summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-05 19:19:59 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-05 19:19:59 -0800
commitae9a73fe9c820d33deab5e31d77084162986cbf1 (patch)
tree9b763d5de75da1c1248dc0f12044b7095411fa9b
parent461d386ccdee912249950b3ccf10a2107b2d1c54 (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/51899-0.txt9321
-rw-r--r--old/51899-0.zipbin186894 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-8.txt9323
-rw-r--r--old/51899-8.zipbin185884 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h.zipbin6364851 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/51899-h.htm8209
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/cover.jpgbin98369 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/map1_hr.jpgbin449812 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/map1_lr.jpgbin176889 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg002.jpgbin77315 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg002a.jpgbin91063 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg002b.jpgbin126493 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg002c.jpgbin127339 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg003.jpgbin76960 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg003a.jpgbin79293 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg003b.jpgbin128960 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg003c.jpgbin140427 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg004.jpgbin127390 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg004c.jpgbin116884 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg004d.jpgbin140183 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg004e.jpgbin115825 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg005.jpgbin60948 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg005a.jpgbin65729 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg005b.jpgbin119916 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg005d.jpgbin143816 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg006.jpgbin65879 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg006a.jpgbin61391 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg006b.jpgbin124237 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg006c.jpgbin95804 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg007.jpgbin121545 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg007a.jpgbin138037 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg007c.jpgbin69483 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg007d.jpgbin69979 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg007e.jpgbin147850 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg008.jpgbin101027 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg008a.jpgbin69782 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg008b.jpgbin104381 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg008c.jpgbin54819 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg008d.jpgbin61675 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg008e.jpgbin106064 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg009.jpgbin182983 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg009a.jpgbin39619 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg009a2.jpgbin128677 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg009b.jpgbin115474 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg009c.jpgbin129822 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg010.jpgbin98993 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg010a.jpgbin92063 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg010b.jpgbin99894 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg010c.jpgbin126429 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg011.jpgbin116420 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg011a.jpgbin132279 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg011b.jpgbin163115 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg011c.jpgbin134075 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg012.jpgbin142246 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg012a.jpgbin133462 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg012b.jpgbin104813 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg012c.jpgbin122597 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg013.jpgbin117470 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51899-h/images/pmg013a.jpgbin129605 -> 0 bytes
62 files changed, 17 insertions, 26853 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..859ad55
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51899 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51899)
diff --git a/old/51899-0.txt b/old/51899-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 51dc8be..0000000
--- a/old/51899-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9321 +0,0 @@
-Project Gutenberg's Loafing Along Death Valley Trails, by William Caruthers
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Loafing Along Death Valley Trails
- A Personal Narrative of People and Places
-
-Author: William Caruthers
-
-Release Date: April 30, 2016 [EBook #51899]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOAFING ALONG DEATH VALLEY TRAILS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- LOAFING ALONG
- DEATH VALLEY TRAILS
-
-
- By WILLIAM CARUTHERS
-
- A Personal Narrative of People and Places
-
- COPYRIGHT 1951 BY WILLIAM CARUTHERS
-
- Printed in the U.S.A. by P-B Press, Inc., Pomona, Calif.
- Published by Death Valley Publishing Co.
- Ontario, California
-
-
-
-
- DEDICATION
-
-
-To one who, without complaint or previous experience with desert
-hardships, shared with me the difficult and often dangerous adventures
-in part recorded in this book, which but for her persistent urging,
-would never have reached the printed page. She is, of course, my
-wife—with me in a sense far broader than the words imply:
-_always—always_.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- Dedication 5
- This Book 9
- I A Foretaste of Things to Come 11
- II What Caused Death Valley 19
- III Aaron and Rosie Winters 25
- IV John Searles and His Lake of Ooze 30
- V But Where Was God? 35
- VI Death Valley Geology 39
- VII Indians of the Area 43
- VIII Desert Gold. Too Many Fractions 48
- IX Romance Strikes the Parson 53
- X Greenwater—Last of the Boom Towns 60
- XI The Amargosa Country 64
- XII A Hovel That Ought To Be a Shrine 82
- XIII Sex in Death Valley Country 87
- XIV Shoshone Country. Resting Springs 92
- XV The Story of Charles Brown 102
- XVI Long Man, Short Man 109
- XVII Shorty Frank Harris 113
- XVIII A Million Dollar Poker Game 125
- XIX Death Valley Scotty 130
- XX Odd But Interesting Characters 136
- XXI Roads. Cracker Box Signs 144
- XXII Lost Mines. The Breyfogle and Others 154
- XXIII Panamint City. Genial Crooks 164
- XXIV Indian George. Legend of the Panamint 171
- XXV Ballarat. Ghost Town 175
- Index 189
-
-
-
-
- THIS BOOK
-
-
-This book is a personal narrative of people and places in Panamint
-Valley, the Amargosa Desert, and the Big Sink at the bottom of America.
-Most of the places which excited a gold-crazed world in the early part
-of the century are now no more, or are going back to sage. Of the actors
-who made the history of the period, few remain.
-
-It was the writer’s good fortune that many of these men were his
-friends. Some were or would become tycoons of mining or industry. Some
-would lucklessly follow jackasses all their lives, to find no gold but
-perhaps a finer treasure—a rainbow in the sky that would never fade.
-
-It is the romance, the comedy, the often stark tragedy these men left
-along the trail which you will find in the pages that follow.
-
-Necessarily the history of the region, often dull, is given first
-because it gives a clearer picture of the background and second, because
-that history is little known, being buried in the generally unread
-diaries of John C. Fremont, Kit Carson, Lt. Brewerton, Jedediah Smith,
-and the stories of early Mormon explorers.
-
-It is interesting to note that a map popular with adventurers of
-Fremont’s time could list only six states west of the Mississippi River.
-These were Texas, Indian Territory, Missouri, Oregon, and Mexico’s two
-possessions—New Mexico and Upper California. There was no Idaho, Utah,
-Nevada, Arizona, Washington, or either of the Dakotas. No Kansas. No
-Nebraska.
-
-Sources of material are given in the text and though careful research
-was made, it should be understood that the history of Death Valley
-country is argumentative and bold indeed is one who says, “Here are the
-facts.”
-
-With something more than mere formality, the writer wishes to thank
-those mentioned below:
-
-My longtime friend, Senator Charles Brown of Shoshone who has often
-given valuable time to make available research material which otherwise
-would have been almost impossible to obtain. Of more value, have been
-his personal recollections of Greenwater, Goldfield, and Tonopah, in all
-of which places he had lived in their hectic days.
-
-Mrs. Charles Brown, daughter of the noted pioneer, Ralph Jacobus (Dad)
-Fairbanks and her sister, Mrs. Bettie Lisle, of Baker, California. The
-voluminous scrapbooks of both, including one of their mother, Celestia
-Abigail Fairbanks, all containing information of priceless value were
-always at my disposal while preparing the manuscript.
-
-Dad Fairbanks, innumerable times my host, was a walking encyclopedia of
-men and events.
-
-One depository of source material deserves special mention. Nailed to
-the wall of Shorty Harris’ Ballarat cabin was a box two feet wide, four
-feet long, with four shelves. The box served as a cupboard and its
-calico curtains operated on a drawstring. On the top shelf, Shorty would
-toss any letter, clipping, record of mine production, map, or bulletin
-that the mails had brought, visitors had given, or friends had sent. And
-there they gathered the dust of years.
-
-Wishing to locate the address of Peter B. Kyne, author of The Parson of
-Panamint, whose host Shorty had been, I removed these documents and
-discovered that the catch-all shelf was a veritable treasure of
-little-known facts about the Panamint of earlier days.
-
-There were maps, reports of geologic surveys, and bulletins now out of
-print; newspapers of the early years and scores of letters with valuable
-material bearing the names of men internationally known.
-
-It is with a sense of futility that I attempt to express my indebtedness
-to my wife, who with a patience I cannot comprehend, kept me searching
-for the facts whenever and wherever the facts were to be found; typing
-and re-typing the manuscript in its entirety many times to make it, if
-possible, a worthwhile book.
-
- Ontario, California, December 22, 1950
-
-
-
-
- Chapter I
- A Foretaste of Things to Come
-
-
-In the newspaper office where the writer worked, was a constant parade
-of adventurers. Talented press agents; promoters; moguls of mining and
-prospectors who, having struck it rich, now lived grandly in palatial
-homes, luxurious hotels or impressive clubs. In their wake, of course,
-was an engaging breed of liars, and an occasional adventuress who by
-luck or love had left a boom town crib to live thereafter “in marble
-halls with vassals” at her command. All brought arresting yarns of Death
-Valley.
-
-For 76 years this Big Sink at the bottom of America had been a land of
-mystery and romantic legend, but there had been little travel through it
-since the white man’s first crossing. “I would have starved to death on
-tourists’ trade,” said the pioneer Ralph (Dad) Fairbanks.
-
-More than 3,000,000 people lived within a day’s journey in 1925, but
-excepting a few, who lived in bordering villages and settlements, those
-who had actually been in Death Valley could be counted on one’s fingers
-and toes. The reasons were practical. It was the hottest region in
-America, with few water holes and these far apart. There were no
-roads—only makeshift trails left by the wagons that had hauled borax in
-the Eighties. Now they were little more than twisting scars through
-brush, over dry washes and dunes, though listed on the maps as roads.
-For the novice it was a foolhardy gamble with death. “There are easier
-ways of committing suicide,” a seasoned desert man advised.
-
-I had been up and down the world more perhaps than the average person
-and this seemed to be a challenge to one with a vagabond’s foot and a
-passion for remote places. So one day I set out for Death Valley.
-
-At the last outpost of civilization, a two-cabin resort, the sign over a
-sand-blasted, false-fronted building stressed: “Free Information.
-Cabins. Eats. Gas. Oil. Refreshments.”
-
-Needing all these items, I parked my car and walked into a foretaste of
-things-to-come. The owner, a big, genial fellow, was behind the counter
-using his teeth to remove the cork from a bottle labeled “Bourbon”—a
-task he deftly accomplished by twisting on the bottle instead of the
-cork. “I want a cabin for the night,” I told him, “and when you have
-time, all the free information I can get.”
-
-“You’ve come to headquarters,” he beamed as he set the bottle on the
-table, glanced at me, then at the liquor and added: “Don’t know your
-drinking sentiments but if you’d like to wet your whistle, take one on
-the house.”
-
-While he was getting glasses from a cabinet behind the counter, a
-slender, wiry man with baked skin, coal-black eyes and hair came through
-a rear door, removed a knapsack strapped across his shoulders and set it
-in the farthest corner of the room. Two or three books rolled out and
-were replaced only after he had wiped them carefully with a red bandana
-kerchief. A sweat-stained khaki shirt and faded blue overalls did not
-affect an impression he gave of some outstanding quality. It may have
-been the air of self assurance, the calm of his keen eyes or the majesty
-of his stride as he crossed the floor.
-
-My host glanced at the newcomer and set another glass on the table,
-“You’re in luck,” he said to me. “Here comes a man who can tell you
-anything you want to know about this country.” A moment later the
-newcomer was introduced as “Blackie.”
-
-“Whatever Blackie tells you is gospel. Knows every trail man or beast
-ever made in that hell-hole, from one end to the other. Ain’t that
-right, Blackie?”
-
-Without answering, Blackie focused an eye on the bottle, picked it up,
-shook it, watched the beads a moment. “Bourbon hell ... just plain
-tongue oil.”
-
-After the drink my host showed me to one of the cabins—a small, boxlike
-structure. Opening the door he waved me in. “One fellow said he couldn’t
-whip a cat in this cabin, but you haven’t got a cat.” He set my suitcase
-on a sagging bed, brought in a bucket of water, put a clean towel on the
-roller and wiped the dust from a water glass with two big fingers. “When
-you get settled come down and loaf with us. Just call me Bill. Calico
-Bill, I’m known as. Came up here from the Calico Mountains.”
-
-“Just one question,” I said. “Don’t you get lonesome in all this
-desolation?”
-
-“Lonesome? Mister, there’s something going on every minute. You’d be
-surprised. Like what happened this morning. Did you meet a truck on your
-way up, with a husky young driver and a girl in a skimpy dress?”
-
-“Yes,” I said. “At a gas station a hundred miles back, and the girl was
-a breath-taker.”
-
-“You can say that again,” Bill grinned. “Prettiest gal I ever saw—bar
-none. She’s just turned eighteen. Married to a fellow fifty-five if he’s
-a day. He owns a truck and hauls for a mine near here at so much a load.
-Jealous sort. Won’t let her out of his sight. You can’t blame a young
-fellow for looking at a pretty girl. But this brute is so crazy jealous
-he took to locking her up in his cabin while he was at work. Fact is,
-she’s a nice clean kid and if I’d known about it, I’d have chased him
-off. I reckon she was too ashamed to tell anybody.
-
-“Of course the young fellows found it out and just to worry him, two or
-three of ’em came over here to play a prank on him and a hell of a prank
-it was. They made a lot of tracks around his cabin doors and windows. He
-saw the tracks and figured she’d been stepping out on him. So instead of
-locking her in as usual, he began to take her to work with him so he
-could keep his eyes on her.
-
-“Yesterday it happened. His truck broke down and this morning he left
-early to get parts, but he was smart enough to take her shoes with him.
-Then he nailed the doors and windows from the outside. Soon as he was
-out of hearing, somehow she busted out and came down to my store
-barefooted and asked me if I knew of any way she could get a ride out.
-‘I’m leaving, if I have to walk,’ she says. Then she told me her story.
-He’d bought her back in Oklahoma for $500. She is one of ten children.
-Her folks didn’t have enough to feed ’em all. This old guy, who lived in
-their neighborhood and had money, talked her parents into the deal. ‘I
-just couldn’t see my little sisters go hungry,’ she said, and like a
-fool she married him.
-
-“I reckon the Lord was with her. We see about three outside trucks a
-year around here, but I’d no sooner fixed her up with a pair of shoes
-before one pulls up for gas. I asked the driver if he’d give her a ride
-to Barstow. He took just one look. ‘I sure will,’ he says and off they
-went.
-
-“You see what I mean,” Bill said, concluding his story. “Things like
-that. Of course we don’t watch no parades but we also don’t get pushed
-around and run over and tromped on.”
-
-In the last twelve words Bill expressed what hundreds have failed to
-explain in pages of flowered phrase—the appeal of the desert.
-
-Soon I was back at the store. Bill and Blackie, over a new bottle were
-swapping memories of noted desert characters who had highlighted the
-towns and camps from Tonopah to the last hell-roarer. The great, the
-humble, the odd and eccentric. Through their conversation ran such names
-as Fireball Fan; Mike Lane; Mother Featherlegs; Shorty Harris; Tiger
-Lil; Hungry Hattie; Cranky Casey; Johnny-Behind-the-Gun; Dad Fairbanks;
-Fraction Jack Stewart; the Indian, Hungry Bill; and innumerable Slims
-and Shortys featured in yarns of the wasteland.
-
-Blackie’s chief interest in life, Bill told me was books. “About all he
-does is read. Doesn’t have to work. Of course, like everybody in this
-country, he’s always going to find $2,000,000,000 this week or next.”
-
-Though only incidental, history was brought into their conversation when
-Bill, giving me “free information” as his sign announced, told me I
-would be able to see the place where Manly crossed the Panamint.
-
-“Manly never knew where he crossed,” Blackie said. “He tried to tell
-about it 40 years afterward and all he did was to start an argument
-that’s going on yet. That’s why I say you can write the known facts
-about Death Valley history on a postage stamp with the end of your
-thumb.”
-
-The tongue oil loosened Calico Bill’s story of Indian George and his
-trained mountain sheep. “George had the right idea about gold. Find it,
-then take it out as needed. One time an artist came to George’s ranch
-and made a picture of the ram. When he had finished it he stepped behind
-his easel and was watching George eat a raw gopher snake when the goat
-came up. Rams are jealous and mistaking the picture for a rival, he
-charged like a thunderbolt.
-
-“It didn’t hurt the picture, but knocked the painter and George through
-both walls of George’s shanty. George picked himself up. ‘Heap good
-picture. Me want.’ The fellow gave it to him and for months George would
-tease that goat with the picture. One day he left it on a boulder while
-he went for his horse. When he got back, the boulder was split wide open
-and the picture was on top of a tree 50 feet away.
-
-“Somebody told George about a steer in the Chicago packing house which
-led other steers to the slaughter pen and it gave George an idea. One
-day I found him and his goat in a Panamint canyon and asked why he
-brought the goat along. ‘Me broke. Need gold.’ Since he didn’t have
-pick, shovel, or dynamite, I asked how he expected to get gold.
-
-“‘Pick, shovel heap work,’ George said. ‘Dynamite maybe kill. Sheep
-better. Me show you.’ He told me to move to a safe place and after
-scattering some grain around for the goat, George scaled the boulder. It
-was big as a house. A moment later I saw him unroll the picture and with
-strings attached, let it rest on one corner of the big rock. Then
-holding the strings, he disappeared into his blind higher up. Suddenly
-he made a hissing noise. The Big Horn stiffened, saw the picture,
-lowered his head and never in my life have I seen such a crash. Dust
-filled the air and fragments fell for 10 minutes. When I went over
-George was gathering nuggets big as goose eggs. ‘White man heap dam’
-fool,’ he grunted. ‘Wants too much gold all same time. Maybe lose. Maybe
-somebody steal. No can steal boulder.’”
-
-The “tongue oil” had been disposed of when Blackie suggested that we
-step over to his place, a short distance around the point of a hill.
-“Plenty more there.”
-
-Bill had told me that as a penniless youngster Blackie had walked up
-Odessa Canyon one afternoon. Within three days he was rated as a
-millionaire. Within three months he was broke again. Later Blackie told
-me, “That’s somebody’s dream. I got about $200,000 and decided I
-belonged up in the Big Banker group. They welcomed me and skinned me out
-of my money in no time.”
-
-It was Blackie who proved to my satisfaction that money has only a minor
-relation to happiness. His house was part dobe, part white tufa blocks.
-On his table was a student’s lamp, a pipe, and can of tobacco. A book
-held open by a hand axe. Other books were shelved along the wall. He had
-an incongruous walnut cabinet with leaded glass doors. Inside, a
-well-filled decanter and a dozen whiskey glasses and a pleasant aroma of
-bourbon came from a keg covered with a gunny sack and set on a stool in
-the corner.
-
-“This country’s hard on the throat,” he explained.
-
-Blackie’s kingdom seemed to have extended from the morning star to the
-setting sun. He had been in the Yukon, in New Zealand, South Africa, and
-the Argentine. Gold, hemp, sugar, and ships had tossed fortunes at him
-which were promptly lost or spent.
-
-For a man who had found compensation for such luck, there is no defeat.
-Certainly his philosophy seemed to meet his needs and that is the
-function of philosophy.
-
-It was cool in the late evening and he made a fire, chucked one end of
-an eight-foot log into the stove and put a chair under the protruding
-end. Bill asked why he didn’t cut the log. “Listen,” Blackie said,
-“you’re one of 100 million reasons why this country is misgoverned. Why
-should I sweat over that log when a fire will do the job?... That book?
-Just some fellow’s plan for a perfect world. I hope I’ll not be around
-when they have it.
-
-“The town of Calico? It was a live one. When John McBryde and Lowery
-Silver discovered the white metal there, a lot of us desert rats got in
-the big money. In the first seven years of the Eighties it was bonanza
-and in the eighth the town was dead.”
-
-But the stories of fortunes made in Mule and Odessa Canyons were of less
-importance to him than a habit of the town judge. “Chewed tobacco all
-the time and swallowed the juice, ‘If a fellow’s guts can’t stand it,’
-he would say, ‘he ought to quit,’ and he’d clap a fine on anybody who
-spat in his court.
-
-“Never knew Jack Dent, did you? Englishman. Now there was a drinking
-man. Said his only ambition was to die drunk. One pay day he got so
-cockeyed he couldn’t stand, so his pals laid him on a pool table and
-went on with their drinking. Every time they ordered, Jack hollered for
-his and somebody would take it over and pour it down him. ‘Keep ’em
-comin’,’ he says. ‘If I doze off, just pry my jaws open and pour it
-down.’
-
-“The boys took him at his word. Every time they drank, they took a drink
-to Jack. When the last round came they took Jack a big one. They tried
-to pry his lips open but the lips didn’t give. Jack Dent’s funeral was
-the biggest ever held in the town.
-
-“Bill was telling you I made a million there, and every now and then I
-hear of somebody telling somebody else I made a million in Africa. And
-another in the Yukon. The truth is, what little I’ve got came out of a
-hole in a whiskey barrel instead of a mine shaft.
-
-“A few years back a strike was made down in the Avawatz that started a
-baby gold rush. I joined it. A fellow named Gypsum came in with a barrel
-of whiskey, thinking there’d be a town, but it didn’t turn out that way.
-Gypsum had no trouble disposing of his liquor and stayed around to do a
-little prospecting. One day when I was starting for Johannesburg, he
-asked me to deliver a message to a bartender there. Gypsum had a meat
-cleaver in his hand and was sharpening it on a butcher’s steel to cut up
-a mountain sheep he’d killed.
-
-“‘Just ask for Klondike and tell him to send my stuff. He’ll understand.
-Tell him if he doesn’t send it, I’m coming after it.’
-
-“I didn’t know at the time that Gypsum had killed three men in honest
-combat and that one of them had been dispatched with a meat cleaver.
-
-“I delivered the message verbatim. Klondike looked a bit worried.
-‘What’s Gypsum doing?’ he asked. ‘When I left,’ I said, ‘he was
-sharpening a meat cleaver.’ Klondike turned white. ‘I’ll have it ready
-before you go.’
-
-“When I called later, he told me he’d put Gypsum’s stuff in the back of
-my car. When I got back to camp and Gypsum came to my tent to ask about
-it, I told him to get it out of the car, which was parked a few feet
-away. Gypsum went for it and in a moment I heard him cussing. I looked
-out and he was trying to shoulder a heavy sack. Before I could get out
-to help him, the sack got away from him and burst at his feet. The
-ground was covered with nickles, dimes, quarters, halves. ‘There’s
-another sack.’ Gypsum said. ‘The son of a bitch has sent me $2500 in
-chicken feed. Just for spite.’
-
-“Because it was a nuisance, Gypsum loaned it to the fellows about, all
-of whom were his friends. They didn’t want it but took it just to
-accommodate Gypsum. There was nothing to spend it for. Somebody started
-a poker game and I let ’em use my tent because it was the largest. I
-rigged up a table by sawing Gypsum’s whiskey barrel in two and nailing
-planks over the open end. Every night after supper they started playing.
-I furnished light and likker and usually I set out grub. It didn’t cost
-much but somebody suggested that in order to reimburse me, two bits
-should be taken out of every jackpot. A hole was slit in the top. It was
-a fast game and the stakes high. It ran for weeks every evening and the
-Saturday night session ended Monday morning.
-
-“Of course some were soon broke and they began to borrow from one
-another. Finally everybody was broke and all the money was in my kitty.
-I took the top off the barrel and loaned it to the players, taking
-I.O.U.’s, I had to take the top off a dozen times and when it was
-finally decided there was no pay dirt in the Avawatz, I had a sack full
-of I.O.U.’s.
-
-“Once I tried to figure out how many times that $2500 was loaned, but I
-gave up. I learned though, why these bankers pick up a pencil and start
-figuring the minute you start talking. They are on the right end of the
-pencil.”
-
-Early the next morning while Bill was servicing my car for the trip
-ahead, with some tactful mention of handy gadgets he had for sale, we
-noticed Blackie coming with a man who ran largely to whiskers. “That’s
-old Cloudburst Pete,” Bill told me. “Another old timer who has shuffled
-all over this country.”
-
-“How did he get that moniker?” I asked.
-
-“One time Pete came in here and was telling us fellows about a narrow
-escape he had from a cloudburst over in the Panamint. Pete said the
-cloud was just above him and about to burst and would have filled the
-canyon with a wall of water 90 feet high. A city fellow who had stopped
-for gas, asked Pete how come he didn’t get drowned. Pete took a notion
-the fellow was trying to razz him. ‘Well, Mister, if you must know, I
-lassoed the cloud, ground-hitched it and let it bust....’”
-
-After greeting Pete, Bill asked if he’d been walking all night.
-
-“Naw,” Pete said. “Started around 11 o’clock, I reckon. Not so bad
-before sunup. Be hell going back. But I didn’t come here to growl about
-the weather. I want some powder so I can get started. Found color
-yesterday. Looks like I’m in the big money.”
-
-“Fine,” Bill said. “I heard you’ve been laid up.”
-
-“Oh, I broke a leg awhile back. Fell in a mine shaft. Didn’t amount to
-much.”
-
-“I know about that, but didn’t you get hurt in a blast since then?”
-
-“Oh that—yeh. Got blowed out of a 20-foot hole. Three-four ribs busted,
-the doc said. Come to think of it, believe he mentioned a fractured
-collar bone. Wasn’t half as bad as last week.”
-
-“Good Lord ... what happened last week?”
-
-“That crazy Cyclone Thompson. You know him ... he pulled a stope gate
-and let five-six tons of muck down on me. Nobody knew it—not even
-Cyclone. Wore my fingers to the bone scratching out. Look at these
-hands....”
-
-Pete held up his mutilated hands. “They’ll heal but bigod—that pair of
-brand new double-stitched overalls won’t.”
-
-“Well,” Bill chuckled, “you know where the powder is. Go in and get it.”
-
-Bill and Blackie remained to see me off, each with a friendly word of
-advice. “Just follow the wheel tracks,” Bill said, as I climbed into my
-car and Blackie added: “Keep your eyes peeled for the cracker box signs
-along the edge of the road. You’ll see ’em nailed to a stake and stuck
-in the ground.”
-
-A moment later I was headed into a silence broken only by the whip of
-sage against the car. Ahead was the glimmer of a dry lake and in the
-distance a great mass of jumbled mountains that notched the pale skies.
-Beyond—what?
-
-I never dreamed then that for twenty-five years I would be poking around
-in those deceiving hills.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter II
- What Caused Death Valley?
-
-
-When you travel through the desolation of Death Valley along the Funeral
-Range, you may find it difficult to believe that several thousand feet
-above the top of your car was once a cool, inviting land with rivers and
-forests and lakes, and that hundreds of feet below you are the dry beds
-of seas that washed its shores.
-
-Scientists assert that all life—both animal and vegetable began in these
-buried seas—probably two and one-half billion years ago.
-
-It is certain that no life could have existed on the thin crust of earth
-covered as it was with deadly gases. Therefore, your remotest ancestors
-must have been sea creatures until they crawled out or were washed
-ashore in one of Nature’s convulsions to become land dwellers.
-
-Since sea water contains more gold than has ever been found on the
-earth, it may be said that man on his way up from the lowest form of
-life was born in a solution of gold.
-
-That he survived, is due to two urges—the sex urge and the urge for
-food. Without either all life would cease.
-
-Note. The author’s book, _Life’s Grand Stairway_ soon to be published,
-contains a fast moving, factual story of man and his eternal quest for
-gold from the beginning of recorded time.
-
-Camping one night at Mesquite Spring, I heard a prospector cursing his
-burro. It wasn’t a casual cursing, but a classic revelation of one who
-knew burros—the soul of them, from inquisitive eyes to deadly heels. A
-moment later he was feeding lumps of sugar to the beast and the feud
-ended on a pleasant note.
-
-We were sitting around the camp fire later when the prospector showed me
-a piece of quartz that glittered at twenty feet.
-
-“Do you have much?” I asked.
-
-“I’ve got more than Carter had oats, and I’m pulling out at daylight. Me
-and Thieving Jack.”
-
-“I suppose,” I said aimlessly, “you’ll retire to a life of luxury; have
-a palace, a housekeeper, and a French chef.”
-
-“Nope. Chinaman cook. Friend of mine struck it rich. He had a female
-cook. After that he couldn’t call his soul his own. Me? First money I
-spend goes for pie. Never had my fill of pie. Next—” He paused and
-looked affectionately at Thieving Jack. “I’m going to buy a ranch over
-at Lone Pine with a stream running smack through the middle. Snow water.
-I aim to build a fence head high all around it and pension that burro
-off. As for me—no mansion. Just a cottage with a screen porch all
-around. I’m sick of horseflies and mosquitoes.”
-
-He was off at sunrise and my thought was that God went with him and
-Thieving Jack.
-
-If you encounter scorching heat you will find little comfort in the fact
-that icebergs once floated in those ancient seas. It is almost certain
-that you will be curious about the disorderly jumble of gutted hills;
-the colorful canyons and strange formations and ask yourself what caused
-it.
-
-The answer is found on Black Mountain in the Funeral Range. Here
-occurred a convulsion of nature without any known parallel and the tops
-of nearby mountains became the bottom of America—an upheaval so violent
-that the oldest rocks were squeezed under pressure from the nethermost
-stratum of the earth to lie alongside the youngest on the surface.
-
-The seas and the fish vanished. The forests were buried. The prehistoric
-animals, the dinosaurs and elephants were trapped.
-
-The result, after undetermined ages, is today’s Death Valley. A shorter
-explanation was that of my companion on my first trip to Black
-Mountain—a noted desert character—Jackass Slim. There we found a
-scientist who wished to enlighten us. To his conversation sprinkled with
-such words as Paleozoic and pre-Cambrian Slim listened raptly for an
-hour. Then the learned man asked Slim if he had made it plain.
-
-“Sure,” Slim said. “You’ve been trying to say hell broke loose.”
-
-The Indians, who saw Death Valley first, called it “Tomesha,” which
-means Ground Afire, and warned adventurers, explorers, and trappers that
-it was a vast sunken region, intolerant of life.
-
-The first white Americans known to have seen it, belonged to the party
-of explorers led by John C. Fremont and guided by Kit Carson.
-
-Death Valley ends on the south in the narrow opening between the
-terminus of the Panamint Range and that of the Black Mountains. Through
-this opening, though unaware of it, Fremont saw the dry stream bed of
-the Amargosa River, on April 27, 1844, flowing north and in the distance
-“a high, snowy mountain.” This mountain was Telescope Peak, 11,045 feet
-high.
-
-Nearly six years later, impatient Forty Niners enroute to California
-gold fields, having heard that the shortest way was through this
-forbidden sink, demanded that their guide take them across it.
-
-“I will go to hell with you, but not through Death Valley,” said the
-wise Mormon guide, Captain Jefferson Hunt.
-
-Scoffing Hunt’s warning, the Bennett-Arcane party deserted and with the
-Jayhawkers became the first white Americans to cross Death Valley. The
-suffering of the deserters, widely advertised, gave the region an evil
-reputation that kept it practically untraveled, unexplored, and accursed
-for the next 75 years, or until Charles Brown of Shoshone succeeded in
-having wheel tracks replaced with roads.
-
-With the opening of the Eichbaum toll road from Lone Pine to Stovepipe
-Wells in 1926-7 a trickle of tourists began, but actually as late as
-1932, Death Valley had fewer visitors than the Congo. A few prospectors,
-a few daring adventurers and a few ranchers had found in the areas
-adjoining, something in the great Wide Open that answered man’s inherent
-craving for freedom and peace. “The hills that shut this valley in,”
-explained the old timer, “also shut out the mess we left behind.”
-
-Tales of treasure came in the wake of the Forty Niners but it was not
-until 1860 that the first prospecting party was organized by Dr. Darwin
-French at Oroville, California. In the fall of that year he set out to
-find the Lost Gunsight mine, the story of which is told in another
-chapter.
-
-On this trip Dr. French discovered and gave his name to Darwin Falls and
-Darwin Wash in the Panamint range. He named Bennett’s Well on the floor
-of Death Valley to honor Asa (or Asabel) Bennett, a member of the
-Bennett-Arcane party. He gave the name of another member of that party
-to Towne’s Pass, now a thrilling route into Death Valley but then a
-breath-taking challenge to death.
-
-He named Furnace Creek after finding there a crude furnace for reducing
-ore. He also named Panamint Valley and Panamint Range, but neither the
-origin of the word Panamint nor its significance is known. Indians found
-there said their tribe was called Panamint, but those around there are
-Shoshones and Piutes. (See note at end of this chapter.)
-
-Also in 1860 William Lewis Manly who with John Rogers, a brave and husky
-Tennessean had rescued the survivors of the Bennett-Arcane party,
-returned to the valley he had named, to search for the Gunsight. Manly
-found nothing and reported later he was deserted by his companions and
-escaped death only when rescued by a wandering Indian.
-
-In 1861 Lt. Ives on a surveying mission explored a part of the valley in
-connection with the California Boundary Commission. He used for pack
-animals some of the camels which had been provided by Jefferson Davis,
-Secretary of War, for transporting supplies across the western deserts.
-
-In 1861 Dr. S. G. George, who had been a member of French’s party,
-organized one of his own and for the same reason—to find the Lost
-Gunsight. He made several locations of silver and gold, explored a
-portion of the Panamint Range. The first man ever to scale Telescope
-Peak was a member of the George party. He was W. T. Henderson, who had
-also been with Dr. French. Henderson named the mountain “because,” he
-said, “I could see for 200 miles in all directions as clearly as through
-a telescope.”
-
-The most enduring accomplishment of the party was to bring back a name
-for the mountain range east of what is now known as Owens Valley, named
-for one of Fremont’s party of explorers. From an Indian chief they
-learned this range was called Inyo and meant “the home of a Great
-Spirit.” Ultimately the name was given to the county in the southeast
-corner of which is Death Valley.
-
-Tragedy dogged all the early expeditions. July 21, 1871 the Wheeler
-expedition left Independence to explore Death Valley. This party of 60
-included geologists, botanists, naturalists, and soldiers. One
-detachment was under command of Lt. George Wheeler. Lt. Lyle led the
-other. Lyle’s detachment was guided by C. F. R. Hahn and the third day
-out Hahn was sent ahead to locate water. John Koehler, a naturalist of
-the party is alleged to have said that he would kill Hahn if he didn’t
-find water. Failing to return Hahn was abandoned to his fate and he was
-never seen again.
-
-William Eagan, guide of Wheeler’s party was sent to Rose Springs for
-water. He also failed to return. What became of him is not known and the
-army officers were justly denounced for callous indifference. On the
-desert, inexcusable desertion of a companion brands the deserter as an
-outcast and has often resulted in his lynching.
-
-It is interesting to note that apart from a Government Land Survey in
-1856, which proved to be utterly worthless, there is no authentic record
-of the white man in Death Valley between 1849 and 1860. However, during
-this decade the canyons on the west side of the Panamint harbored
-numerous renegades who had held up a Wells-Fargo stage or slit a miner’s
-throat for his poke of gold. Some were absorbed into the life of the
-wasteland when the discovery of silver in Surprise Canyon brought a
-hectic mob of adventurers to create hell-roaring Panamint City.
-
-When, in the middle Seventies Nevada silver kings, John P. Jones and Wm.
-R. Stewart, who were Fortune’s children on the Comstock, decided
-$2,000,000 was enough to lose at Panamint City, many of the outlaws
-wandered over the mountain and down the canyon to cross Death Valley and
-settle wherever they thought they could survive on the eastern
-approaches.
-
-Soon Ash Meadows, Furnace Creek Ranch, Stump Springs, the Manse Ranch,
-Resting Springs, and Pahrump Ranch became landmarks.
-
-The first white man known to have settled in Death Valley was a person
-of some cunning and no conscience, known as Bellerin’ Teck, Bellowing
-Tex Bennett, and Bellowin’ Teck. He settled at Furnace Creek in 1870 and
-erected a shanty alongside the water where the Bennett-Arcane party had
-camped when driven from Ash Meadows by Indians whose gardens they had
-raided and whose squaws they had abused, according to a legend of the
-Indians and referred to with scant attention to details, by Manly.
-(Panamint Tom, famed Indian of the region, in speaking of this raid by
-the whites, told me that the head man of his tribe sent runners to Ash
-Meadows for reinforcements and that the recruits were marched in circles
-around boulders and in and out of ravines to give the impression of
-superior strength. This strategy deceived the whites, who then went on
-their way.)
-
-Teck claimed title to all the country in sight. Little is known of his
-past, but whites later understood that he chose the forbidding region to
-outsmart a sheriff. He brought water through an open ditch from its
-source in the nearby foothills and grew alfalfa and grain. He named his
-place Greenland Ranch and it was the beginning of the present Furnace
-Creek Ranch.
-
-There is a tradition that Teck supplemented his meager earnings from the
-ranch by selling half interests to wayfarers, subsequently driving them
-off.
-
-There remains a record of one such victim—a Mormon adventurer named
-Jackson. In part payment Teck took a pair of oxen, Jackson’s money and
-his only weapon, a rifle. Shortly Teck began to show signs of
-dissatisfaction. His temper flared more frequently and Jackson became
-increasingly alarmed. When finally Teck came bellowing from his cabin,
-brandishing his gun, Jackson did the right thing at the right moment. He
-fled, glad to escape with his life.
-
-This became the pattern for the next wayfarer and the next. Teck always
-craftily demanded their weapons in the trade, but knowing that sooner or
-later some would take their troubles to a sheriff or return for revenge,
-Teck sold the ranch, left the country and no trace of his destiny
-remains.
-
-Before Aaron and Rosie Winters or Borax Smith ever saw Death Valley, one
-who was to attain fame greater than either listed more than 2000
-different plants that grew in the area.
-
-Notwithstanding this important contribution to knowledge of the valley’s
-flora, only one or two historians have mentioned his name, and these in
-books or periodicals long out of print.
-
-Two decades later he was to become famous as Brigadier General Frederick
-Funston of the Spanish-American War—the only major war in America’s
-history fought by an army which was composed entirely of volunteers
-without a single draftee.
-
-Of interest to this writer is the fact that he was my brigade commander
-and a soldier from the boots up. Not five feet tall, he was every inch a
-fighting man. I served with him while he captured Emilio Aguinaldo,
-famous _Filipino Insurrecto_.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter III
- Aaron and Rosie Winters
-
-
-While Bellerin’ Teck was selling half interests in the spectacular hills
-to the unwary, he actually walked over a treasure of more millions than
-his wildest dreams had conjured.
-
-Teck’s nearest neighbor lived at Ash Meadows about 60 miles east of the
-valley.
-
-Ash Meadows is a flat desert area in Nevada along the California border.
-With several water holes, subterranean streams, and abundant wild grass
-it was a resting place for early emigrants and a hole-in for
-prospectors. It was also an ideal refuge for gentlemen who liked its
-distance from sheriffs and the ease with which approaching horsemen
-could be seen from nearby hills.
-
-Lacking was woman. The male needed the female but there wasn’t a white
-woman in the country. So he took what the market afforded—a squaw and
-not infrequently two or three. “He’s my son all right,” a patriarch once
-informed me, “but it’s been so long I don’t exactly recollect which of
-them squaws was his mother.”
-
-Usually the wife was bought. Sometimes for a trinket. Often a horse.
-Among the trappers who first blazed the trails to the West, 30 beaver
-skins were considered a fair price for an able bodied squaw. She was
-capable in rendering domestic service and loyal in love. Too often the
-consort’s fidelity was transient.
-
-“For 20 years,” said the noted trapper, Killbuck, “I packed a squaw
-along—not one, but a many. First I had a Blackfoot—the darndest slut as
-ever cried for fo-farrow. I lodge-poled her on Coulter’s Creek ... as
-good as four packs of beaver I gave for old Bull-tail’s daughter. He was
-the head chief of the Ricaree. Thar wan’t enough scarlet cloth nor beads
-... in Sublette’s packs for her ... I sold her to Cross-Eagle for one of
-Jake Hawkins’ guns.... Then I tried the Sioux, the Shian (Cheyenne) and
-a Digger from the other side, who made the best moccasins as ever I
-wore.”
-
-So Aaron Winters chose his mate from the available supply and with
-Rosie, part Mexican and Indian, part Spanish, he settled in Ash Meadows
-in a dugout. In front and adjoining had been added a shack, part wood,
-part stone. The floors were dirt. Rosie dragged in posts, poles, and
-brush and made a shed. Aaron found time between hunting and trapping to
-add a room of unmortared stone. At times there was no money, but piñon
-nuts grew in the mountains, desert tea and squaw cabbage were handy and
-the beans of mesquite could be ground into flour.
-
-Rosie, to whom one must yield admiration, was not the first woman in
-Winters’ life. “He liked his women,” Ed Stiles recalled, “and changed
-’em often.” But to Rosie, Aaron Winters was always devoted. Her material
-reward was little but all who knew her praised her beauty and her
-virtues.
-
-One day when dusk was gathering there was a rap on the sagging slab door
-and Rosie Winters opened it on an angel unawares. The Winters invited
-the stranger in, shared their meager meal. After supper they sat up
-later than usual, listening to the story of the stranger’s travels. He
-was looking for borax, he told them. “It’s a white stuff....” At this
-time, only two or three unimportant deposits of borax were known to
-exist in America and the average prospector knew nothing about it.
-
-The first borax was mined in Tibet. There in the form of tincal it was
-loaded on the backs of sheep, transported across the Himalayas and
-shipped to London. It was so rare that it was sold by the ounce. Later
-the more intelligent of the western prospectors began to learn that
-borax was something to keep in mind.
-
-To Aaron Winters it was just something bought in a drug store, but Rosie
-was interested in the “white stuff.” She wanted to know how one could
-tell when the white stuff was borax. Patiently the guest explained how
-to make the tests: “Under the torch it will burn green....”
-
-Finally Rosie made a bed for the wayfarer in the lean-to and long after
-he blew out his candle Rosie Winters lay awake, wondering about some
-white stuff she’d seen scattered over a flat down in the hellish heat of
-Death Valley. She remembered that it whitened the crust of a big area,
-stuck to her shoes and clothes and got in her hair when the wind lifted
-the silt.
-
-The next morning Rosie and Aaron bade the guest good luck and goodbye
-and he went into the horizon without even leaving his name. Then Rosie
-turned to Aaron: “Maybe,” she said ... “maybe that white stuff we see
-that time below Furnace Creek—maybe that is borax.”
-
-“Might be,” Aaron answered.
-
-“Why don’t we go see?” Rosie asked. “Maybe some Big Horn sheep—” Rosie
-knew her man and Aaron Winters got his rifle and Rosie packed the
-sow-belly and beans.
-
-It was a long, gruelling trip down into the valley under a Death Valley
-sun but hope sustained them. They made their camp at Furnace Creek, then
-Rosie led Aaron over the flats she remembered. She scooped up some of
-the white stuff that looked like cotton balls while Aaron prepared for
-the test. Then the brief, uncertain moment when the white stuff touched
-the flame. Tensely they watched, Aaron grimly curious rather than
-hopeful; Rosie with pounding heart and lips whispering a prayer.
-
-Then, miracle of miracles—the green flame. They looked excitedly into
-each other’s eyes, each unable to believe. In that moment, Rosie, always
-devout, lifted her eyes to heaven and thanked her God. Neither had any
-idea of the worth of their find. Vaguely they knew it meant spending
-money. A new what-not for Rosie’s mantel. Perhaps pine boards to cover
-the hovel’s dirt floor; maybe a few pieces of golden oak furniture; a
-rifle with greater range than Aaron’s old one; silk or satin to make a
-dress for Rosie.
-
-“Writers have had to draw on their imagination for what happened,” a
-descendant of the Winters once told me. “They say Uncle Aaron exclaimed,
-‘Rosie, she burns green!’ or ‘Rosie, we’re rich!’ but Aunt Rosie said
-they were so excited they couldn’t remember, but she knew what they did!
-They went over to the ditch that Bellerin’ Teck had dug to water the
-ranch and in its warm water soaked their bunioned feet.”
-
-Returning to Ash Meadows they faced the problem of what to do with the
-“white stuff.” Unlike gold, it couldn’t be sold on sight, because it was
-a new industry, and little was known about its handling. Finally Aaron
-learned that a rich merchant in San Francisco, named Coleman was
-interested in borax in a small way and lost no time in sending samples
-to Coleman.
-
-W. T. Coleman was a Kentucky aristocrat who had come to California
-during the gold rush and attained both fortune and the affection of the
-people of the state. He had been chosen leader of the famed Vigilantes,
-who had rescued San Francisco from a gang of the lawless as tough as the
-world ever saw.
-
-Actually Coleman’s interest in borax was a minor incident in the
-handling of his large fortune and his passionate devotion to the
-development of his adopted state. For that reason alone, Coleman had
-become interested in the small deposits of borax discovered by Francis
-Smith, first at Columbus Marsh.
-
-Smith had been a prospector before coming to California, wandering all
-over western country, looking for gold and silver. He was one of those
-who had heard that borax was worth keeping in mind.
-
-Reaching Nevada and needing a grubstake, he began to cut wood to supply
-mines around Columbus, Aurora, and Candelaria. On Teel’s Marsh he found
-a large growth of mesquite, built a shack and claimed all the wood and
-the site as his own. Upon a portion of it, some Mexicans had cut and
-corded some of the wood and Smith refused to let them haul it off. They
-left grudgingly and with threats to return. The Mexicans, of course, had
-as much right to the wood as Smith.
-
-Sensing trouble and having no weapons at his camp, he went twelve miles
-to borrow a rifle. But there were no cartridges and he had to ride sixty
-miles over the mountains to Aurora where he found only four. Returning
-to his shack, he found the Mexicans had also returned with
-reinforcements. Twenty-four were now at work and their mood was
-murderous. Smith had a companion whose courage he didn’t trust and
-ordered him to go out in the brush and keep out of the way.
-
-The Mexicans told Smith they were going to take the wood. Smith warned
-that he would kill the first man who touched the pile. With only four
-cartridges to kill 20 men, it was obviously a bluff. One of the Mexicans
-went to the pile and picked up a stick. Smith put his rifle to his
-shoulder and ordered the fellow to drop it. Unafraid and still holding
-the stick the Mexican said: “You may kill me, but my friends will kill
-you. Put your rifle down and we will talk it over.”
-
-They had cut additional wood during his absence and demanded that they
-be permitted to take all the wood they had cut. Smith consented and when
-the Mexicans had gone he staked out the marsh as a mining claim—which
-led to the connection with Coleman.
-
-Upon receipt of Winters’ letter, Coleman forwarded it to Smith and asked
-him to investigate the Winters claim. Smith’s report was enthusiastic.
-Coleman then sent two capable men, William Robertson and Rudolph
-Neuenschwander to look over the Winters discovery, with credentials to
-buy. Again Rosie and Aaron Winters heard the flutter of angel wings at
-the hovel door. This time the angels left $20,000. Rarely in this world
-has buyer bought so much for so little, but to Aaron and Rosie Winters
-it was all the money in the world.
-
-Despite the troubles of operating in a place so remote from market and
-with problems of a product about which too little was known, borax was
-soon adding $100,000 a year to Coleman’s already fabulous fortune.
-
-Francis M. (Borax) Smith was put in charge of operations under the firm
-name of Coleman and Smith.
-
-Freed from the sordid squalor of the Ash Meadows hovel, the Winters
-bought the Pahrump Ranch, a landmark of Pahrump Valley, and settled down
-to watch the world go by.
-
-Thus began the Pacific Coast Borax Company, one of the world’s
-outstanding corporations. Later Smith was to become president of the
-Pacific Coast Borax Company and later still, he was to head a three
-hundred million dollar corporation for the development of the San
-Francisco and Oakland areas and then face bankruptcy and ruin.
-
-Overlooking the site where Rosie and Aaron made the discovery, now
-stands the magnificent Furnace Creek Inn.
-
-One day while sitting on the hotel terrace, I noticed a plane discharge
-a group of the Company’s English owners and their guests. Meticulously
-dressed, they paid scant attention to the desolation about and hastened
-to the cooling refuge of their caravansary. At dinner they sat down to
-buttered mignon and as they talked casually of the races at Ascot and
-the ball at Buckingham Palace, I looked out over that whitehot slab of
-hell and thought of Rosie and Aaron Winters trudging with calloused feet
-behind a burro—their dinner, sow-belly and beans.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter IV
- John Searles and His Lake of Ooze
-
-
-Actually the first discovery of borax in Death Valley was made by
-Isadore Daunet in 1875, five years before Winters’ discovery. Daunet had
-left Panamint City when it was apparent that town was through forever
-and with six of his friends was en route to new diggings in Arizona.
-
-He was a seasoned, hardy adventurer and risked a short cut across Death
-Valley in mid-summer. Running out of water, his party killed a burro,
-drank its blood; but the deadly heat beat them down. Indians came across
-one of the thirst-crazed men and learned that Daunet and others were
-somewhere about. They found Daunet and two companions. The others
-perished.
-
-When Daunet heard of the Winters sale five years later, like Rosie
-Winters he remembered the white stuff about the water, to which the
-Indians had taken him. He hurried back and in 1880 filed upon mining
-claims amounting to 260 acres. He started at once a refining plant which
-he called Eagle Borax Works and began operating one year before Old
-Harmony began to boil borax in 1881. Daunet’s product however, was of
-inferior grade and unprofitable and work was soon abandoned. The
-unpredictable happened and dark days fell upon borax and William T.
-Coleman.
-
-In 1888 the advocates of free trade had a field day when the bill
-authored by Roger Q. Mills of Texas became the law of the land and borax
-went on the free list. The empire of Coleman tumbled in a financial
-scare—attributed by Coleman to a banker who had falsely undervalued
-Coleman’s assets after a report by a borax expert who betrayed him. “My
-assets,” wrote Coleman, “were $4,400,000. My debts $2,000,000.” No
-person but Coleman lost a penny.
-
-But Borax Smith was never one to surrender without a fight and organized
-the Pacific Coast Borax Company to take over the property and the
-success of that company justifies the faith and the integrity of
-Coleman.
-
-Marketing the borax presented a problem in transportation even more
-difficult than it did in Tibet. At first it was scraped from the flat
-surface of the valley where it looked like alkali. It was later
-discovered in ledge form in the foothills of the Funeral Mountains. The
-sight of this discovery was called Monte Blanco—now almost a forgotten
-name.
-
-The borax was boiled in tanks and after crystallization was hauled by
-mule team across one hundred and sixty-five miles of mountainous desert
-at a pace of fifteen miles per day—if there were no accidents—or an
-average of twenty days for the round trip. The summer temperatures in
-the cooler hours of the night were 112 degrees; in the day, 120 to 134
-(the highest ever recorded). There were only four water holes on the
-route. Hence, water had to be hauled for the team.
-
-The borax was hauled to Daggett and Mojave and thence shipped to
-Alameda, California, to be refined. Charles Bennett, a rancher from
-Pahrump Valley, was among the first to contract the hauling of the raw
-product.
-
-In 1883 J. W. S. Perry, superintendent of the borax company, decided the
-company should own its freighting service and under his direction the
-famous 20 mule team borax wagons with the enormous wheels were designed.
-Orders were given for ten wagons. Each weighed 7800 pounds. Two of these
-wagons formed a train, the load being 40,000 pounds. To the second wagon
-was attached a smaller one with a tank holding 1200 gallons of water.
-
-“I’d leave around midnight,” Ed Stiles said. “Generally 110 or 112
-degrees.”
-
-The first hauls of these wagons were to Mojave, with overnight stations
-every sixteen miles. Thirty days were required for the round trip.
-
-In the Eighties a prospector in the then booming Calico Mountains,
-between Barstow and Yermo discovered an ore that puzzled him. He showed
-it to others and though the bustling town of Calico was filled with
-miners from all parts of the world, none could identify it. Under the
-blow torch the crystalline surface crumbled. Out of curiosity he had it
-assayed. It proved to be calcium borate and was the world’s first
-knowledge of borax in that form. Previously it had been found in the
-form of “cotton ball.” The Pacific Coast Borax Company acquired the
-deposits; named the ore Colemanite in honor of W. T. Coleman.
-
-Operations in Death Valley were suspended and transferred to the new
-deposit, which saved a ten to fifteen days’ haul besides providing a
-superior product. The deposit was exhausted however, in the early part
-of the century when Colemanite was discovered in the Black Mountains and
-the first mine—the Lila C. began operations.
-
-It is a bit ironical that during the depression of the Thirties, two
-prospectors who neither knew nor cared anything about borax were poking
-around Kramer in relatively flat country in sight of the paved highway
-between Barstow and Mojave when they found what is believed to be the
-world’s largest deposit of borax.
-
-It was a good time for bargain hunters and was acquired by the Pacific
-Coast Borax Company and there in a town named Boron, all its borax is
-now produced.
-
-Even before Aaron Winters or Isadore Daunet, John Searles was shipping
-borax out of Death Valley country. With his brother Dennis, member of
-the George party of 1861, Searles had returned and was developing gold
-and silver claims in the Slate Range overlooking a slimy marsh. They had
-a mill ready for operation when the Indians, then making war on the
-whites of Inyo county destroyed it with fire. A man of outstanding
-courage, Searles remained to recuperate his losses. He had read about
-the Trona deposits first found in the Nile Valley and was reminded of it
-when he put some of the water from the marsh in a vessel to boil and use
-for drinking. Later he noticed the formation of crystals and then
-suspecting borax he went to San Francisco with samples and sought
-backing. He found a promoter who after examining the samples, told him,
-“If the claims are what these samples indicate, I can get all the money
-you need....”
-
-An analysis was made showing borax.
-
-“But where is this stuff located?”
-
-Searles told him as definitely as he could. He was invited to remain in
-San Francisco while a company could be organized. “It will take but a
-few days....”
-
-Searles explained that he hadn’t filed on the ground and preferred to go
-back and protect the claim.
-
-The suave promoter brushed his excuse aside. “Little chance of anybody’s
-going into that God forsaken hole.” He called an associate. “Take Mr.
-Searles in charge and show him San Francisco....”
-
-Not a rounder, Searles bored quickly with night life. His funds ran low.
-He asked the loan of $25.
-
-“Certainly....” His host stepped into an adjacent office, returning
-after a moment to say the cashier was out but that he had left
-instructions to give Searles whatever he wished.
-
-Searles made trip after trip to the cashier’s office but never found him
-in and becoming suspicious, he pawned his watch and hurried home,
-arriving at midnight four days later.
-
-The next morning a stranger came and something about his attire, his
-equipment, and his explanation of his presence didn’t ring true and
-Searles was wary even before the fellow, believing that Searles was
-still in San Francisco announced that he had been sent to find a man
-named Searles to look over some borax claims. “Do you know where they
-are?”
-
-Searles thought quickly. He had not as yet located his monuments nor
-filed a notice. He pointed down the valley. “They’re about 20 miles
-ahead....”
-
-The fellow went on his way and before he was out of sight, Searles was
-staking out the marsh and with one of the most colorful of Death Valley
-characters, Salty Bill Parkinson, began operations in 1872. Incorporated
-under the name of San Bernardino Borax Company, the business grew and
-was later sold to Borax Smith’s Pacific Coast Borax Company.
-
-Once while Searles was away hunting grizzlies, the Indians who had
-burned his mill, raided his ranch and drove his mules across the range.
-Suspecting the Piutes, he got his rifle and two pistols.
-
-“They’ll kill you,” he was warned.
-
-“I’m going to get those mules,” Searles snapped and followed their
-tracks across the Slate Range and Panamint Valley. High in the
-overlooking mountains he came upon the Indians feasting upon one of the
-animals and was immediately attacked with bows and arrows. He killed
-seven bucks and the rest ran, but an Indian’s arrow was buried in his
-eye. He jerked the arrow out, later losing the eye, pushed on and
-recovered the rest of his mules. Thereafter the Piutes avoided Searles
-and his marsh because, they said, he possessed the “evil eye.”
-
-On the same lake where Searles began operations, the town of Trona was
-established to house the employees and processing plants of the American
-Potash and Chemical Company. It was British owned, though this ownership
-was successfully concealed in the intricate corporate structure of the
-Pacific Coast Borax Company, but later sold for twelve million dollars
-to Hollanders who left the management as they found it. During World War
-II Uncle Sam discovered that the Hollanders were stooges for German
-financiers’ Potash Cartel.
-
-The Alien Property Custodian took over and ordered the sale of the stock
-to Americans. Today it is what its name implies—an American company.
-
-From the ooze where John Searles first camped to hunt grizzly bears, is
-being taken more than 100 commercial products and every day of your life
-you use one or more of them if you eat, bathe, or wear clothes, brush
-your teeth or deal with druggist, grocer, dentist or doctor.
-
-Fearing exhaustion of the visible supply (the ooze is 70 feet deep)
-tests were made in 1917 to determine what was below. Result, supply one
-century; value two billion dollars.
-
-Here are a few things containing the product of the ooze. Fertilizer for
-your flowers, orchards, and fields. Baking soda, dyes, lubricating oils,
-paper. Ethyl gasoline, porcelain, medicines, fumigants, leathers,
-solvents, cosmetics, textiles, ceramics, chemical and pharmaceutical
-preparations.
-
-About 1300 tons of these products are shipped out every day over a
-company-owned railroad and transshipped at Searles’ Station over the
-Southern Pacific, to go finally in one form or another into every home
-in America and most of those in the entire world.
-
-The weird valley meanders southward from the lake through blown-up
-mountains gorgeously colored and grimly defiant—a trip to thrill the
-lover of the wild and rugged.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter V
- But Where Was God?
-
-
-For years, on the edge of the road near Tule Hole, a rough slab marked
-Jim Dayton’s grave, on which were piled the bleached bones of Dayton’s
-horses. On the board were these words: “Jas. Dayton. Died 1898.”
-
-The accuracy of the date of Dayton’s death as given on the bronze plaque
-on the monument and on the marker which it replaced, has been
-challenged. The author of this book wrote the epitaph for the monument
-and the date on it is the date which was on the original marker—an old
-ironing board that had belonged to Pauline Gower. In a snapshot made by
-the writer, the date 1898, burned into the board with a redhot poker
-shows clearly.
-
-The two men who know most about the matter, Wash Cahill and Frank
-Hilton, whom he sent to find Dayton or his body, both declared the date
-on the marker correct.
-
-The late Ed Stiles brought Dayton into Death Valley. Stiles was working
-for Jim McLaughlin (Stiles called him McGlothlin), who operated a
-freighting service with headquarters at Bishop. McLaughlin ordered
-Stiles to take a 12 mule team and report to the Eagle Borax Works in
-Death Valley. “I can’t give you any directions. You’ll just have to find
-the place.” Stiles had never been in Death Valley nor could he find
-anyone who had. It was like telling a man to start across the ocean and
-find a ship named Sally.
-
-At Bishop Creek in Owens Valley Stiles decided he needed a helper. There
-he found but one person willing to go—a youngster barely out of his
-teens—Jim Dayton.
-
-Dayton remained in Death Valley and somewhat late in life, on one of his
-trips out, romance entered. After painting an intriguing picture of the
-lotus life a girl would find at Furnace Creek, he asked the lady to
-share it with him. She promptly accepted.
-
-A few months later, the bride suggested that a trip out would make her
-love the lotus life even more and so in the summer of 1898 she tearfully
-departed. Soon she wrote Jim in effect that it hadn’t turned out as she
-had hoped. Instead, she had become reconciled to shade trees, green
-lawns, neighbors, and places to go and if he wanted to live with her
-again he would just have to abandon the Death Valley paradise.
-
-Dayton loaded his wagon with all his possessions, called his dog and
-started for Daggett.
-
-Wash Cahill, who was to become vice-president of the borax company, was
-then working at its Daggett office. Cahill received from Dayton a letter
-which he saw from the date inside and the postmark on the envelope, had
-been held somewhere for at least two weeks before it was mailed.
-
-The letter contained Dayton’s resignation and explained why Dayton was
-leaving. He had left a reliable man in temporary charge and was bringing
-his household goods; also two horses which had been borrowed at Daggett.
-
-Knowing that Dayton should have arrived in Daggett at least a week
-before the actual arrival of the letter, Cahill was alarmed and
-dispatched Frank Hilton, a teamster and handy man, and Dolph Lavares to
-see what had happened.
-
-On the roadside at Tule Hole they found Dayton’s body, his dog patiently
-guarding it. Apparently Dayton had become ill, stopped to rest. “Maybe
-the sun beat him down. Maybe his ticker jammed,” said Shorty Harris,
-“but the horses were fouled in the harness and were standing up dead.”
-
-There could be no flowers for Jim Dayton nor peal of organ. So they went
-to his wagon, loosened the shovel lashed to the coupling pole. They dug
-a hole beside the road, rolled Jim Dayton’s body into it.
-
-The widow later settled in a comfortable house in town with neighbors
-close at hand. There she was trapped by fire. While the flames were
-consuming the building a man ran up. Someone said, “She’s in that upper
-room.” The brave and daring fellow tore his way through the crowd,
-leaped through the window into a room red with flames and dragged her
-out, her clothing still afire. He laid her down, beat out the flames,
-but she succumbed.
-
-A multitude applauded the hero. A little later over in Nevada another
-multitude lynched him. Between heroism and depravity—what?
-
-Although Tule Hole has long been a landmark of Death Valley, few know
-its story and this I believe to be its first publication.
-
-One day while resting his team, Stiles noticed a patch of tules growing
-a short distance off the road and taking a shovel he walked over,
-started digging a hole on what he thought was a million to one chance of
-finding water, and thus reduce the load that had to be hauled for use
-between springs. “I hadn’t dug a foot,” he told me “before I struck
-water. I dug a ditch to let it run off and after it cleared I drank
-some, found it good and enlarged the hole.”
-
-He went on to Daggett with his load. Repairs to his wagon train required
-a week and by the time he returned five weeks had elapsed. “I stopped
-the team opposite the tules, got out and started over to look at the
-hole I’d dug. When I got within a few yards three or four naked squaw
-hags scurried into the brush. I stopped and looked away toward the
-mountains to give ’em a chance to hide. Then I noticed two Indian bucks,
-each leading a riderless horse, headed for the Panamints. Then I knew
-what had happened.”
-
-Ed Stiles was a desert man and knew his Indians. Somewhere up in a
-Panamint canyon the chief had called a powwow and when it was over the
-head men had gone from one wickiup to another and looked over all the
-toothless old crones who no longer were able to serve, yet consumed and
-were in the way. Then they had brought the horses and with two strong
-bucks to guard them, they had ridden down the canyon and out across the
-desert to the water hole. There the crones had slid to the ground. The
-bucks had dropped a sack of piñon nuts. Of course, the toothless hags
-could not crunch the nuts and even if they could, the nuts would not
-last long. Then they would have to crawl off into the scrawny brush and
-grabble for herbs or slap at grasshoppers, but these are quicker than
-palsied hands and in a little while the sun would beat them down.
-
-The rest was up to God.
-
-The distinction of driving the first 20 mule team has always been a
-matter of controversy. Over a nation-wide hook-up, the National
-Broadcasting Co. once presented a playlet based upon these conflicting
-claims. A few days afterward, at the annual Death Valley picnic held at
-Wilmington, John Delameter, a speaker, announced that he’d made
-considerable research and was prepared to name the person actually
-entitled to that honor. The crowd, including three claimants of the
-title, moved closer, their ears cupped in eager attention as Delameter
-began to speak. One of the claimants nudged my arm with a confident
-smile, whispered, “Now you’ll know....” A few feet away his rivals,
-their pale eyes fixed on the speaker, hunched forward to miss no word.
-
-Mr. Delameter said: “There were several wagons of 16 mules and who drove
-the first of these, I do not know, but I do know who drove the first 20
-mule team.”
-
-Covertly and with gleams of triumph, the claimants eyed each other as
-Delameter paused to turn a page of his manuscript. Then with a loud
-voice he said: “I drove it myself!”
-
-May God have mercy on his soul.
-
-A few days later I rang the doorbell at the ranch house of Ed Stiles,
-almost surrounded by the city of San Bernardino. As no one answered, I
-walked to the rear, and across a field of green alfalfa saw a man
-pitching hay in a temperature of 120 degrees. It was Stiles who in 1876
-was teaming in Bodie—toughest of the gold towns.
-
-I sat down in the shade of his hay. He stood in the sun. I said, “Mr.
-Stiles, do you know who drove the first 20 mule team in Death Valley?”
-
-He gave me a kind of _et-tu, Brute_ look and smiled.
-
-“In the fall of 1882 I was driving a 12 mule team from the Eagle Borax
-Works to Daggett. I met a man on a buckboard who asked if the team was
-for sale. I told him to write Mr. McLaughlin. It took 15 days to make
-the round trip and when I got back I met the same man. He showed me a
-bill of sale for the team and hired me to drive it. He had an eight mule
-team and a new red wagon, driven by a fellow named Webster. The man in
-the buckboard was Borax Smith.
-
-“Al Maynard, foreman for Smith and Coleman, was at work grubbing out
-mesquite to plant alfalfa on what is now Furnace Creek Ranch. Maynard
-told me to take the tongue out of the new wagon and put a trailer tongue
-in it. ‘In the morning,’ he said, ‘hitch it to your wagon. Put a water
-wagon behind your trailer, hook up those eight mules with your team and
-go to Daggett.’
-
-“That was the first time that a 20 mule team was driven out of Death
-Valley. Webster was supposed to swamp for me. But when he saw his new
-red wagon and mules hitched up with my outfit, he walked into the office
-and quit his job.”
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VI
- Death Valley Geology
-
-
-The pleasure of your trip through the Big Sink will be enhanced if you
-know something about the structural features which are sure to arrest
-your attention.
-
-For undetermined ages Death Valley was desert. Then rivers and lakes.
-Rivers dried. Lakes evaporated. Again, desert. It is believed that in
-thousands of years there have been no changes other than those caused by
-earthquakes and erosion.
-
-It is no abuse of the superlative to say that the foremost authority
-upon Death Valley geology is Doctor Levi Noble, who has studied it under
-the auspices of the U.S. Geological Survey since 1917. He has ridden
-over more of it than anyone and because of his studies, earlier
-conclusions of geologists are scrapped today.
-
-From a pamphlet published by the American Geological Society with the
-permission of the U. S. Dept. of Interior, now out of print, I quote a
-few passages which Doctor Noble, its author, once described to me as
-“dull reading, even for scientists.”
-
-“The southern Death Valley region contains rocks of at least eight
-geologic systems whose aggregate thickness certainly exceeds 45,000 feet
-for the stratified rocks alone.”
-
-“The dissected playa or lake beds in Amargosa Valley between Shoshone
-and Tecopa contain elephant remains that are Pleistocene....”
-
-“Rainbow Mountain is one of the geological show places of the Death
-Valley region.... Here the Amargosa river has cut a canyon 1000 feet
-deep.... The mountain is made up of thrust slices of Cambrian and
-pre-Cambrian rocks alternating with slices of Tertiary rocks, all of
-which dip in general about 30 to 40 degrees eastward, but are also
-anticlinally arched.”
-
-“None of the geologic terms in common use appear exactly to fit this
-mosaic of large tightly packed individual blocks of different ages
-occupying a definite zone above a major thrust fault.”
-
-The significant feature is that a stratum that began with creation may
-lie above one that is an infant in the age of rock—a puzzle that will
-engage men of Levi Noble’s talents for years to come. But one doesn’t
-have to be a member of the American Geological Society to find thrills
-in other gripping features.
-
-Throughout the area south of Shoshone are many hot springs containing
-boron and fluorine—some with traces of radium. The water is believed to
-come from a buried river. The source of other hot springs in the Death
-Valley area is unknown.
-
-More startling features were related to Shorty Harris and me at
-Bennett’s Well in the bottom of Death Valley where we met one of
-Shorty’s friends. Lanky and baked brown, in each wrinkle of his face the
-sun had etched a smile. “Shorty,” he said, “yachts will be sailing
-around here some day. There’s a passage to the sea, sure as hell.”
-
-“What makes you think so?” Shorty asked.
-
-“Those salt pools. Just come from there. I was watching the crystals;
-felt the ground move a little. Pool started sloshing. A sea serpent with
-eyes big as a wagon wheel and teeth full of kelp stuck his head up.
-Where’d he come from? No kelp in this valley. That prove anything?”
-
-Ubehebe Crater is believed to have resulted from the only major change
-in the topography of the valley since its return to desert, but John
-Delameter, old time freighter, thought geologists didn’t know what they
-were talking about. “When I first saw Saratoga Spring I could straddle
-it. Full of fish four inches long. Next time, three springs and a lake.
-Fish shrunk to one inch and different shaped head.”
-
-Actually these fish are the degenerate descendants of the larger fish
-that lived in the streams and lakes that once watered Death Valley—an
-interesting study in the survival of species. The real name, _Cyprinodon
-Macularius_, is too large a mouthful for the natives so they are called
-desert sardines, though they are in reality a small killifish.
-
-Dan Breshnahan, in charge of a road crew working between Furnace Creek
-Inn and Stove Pipe Well, ordered some of the men to dig a hole to sink
-some piles. Two feet beneath a hard crust they encountered muck. When
-they hit the pile with a sledge it would bounce back. Dan put a board
-across the top. With a man on each end of the board, the rebound was
-prevented and the pile driven into hard earth. “I’m convinced that under
-that road is a lake of mire and Lord help the fellow who goes through,”
-Dan said.
-
-A heavily loaded 20 mule team wagon driven by Delameter broke the
-surface of this ooze and two days were required to get it out. To test
-the depth, he tied an anvil to his bridle rein and let it down. The lead
-line of a 20 mule team is 120 feet long. It sank (he said) the length of
-the line and reached no bottom.
-
-On Ash Meadows, a few miles from Death Valley Junction and on the side
-of a mountain is what is known as The Devil’s Hole which it is said has
-no bottom. True or false, none has ever been found.
-
-A steep trail leads down to the water which will then be over your head.
-Indians will tell you that a squaw fell into this hole within the memory
-of the living and that she was sucked to the bottom and came out at Big
-Spring several miles distant. The latter is a large hole in the middle
-of the desert and from its throat, also bottomless, pours a large volume
-of clear, warm water.
-
-“Explored?” shouted Dad Fairbanks one day when a white-haired prospector
-declared every foot of Death Valley had been worked over. “It isn’t
-scratched!”
-
-Only the day before (in 1934), Dr. Levi Noble had been working in the
-mountains overlooking the valley on the east rim. Through his field
-glasses he saw a formation that looked like a natural bridge. When he
-returned to Shoshone he phoned Harry Gower, Pacific Borax Co. official
-at Furnace Creek of his discovery and suggested that Gower investigate.
-
-Since Furnace Creek Inn wanted such attractions for its guests, Gower
-went immediately and almost within rifle shot of a road used since the
-Seventies, he found the bridge.
-
-That too is Death Valley—land of continual surprise.
-
-Death Valley is the hottest spot in North America. The U.S. Army, in a
-test of clothing suitable for hot weather made some startling
-discoveries. According to records, on one day in every seven years the
-temperature reaches 180 on the valley floor. But five feet above ground
-where official temperatures are recorded the thermometer drops 55
-degrees to 125.
-
-The highest temperature ever recorded was 134 at Furnace Creek
-Ranch—only two degrees below the world’s record in Morocco. In 1913, the
-week of July 7-14, the temperature never got below 127. Official
-recording differs little from that of Arabia, India, and lower
-California, but the duration is longer.
-
-Left in the sun, water in a pail of ordinary size will evaporate in an
-hour. Bodies decompose two or three hours after rigor mortis begins but
-some have been found in certain areas at higher altitudes dried like
-leather. A rattlesnake dropped into a bucket and set in the sun will die
-in 20 minutes.
-
-The evaporation of salt from the body is rapid and many prospectors
-swallow a mouthful of common salt before going out into a killing sun.
-
-One of the pitiable features of death on the desert is that bodies are
-found with fingers worn to the bone from frantic digging and often
-beneath the cadaver is water at two feet.
-
-There is also legendary weather for outside consumption. Told to see Joe
-Ryan as a source of dependable information, a tourist approached Joe and
-asked what kind of temperature one would encounter in the valley.
-
-“Heat is always exaggerated,” said Joe. “Of course it gets a little warm
-now and then. Hottest I ever saw was in August when I crossed the valley
-with Mike Lane. I was walking ahead when I heard Mike coughing. I looked
-around. Seemed to be choking and I went back. Mike held out his palm and
-in it was a gold nugget and Mike was madder’n hell. ‘My teeth melted,’
-Mike wailed. ‘I’m going to kill that dentist. He told me they would
-stand heat up to 500 degrees.’”
-
-I met an engaging liar at Bradbury Well one day. He was gloriously drunk
-and was telling the group about him that he was a great grand-son of the
-fabulous Paul Bunyan.
-
-“Of course,” he said, “Gramp was a mighty man, but he was dumb at that.
-One time I saw him put a handful of pebbles in his mouth and blow ’em
-one at a time at a flock of wild geese flying a mile high. He got every
-goose, but how did he end up? Not so good. He straddled the Pacific
-ocean one day and prowled around in China, and saw a cross-eyed
-pigeon-toed midget with buck teeth. Worse, she had a temper that would
-melt pig-iron.
-
-“Gramp went nuts over her. What happened? He married her. She had some
-trained fleas. If Gramp got sassy, she put fleas in his ears and ants in
-his pants and stood by, laughing at him, while he scratched himself to
-death. Hell of an end for Gramp, wasn’t it?”
-
-In the late fall, winter, and early spring perfect days are the rule and
-if you are among those who like uncharted trails, do not hurry. Then
-when night comes you will climb a moonbeam and play among the stars. You
-will learn too, that life goes on away from box scores, radio puns, and
-girls with a flair for Veuve Cliquot.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VII
- Indians of the Area
-
-
-The Indians of the Death Valley country were dog eaters—both those of
-Shoshone and Piute origin. Both had undoubtedly degenerated as a result
-of migrations. The Shoshones (Snakes) had originally lived in Idaho,
-Oregon, and Washington. The Piutes in Utah, Idaho, and Nevada.
-
-The true blood connection of coast Indians may well be a matter of
-dispute. “Almost every 15 or 20 leagues you’ll find a distinct dialect,”
-was said of California Indians. (Boscana in Robinson’s Life in
-California, p. 220.) Most of them were hardly above the animal in
-intelligence or morality. Though the Death Valley Indians are called
-Shoshone and Piutes, to what extent their blood justifies the
-classification is the white man’s guess.
-
-Those whom Dr. French found in the Panamint said they had no tribal
-name. Many California tribes were given names by the whites, these names
-being the American’s interpretation of a sound uttered by one group to
-designate another. “They do not seem to have any names for themselves.”
-(Schoolcraft’s Arch., Vol. 3.)
-
-All seem to agree however, that the farther north the Indian lived, the
-more intelligent he was and the better his physique—which would indicate
-a relation to the better diet in the lush, well-watered and game-filled
-valleys and foothills. Some of the women are described by early writers
-as “exceedingly pretty.” Others, “flat-faced and pudgy.” “The Indians in
-the northern portion ... are vastly superior in stature and intellect to
-those found in the southern part.” (Hubbard, Golden Era, 1856.)
-
-Certainly those found in Death Valley country reflected in their persons
-and in their character the niggardly land and the struggle for survival
-upon it. They were treacherous as its terrain. Cruel as its cactus.
-Tenacious as its stunted life.
-
-It is interesting to note the range of opinion and the conclusions drawn
-by earlier travelers.
-
-Of the Shoshones: “Very rigid in their morals.” (Remi and Brenchley’s
-Journal, Vol. 1, p. 85.)
-
-“They of all men are lowest, lying in a state of semi-torpor in holes in
-the ground in winter and in spring, crawling forth and eating grass on
-their hands and knees until able to regain their feet ... living in
-filth ... no bridles on their passions ... surely room for no missing
-links between them and brutes.” (Bancroft’s Native Races, Vol. 1, p.
-440.)
-
-“It is common practice ... to gamble away their wives and children.... A
-husband will prostitute his wife to a stranger for a trifling present.”
-(Ibid. ch. 4, Vol. 1.)
-
-“Our Piute has a peculiar way of getting a foretaste of connubial
-bliss—cohabiting experimentally with his intended for two or three days
-previous to the nuptial ceremony, at the end of which time either party
-can stay further proceedings to indulge further trials until a companion
-more congenial is found.” (S. F. Medical Press, Vol. 3, p. 155. See
-also, Lewis and Clark’s Travels, p. 307.)
-
-“The Piutes are the most degraded and least intellectual Indians known
-to trappers.” (Farnham’s Life, p. 336.)
-
-“Pah-utes are undoubtedly the most docile Indians on the continent.”
-(Indian Affairs Report, 1859, p. 374.)
-
-“Honest and trustworthy, but lazy and dirty,” is said of the Shoshones.
-(Remi and Brenchley’s Journal, p. 123.) Some ethnologists declare they
-cannot be identified with any other American tribe.
-
-Wives were purchased, cash or credit. Polygamy prevailed. Unmarried
-women belonged to all, but Gibbs says women bewailed their virginity for
-three days prior to marriage. “They allow but one wife.” (Prince in
-California Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861.)
-
-Husbands were allowed to kill their mothers-in-law. The heart of a
-valiant enemy killed in battle was eaten raw or cut into pieces and made
-into soup. Women captives of other tribes were ravished, sold or kept as
-slaves. Some Southern California tribes sold their women and
-occasionally tribes were found without a single squaw.
-
-“They are exceedingly virtuous.” (Remi and Brenchley’s Journal, Vol. 1,
-pp. 1-23-8.)
-
-“Given to sensual excesses.” (Farnham’s Travel, p. 62.)
-
-“The Nevada Shoshones are the most pure and uncorrupted aborigines on
-the continent ... scrupulously clean ... chaste.” (Prince, California
-Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861.)
-
-Thus the Indian who came or was driven to this wasteland evoked
-conflicting opinions and the real picture is vague.
-
-The lowest of California Indians is believed to have been the Digger,
-so-called because he existed chiefly upon roots and lived in burrows of
-his own making, but his isolation by ethnologists is not convincing. He
-was found around Shoshone by Fremont and Kit Carson and inhabited
-valleys to the north and west, but in the Death Valley region the Piute
-and Shoshone were dominant.
-
-Blood vengeance was deep-rooted. Found with the Indian collection of Dr.
-Simeon Lee at Carson City was a revealing manuscript that tells how
-swiftly it struck.
-
-Mudge rode up to another Indian standing on a Carson City street and
-without warning shot him dead and galloped away. The dead man had two
-cousins working at Lake Tahoe. The murder had occurred at 9:30 a.m. and
-by some means of communication unknown to whites, they were on Mudge’s
-trail within two hours and had found him. Mudge promptly killed them
-both and fled again. Sheriff Ulric engaged Captain Johnnie, a Piute, to
-track the slayer. He found Mudge’s lair, but Mudge was a sure shot, well
-protected and to rush him meant certain death. The posse decided to keep
-watch until thirst or hunger forced him out. “Me fix um,” said Captain
-Johnnie.
-
-He disappeared, but soon returned with an enormous amount of tempting
-food which he contrived to place within easy reach of Mudge. “Him see
-moppyass (food). Eat bellyful and fall down asleep.”
-
-That is exactly what happened and old Demi-John, the father of the
-murdered boys crawled stealthily through the sage and with his hunting
-knife severed the head from the sleeping Mudge’s body.
-
-In Mono county Piutes killed the Chinese owner of a cafe and fed the
-carcass to their dogs. In court they blandly confessed and justified it,
-claiming the Chinaman had killed and pickled one of their missing
-tribesmen and then sold and served to them portions of the victim as
-“corned beef and cabbage.”
-
-For the desert Indian life was raw to the bone. He was an unemotional,
-fatalistic creature as ruthless as the land. In the struggle to live, he
-had acquired endurance and cunning. He knew his desert—its moods, its
-stingy dole, its chary tolerance of life. He knew where the mountain
-sheep hid, the screw-bean grew and the fat lizard crawled. He knew where
-the drop of water seeped from the lone hill. He combed the lower levels
-of the range for chuckwalla, edible snakes, horned toads—anything with
-flesh; stuffed the kill into bags and preserved them for later use. He
-made flour from mesquite beans; stored piñons, roots, herbs in his
-desperate fight to survive, and anything that crawled, flew, or walked
-was food. I have seen a squaw squatted beside the carcass of a dog,
-picking out the firmer flesh.
-
-When the Piute came to a spring, the first thing he did was to look
-about for a flat rock which he was sure to find if a member of his tribe
-had previously been there. Kneeling, he would skim the water from the
-surface and dash it upon this rock. Then he smelled the rock. If there
-was an odor of onion or garlic, he knew it contained arsenic and was
-deadly. Naturally, he would be concerned about another water hole. He
-had only to look about him. He would find partially imbedded in the
-earth several stones fixed in the form of a circle not entirely closed.
-The opening pointed in the direction of the next water. The distance to
-that water was indicated by stones inside the circle. There he would
-find for example, three stones pointing toward the opening. He knew that
-each of those stones indicated one “sleep.” Therefore he would have to
-sleep three times before he got there. In other words, it was three
-days’ journey.
-
-But which of these trails leading to the water should he take? There
-might be several trails converging at the water hole. The matter was
-decided for him. He walked along each of those trails for a few feet.
-Beside one of them he would find an oblong stone. By its shape and
-position he knew that was the trail that led to the next water.
-
-Under such circumstances a man would perhaps wonder if upon arrival at
-the next water hole he would find that water also unfit to use. The
-information was at hand. If, upon top of that oblong stone he found a
-smaller stone placed crosswise and white in color, he knew the water
-would be good water. If a piece of black malpai was there instead of the
-white stone, he knew the next water would be poison also.
-
-Not infrequently he would find other information at the water hole if
-there were boulders about, or chalky cliffs upon which the Indian could
-place his picture writing. If he saw the crude drawing of a lone man, it
-indicated that the land about was uninhabited except by hunters, but if
-upon the pictured torso were marks indicating the breasts of a woman, he
-knew there was a settlement about and he would find squaws and children
-and something to eat.
-
-Frequently other information was left for this wayfaring Indian. Under
-conspicuous stones about, he might find a feather with a hole punched
-through it or one that was notched. The former indicated that one had
-been there who had killed his man. The notch indicated that he had cut a
-throat.
-
-Since there was a difference between the moccasins of Indian tribes, the
-dust about would often inform him whether the buck who went before was
-friend or enemy.
-
-Like all American aborigines, the Piute had his medicine man, but the
-manner of his choosing is not clear. The one selected had to accept the
-role, though the honor never thrilled him, because he knew that when the
-score of death was three against him he would join his lost patients in
-the happy hereafter. Occasionally he was stoned to death by the
-relatives of the first lost patient and with the approval of the rest of
-the tribe. Not infrequently it was believed the medicine man’s departed
-spirit then entered the medicine man’s kin and they were also butchered
-or stoned to death.
-
-
-Note. Early writers refer to Pau Eutahs, Pah Utes, Paiuches, Pyutes, and
-Paiutes. The word Piute is believed to mean true Ute.
-
-Bancroft claimed the Piutes and Pah Utes were separate tribes, the
-latter being the Trout or Ochi Indians of Walker River; the former the
-Tule (or Toy) Indians of Pyramid Lake.
-
-There was an undetermined number of branches of the original Utah stock.
-Besides the above, there was another tribe called by other Indians,
-Cozaby Piutes, Cozaby being the Indian name of a worm that literally
-covered the shores of Mono Lake. This worm was a principal food of the
-tribe.
-
-Though “Piute” is the spelling justifiably used throughout the region,
-“Pahute” was chosen a few years ago by a group of scholars as the
-preferable form.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VIII
- Desert Gold. Too Many Fractions
-
-
-On the Nevada desert wind-whipped Mount Davidson (or Sun Mountain)
-guided the Forty Niners across the flat Washoe waste. At its foot they
-rested and cursed it because it impeded their progress to the California
-goldfields. Ten years later they rushed back because it had become the
-fabulous Comstock, said to have produced more than $880,000,000, though
-the Nevada State bureau of mines places the figure at $347,892,336. The
-truth lies somewhere between.
-
-“Pancake” Comstock had acquired, more by bluff and cunning than labor,
-title to gold claims others had discovered and cursed a “blue stuff”
-that slowed the recovery of visible particles of gold. Later the “blue
-stuff” was blessed as incredibly rich silver. A mountain of gold and
-silver side by side. It just couldn’t be.
-
-A new crop of overnight millionaires. New feet feeling for the first
-step on the social ladder. The Mackays, the Floods, the Fairs, the
-Hearsts.
-
-All this was more like current than twenty year old history to Jim
-Butler on May 18, 1900, when his hungry burro strayed up a hill in
-search of grass. Soon a city stood where the burro ate and soon
-adventurers were poking around in the canyons of Death Valley, 66 miles
-south.
-
-Jim Butler, more rancher than gold hunter was a likable happy-go-lucky
-fellow, who could strum a banjo and sing a song. But when he found the
-burro in Sawtooth Pass he saw a ledge which looked as if it might have
-values. Born in El Dorado county in California in 1855, Butler was more
-or less gold conscious, but unexcited he stuck a few samples in his
-pocket and went on after the burro.
-
-A story survives which states that a half-breed Shoshone Indian known as
-Charles Fisherman had told Butler of the existence of the ore without
-disclosing its location and that Butler was actually searching for it
-when the burro strayed. The preponderance of evidence, however,
-indicates that Butler was en route to Belmont to see his friend, Tasker
-Oddie, who was batching there in a cabin. He gave Oddie one of the
-samples and after his visit, left for home.
-
-Oddie laid the sample on a window sill and forgot it.
-
-In Klondike a few days later, Butler showed another sample to Frank
-Higgs, an assayer. Half in jest he said: “Frank, I’ve no money to pay
-for an assay, but I’ll cut you in on this stuff if it shows anything.”
-
-Higgs looked at the sample and returned it to Butler: “Just a waste of
-time. Forget it.”
-
-Later in Belmont Henry Broderick, a prospector dropped in for a visit
-with Oddie and noticed the sample Butler had given Oddie and looked it
-over. “This ore has good values,” he told Oddie. “It’s worth
-investigating.” Oddie knew that Broderick’s opinion was not to be
-underrated.
-
-Oddie was a young lawyer with little practice and a salary of $100 a
-year as District Attorney. Belmont had a population of 100. Oddie didn’t
-have two dollars to risk, but he took the sample to W. C. Gayhart at
-Austin and offered Gayhart a fractional interest if he’d assay it. With
-few customers, Gayhart took a chance.
-
-The ore showed values and Oddie was mildly excited. Butler lived 35
-miles away in wild, difficult country and Oddie wrote him, enclosing the
-assay. Several weeks passed before Butler received the letter. Then
-Butler and his wife returned to Belmont only to find Oddie could not go
-with them. Jim and Mrs. Butler now returned home, loaded provisions,
-tools, and camp equipment in a wagon and three days later, Aug. 26,
-1900, they reached Sawtooth Pass and made camp.
-
-The Butlers staked out eight claims. Jim took for himself the one he
-considered best. He named it The Desert Queen. Mrs. Butler chose another
-and called it Mizpah. Jim located another for Oddie and named it Burro.
-The best proved to be Mrs. Butler’s Mizpah.
-
-Returning to Belmont, they found Oddie at home. The matter of recording
-the location notices had to be attended to. “That will cost ten or
-fifteen dollars,” Butler said. Neither of them had any money. Wils
-Brougher was recorder of Nye county and Oddie’s friend, so Oddie made a
-proposition to Brougher. “If you’ll pay the recorder’s fees we’ll give
-you an eighth.”
-
-Brougher said, “Nye county is one of the largest counties in the United
-States, but there are only 400 people in it and I’m not getting many
-fees these days. Leave ’em.”
-
-After they’d gone Brougher looked at the assay Oddie had left and
-decided to take a chance. The setup was now: Butler and his wife
-five-eighths, Oddie, Brougher, and Gayhart, one-eighth each.
-
-They managed to pool resources and obtained $25 in cash to provide
-material and provisions.
-
-Brougher, Oddie, Jim, and Mrs. Butler set out in October, 1900. Mrs.
-Butler did the cooking while the men dug, drilled, and blasted two tons
-of ore. The ore was sacked and hauled 150 miles to Austin and shipped to
-a San Francisco smelter. The returns showed high values but still they
-had a major problem—money to develop the claims. Because the country had
-been prospected and pronounced worthless, men of millions were not
-backing a banjo-picking rancher and a young lawyer with no money and few
-clients. The answer was leasing to idle miners willing to gamble muscle
-against money. The venture made many of them rich. The others recovered
-more than wages. As the leases expired the owners took them over.
-
-The camp where Mrs. Butler cooked became the site of the Mizpah Hotel
-and the City of Tonopah and the hill where the burro strayed produced
-many millions.
-
-There are several versions of the Butler discovery and the writer does
-not pretend that his own is the true one. He can only say that he knew
-many of those who were first on the scene and some of those who held the
-first and best leases, and his conclusions are based on their personal
-narratives.
-
-Oddie became one of the moguls of mining, Nevada’s governor, and a
-senator of the United States.
-
-Twenty-six miles south of Tonopah was a place known as Grandpa, so named
-because there were always a few old prospectors camped at the water hole
-known as Rabbit Springs. These patriarchs had combed the desert about,
-for years without success.
-
-Al Myers, a prospector working on a hill nearby, came to the Grandpa
-Spring to fill a barrel of water and found his friend, Shorty Harris,
-who had been camping there, packing his burros to leave. “Better hang
-around, Shorty,” Al advised. “I’m getting color.”
-
-“Luck to you,” Shorty laughed. “But any place where these old grandpas
-can’t find color, is no place for me.”
-
-In six weeks Myers and Tom Murphy made the big strike (1903) and Grandpa
-became Goldfield—one of the West’s most spectacular camps. Some of the
-more promising claims of Goldfield were leased, the most valuable being
-that of Hays and Monette, on the Mohawk. In 106 days the lease produced
-$5,000,000.
-
-Out of the Mohawk one car was shipped which yielded over $579,000 and
-ore in all of the better mines was so rich that Goldfield quickly became
-the high-grader’s paradise. Though wages at Tonopah were twice those
-paid at Goldfield, miners deserted the older camp for the lower wage and
-made more than the difference by concealing high-grade in the cuffs of
-their overalls or in other ingenious receptacles built into their
-clothing. Miners and muckers took the girls of their choice out of
-honkies and installed them in cottages. More than one of these gorgeous
-creatures, having found her man in her boom-town crib, later ascended
-life’s grand stairway to live virtuously and bravely in a Wilshire
-mansion or a swank hotel.
-
-To stop the stealing, a change room was installed but many had already
-secured themselves against want. A wealthy resident of California once
-told me: “With the proceeds of the high-grade I took home I built
-rentals that led to bank connections and more lucky investments.
-Everybody was doing it.”
-
-Tex Rickard, a gambler and saloon man, already known in Alaska and San
-Francisco for spectacular adventures, here began his career as a sports
-promoter in the ill-advised Jeffries-Johnson fight.
-
-One morning his Great Northern had more than its usual crowd. Men stood
-three deep at the bar, games were busy and Billy Murray, the cashier was
-rushed. It was not unusual for desert men to leave their money with
-Murray. He would tag and sack it and toss it aside, but today there was
-a steady stream being poked at him. Finally it got in his way and he had
-it taken through the alley to the bank, but the deluge continued.
-
-When it again got in his way, his assistant having stepped out, Billy
-took it to the bank himself. There he learned the reason for the flood
-of money. A run was being made on the John S. Cook bank. He satisfied
-himself that the bank was safe and returned to his cage. As fast as the
-money came in the front door, it went out the back and Billy Murray thus
-saved the bank and the town from collapse.
-
-A resourceful youngster who knew that wherever men recklessly acquire,
-they recklessly spend, dropped in from Oregon, got a job in Tom
-Kendall’s Tonopah Club as a dealer. Good looking and likable, he made
-friends, took over the gambling concession and was soon taking over
-Goldfield and the state of Nevada. He was George Wingfield, who, when
-offered a seat in the United States Senate, calmly declined it.
-
-Goldfield is only 40 miles from the northern boundary of Death Valley
-National Monument and was in bonanza when Shorty Harris walked into the
-Great Northern saloon. “I’ve been drinking gulch likker,” he told the
-bartender. “Give me the best in the house.”
-
-The bartender reached for a bottle. “This is 100 proof 14 year old
-bourbon.”
-
-Shorty drank it, laid a goldpiece on the bar. “Good stuff. I’ll have
-another.”
-
-“You must be celebrating,” the bartender said.
-
-“You guessed it,” Shorty said and laid a piece of high-grade beside his
-glass. “I’ve got more gold where that came from than Uncle Sam’s got in
-the mint.”
-
-A faro dealer noticed the ore and picked it up. “Good looking rock,” he
-said and passed it to a promoter standing by. In a moment a crowd had
-gathered. “Looks like Breyfogle quartz,” the promoter said and led
-Shorty aside. “I can make you a million on this. Want to sell?”
-
-“Not on your life,” Shorty said, but after pressure and a few drinks, he
-agreed to part with an eighth interest. The deal closed, he left to see
-friends around town. He found each of them in a barroom. News of his
-strike had preceded him and each time he laid the ore on the bar someone
-wanted an interest. Someone called him aside and someone bought the
-drinks.
-
-Within an hour every fortune hunter in Goldfield was looking for Shorty
-Harris, each believing Shorty had found the Lost Breyfogle.
-
-When he left town, weaving in the dust of his burros, sixteen men wished
-him well, for each had a piece of paper conveying a one-eighth interest
-in Shorty’s claim.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter IX
- Romance Strikes the Parson
-
-
-Scorning Al Myers’s advice to locate a claim on the Goldfield hill,
-Shorty Harris headed south, prospecting as he went until he reached
-Monte Beatty’s ranch where he camped with Beatty, a squaw man. “I’m
-going to look at a rhyolite formation in the hills four miles west. It
-looks good—that hill,” Shorty told him.
-
-“Forget it,” Beatty said, “I’ve combed every inch.”
-
-With faith in Beatty’s knowledge of the country, he abandoned the trip
-and crossed the Amargosa desert to Daylight Springs, found the country
-full of amateur prospectors excited by the discoveries at Tonopah and
-Goldfield. After a few weeks he decided there was nothing worthwhile to
-be found. “I had a hunch Beatty could be wrong about that formation and
-decided to go back.”
-
-He was well outfitted and with five burros and more than enough
-provisions, was ready to go when, out of the bush came a cleancut
-youngster—a novice who had brought his wife along.
-
-“Shorty,” he said, “we’re out of grub. Can you spare any?”
-
-“Sure. But you’d be better off to go with me. I have enough grub for all
-of us.”
-
-Ed Cross had all to gain; nothing to lose by following an experienced
-prospector.
-
-At a water hole known as Buck Springs they made camp. Within an hour
-they went up a canyon, each working a side of it. Shorty broke a piece
-of quartz from an outcropping; saw shades of turquoise and jade. “Come
-a-runnin’ Ed,” he shouted. “We’ve got the world by the tail and a
-downhill pull.”
-
-They staked out the discovery claims. “How many more should we locate?”
-Cross asked.
-
-“None. Give the other fellow a chance. If this is as good as we think,
-we’ve got all the money we’ll ever need. If it isn’t and the other
-fellow makes a good showing it will help us sell this one.”
-
-They went to Goldfield. Shorty showed the sample to Bob Montgomery, an
-old friend. Bob was skeptical. But in an hour the news was out and
-Goldfield en masse headed for the new strike. Those, who couldn’t get
-conveyances, walked. Some pulled burro carts across the desert. Some
-started out with wheelbarrows. Jack Salsbury began to move lumber.
-Others brought merchandise, barrels of liquor. Everything to build a
-town.
-
-“Specimens of my ore,” Shorty said, “were used by Tiffany for ring
-settings, lavallieres, bracelets. It went to Paris and London. Ore
-broken from the ledge sold for $50 a pound. I must have given away
-thousands of dollars’ worth of it for souvenirs.”
-
-Overnight Rhyolite was born. Shorty bought a barrel of liquor, drove a
-row of nails around the barrel, hung tin dippers on the nails and
-invited the town to quench its thirst. Two railroads came. One, 114
-miles from Las Vegas. Another, 200 miles from Ludlow.
-
-“Two things influenced me in naming it Bullfrog,” Shorty said. “Ed had
-asked, ‘what’ll we name it?’ As I looked at the green ore in my hand, a
-frog bellowed. ‘Bullfrog,’ I said.” (One writer has stated erroneously
-that there is not a bullfrog on the desert.)
-
-The tycoons of mining and their agents appeared as if borne on magic
-carpets and in a little while men who would have turned him from their
-doors, were fawning around the little man with the golden smile and the
-ugly brawl for the Bullfrog was on—a struggle between cheap promoters
-who gave him cheap whiskey and moguls who gave him champagne.
-
-Scores of yarns have been written about the sale of the Bullfrog. It was
-one of the few things in Shorty’s life which he discussed with reserve.
-In my residence two years before he died and in my presence he told my
-wife, to whom he was singularly devoted, the sordid story. “Cross had a
-good head,” Shorty said. “He attended to business, sold his interest and
-retired to a good ranch.
-
-“I woke up one morning and judging from the empties, I must have had a
-grand evening. I reached for a full pint on the table and under it was a
-piece of paper with a note. I read it and learned for the first time
-that I’d sold the Bullfrog.”
-
-“The law would have released you from that contract,” I said.
-
-“I’d signed it,” he answered quietly.
-
-I thought of the crumbling adobe on the Ballarat flat and the lean years
-that followed.
-
-“At that, I got good money for a fellow like me,” he added. “I’ve never
-wanted for anything.”
-
-A fortune blown like a bubble meant absolutely nothing—stopped no laugh;
-dimmed no hope; quenched no fire in his eager eyes.
-
-“If I’d got those millions the big boys would have hauled me off to
-town, put a white shirt on me. Maybe they would have made me believe
-Shorty Harris was important. ‘Mr. Harris this and Mr. Harris that.’ I’ve
-got something they can’t take away. I step out of my cabin every morning
-and look it over—100 miles of outdoors. All mine.”
-
-The future of Rhyolite seemed assured when Bob Montgomery sold to
-Charles M. Schwab, president of Bethlehem Steel Company, his interest in
-the claim known as the Montgomery Shoshone for more than $2,000,000.
-
-The discovery of this claim has been accredited to Shoshone Johnnie and
-historians have said that Montgomery bought it from Johnnie for a pair
-of overalls, a buggy, and a few dollars. Actually Bob Montgomery was
-among the first on the scene following Shorty’s discovery strike and
-located the claim himself. Even if Johnnie had located it Montgomery
-would have been entitled to one-half interest for the reason that he had
-been grubstaking Johnnie for years.
-
-It never paid as a mine, but America was gold mad and the two railroads
-which brought mail for Rhyolite also carried stock certificates out and
-the promoters lost nothing.
-
-The strike at Bullfrog was made in 1904. Rhyolite attained a population
-of about 14,000 at its peak—then started downward. On January 1, 1926, I
-made a camp fire in its empty streets and beside it tried to sleep
-through a biting wind that seemed aptly enough a dirge. The next morning
-I poked around in the abandoned stores to marvel at things of value left
-behind. Chinaware and silver in hurriedly abandoned houses and in the
-leading cafe. The cribs still bore the castoff ribbons and silks of the
-girls and for all I know, the satin slipper which I found on a bed may
-have been the one that Shorty Harris filled with champagne to toast the
-charms of Flaming Jane.
-
-I walked up to the vacant depot. Across the door, through which
-thousands had passed from incoming trains with youth and hope and the
-eagerness of life, lay the long-dead carcass of a cow. It fitted, it
-seemed to me, the scene about.
-
-Like Tonopah, Skidoo on top of Tucki Mountain overlooking Death Valley
-may be accredited to the straying of a burro in 1905.
-
-John Ramsey and John Thompson, two prospectors, camped overnight in
-Emigrant Canyon which leads into Death Valley. The grass about was lush
-and they thought it safe to turn the burros loose. The burros strayed
-during the night and because the walls on the east side of the canyon
-are perpendicular, search was immediately confined to the sloping west
-area. But the burros, always unpredictable, found a way to ascend Tucki
-Mountain and there they were found—one of them actually straddling an
-outcropping of gold.
-
-This happened on the 23rd day of the month and because of a popular
-current slang expression, “Twenty-three for you—skidoo,” (meaning
-phooey, or shut up) the claim and the town were named Skidoo.
-
-Bob Montgomery bought the claim on sight. A winding road with a
-spectacular view of Death Valley was built, a mill installed on the side
-of Telephone Canyon and water brought 22 miles from Panamint Canyon. A
-long rambling building on top of the mountain served as offices and
-living quarters for officials. A broad porch encircled it and afforded a
-sweeping and unforgettable view of Death Valley country.
-
-On the area about this building was the company town. Adjoining was “Our
-Town” where the cribs and honkies thrived.
-
-I first visited it with Shorty Harris, holding my breath most of the way
-on the steep, narrow, and winding road. We appropriated the company
-building for our temporary home. Shorty had owned claims there and had
-helped build the road.
-
-Montgomery paid $60,000 for the claims and took out $9,000,000 before
-production costs exceeded his profits, when work was abandoned.
-
-During World War I, Montgomery sold the pipe, which had brought the
-water to Skidoo, to Standard Oil Company at a price far in excess of its
-cost. That was the end of Skidoo.
-
-More interesting to me than the fate of Skidoo was that of Blonde Betty
-and the traveling preacher, of which Shorty was reminded when we
-strolled by the crib in which Betty had lived.
-
-“Skagway Thompson, as fine a chap as ever drew a cork, died right over
-there in that shack and we decided he deserved a nice planting.
-Everybody liked Skagway. Only women around at that time were crib girls
-and they banked his grave with wild flowers and I got this sky pilot to
-say a few words.
-
-“He was a young fellow, good looking and agreeable. I told him Skagway’s
-friends thought it would be nice if one of the women in town would sing
-Skagway’s favorite song. ‘It’s called “When the Wedding Bells Are
-Ringing”’ I said, ‘and I hope you don’t mind if it’s not in the hymn
-books.’ I didn’t tell him the girl who was going to sing it was Blonde
-Betty—a chippy—figuring he’d be on his way before he found out. That gal
-could sing like a flock of larks and after the service the preacher
-barged up to me and said he wanted to meet Betty and would I introduce
-him.
-
-“There was no way out and besides, I figured what he didn’t know
-wouldn’t hurt him. He told her what a wonderful voice she had, how the
-song had touched him and hoped she would sing at one of his meetings.
-
-“Blonde Betty was pretty as curly ribbon and I was afraid every minute
-he was going to ask if he could call on her, so I horned in and said,
-‘Parson, excuse me, but I promised I would bring Miss Betty home right
-away.’
-
-“So I took her arm and pulled her away.
-
-“‘You big-mouthed bum,’ Betty says when we were out of hearing. ‘Why
-don’t you attend to your own business? I know how to act.’”
-
-Shorty pointed to a riot of wild flowers on the side of a hill across
-the gulch. “The next day I saw her and the Parson picking flowers right
-over there. Of course he didn’t know then what she was. After that I
-reckon he didn’t give a dam’. He chucked the preaching job and ran off
-with Betty. But maybe God went along. They got married and live over in
-Nevada and you couldn’t find a happier family or a finer brood of
-children anywhere.
-
-“It is no argument for sin, but this was a hell of a country in those
-days and you just couldn’t always live by the Book.”
-
-On July 4, 1905 Shorty Harris made the strike which started the town of
-Harrisburg, now only a name on a signboard. A feud due to a partnership
-of curious origin, started immediately and is worth mention only because
-it confused historians of a later period who, gathering material after
-Shorty’s death have given only the story of the feudist who survived
-him.
-
-Here is Shorty’s version: “I was trying to save distance by taking the
-Blackwater trail across Death Valley into the Panamint. I had been over
-the country and had seen a formation that looked good and was going back
-to look it over. The Blackwater trail is a wet trail and one of my
-burros sank in the ooze. I had just gotten her out when a fellow I’d
-never seen before, came up. He said he was a stranger in the country and
-he wanted to get to Emigrant Springs where his two partners were
-waiting. He explained that the foreman at Furnace Creek had told him I
-had left only a short while before, but he might overtake me by
-hurrying, and I would show him the way. Then he asked if he could join
-me.
-
-“I told him it was free country and nobody on the square was barred.
-When I reached my destination I showed him the trail to Emigrant
-Springs. I reckon I talked too much on the way over—maybe made him think
-I had a gold mountain. Anyway, he said he believed he would look around
-a little to see what he could find. I didn’t even know his name and
-though it was against the unwritten code, he followed me. There wasn’t
-anything I could do about it without trouble and I was looking for
-gold—not trouble.
-
-“In 15 minutes I had found gold. He was pecking around a short distance
-away and also found rock with color and claimed a half interest. It was
-then that I learned his name—Pete Auguerreberry and that his partners
-were Flynn and Cavanaugh. Wild Bill Corcoran had grubstaked me. I told
-Pete five partners were too many and we should agree upon a division
-point—each taking a full claim and he could have his choice.
-
-“He refused and wanted half interest in both and nothing short of murder
-would have budged him. I went to Rhyolite for Bill Corcoran. He went for
-his partners. When we met, Corcoran had an offer to buy, sight unseen,
-from one of Schwab’s agents. Everyone of us wanted to sell, except Pete
-who stood out for a fantastic price. His partners offered to give him a
-part of their share if he would accept the offer. Pete refused. He
-thought it was worth millions. Wild Bill organized a company and we
-started work.”
-
-For awhile it seemed the Harrisburg claims would prove to be good
-producers. In the end it was just another town on the map for Shorty.
-Futile years for Pete.
-
-
-Once I asked Shorty Harris how he obtained his grubstakes. “Grubstakes,”
-he answered, “like gold, are where you find them. Once I was broke in
-Pioche, Nev., and couldn’t find a grubstake anywhere. Somebody told me
-that a woman on a ranch a few miles out wanted a man for a few days’
-work. I hoofed it out under a broiling sun, but when I got there, the
-lady said she had no job. I reckon she saw my disappointment and when
-her cat came up and began to mew, she told me the cat had an even dozen
-kittens and she would give me a dollar if I would take ’em down the road
-and kill ’em.
-
-“‘It’s a deal,’ I said. She got ’em in a sack and I started back to
-town. I intended to lug ’em a few miles away and turn ’em loose, because
-I haven’t got the heart to kill anything.
-
-“A dozen kittens makes quite a load and I had to sit down pretty often
-to rest. A fellow in a two-horse wagon came along and offered me a ride.
-I picked up the sack and climbed in.
-
-“‘Cats, eh?’ the fellow said. ‘They ought to bring a good price. I was
-in Colorado once. Rats and mice were taking the town. I had a cat. She
-would have a litter every three months. I had no trouble selling them
-cats for ten dollars apiece. Beat a gold mine.’
-
-“There were plenty rats in Pioche and that sack of kittens went like
-hotcakes. One fellow didn’t have any money and offered me a goat. I knew
-a fellow who wanted a goat. He lived on the same lot as I did. Name was
-Pete Swain.
-
-“Pete was all lit up when I offered him the goat for fifty dollars. He
-peeled the money off his roll and took the goat into his shack. A few
-days later Pete came to his door and called me over and shoved a fifty
-dollar note into my hands. ‘I just wanted you to see what that goat’s
-doing,’ he said.
-
-“I looked inside. The goat was pulling the cork out of a bottle of
-liquor with his teeth.
-
-“‘That goat’s drunk as a boiled owl,’ Pete said. ‘If I ever needed any
-proof that there’s something in this idea of the transmigration of
-souls, that goat gives it. He’s Jimmy, my old sidekick, who, I figgered
-was dead and buried.’
-
-“‘Now listen,’ I said. ‘Do you mean to tell me you actually believe that
-goat is your old pal, whom you drank with and played with and saw buried
-with your own eyes, right up there on the hill?’
-
-“‘Exactly,’ Pete shouted, and he peeled off another fifty and gave it to
-me. So, you see, a grubstake, like gold, is where you find it.”
-
-
-
-
- Chapter X
- Greenwater—Last of the Boom Towns
-
-
-Located on Black Mountain in the Funeral Range on the east side of Death
-Valley, Greenwater was the last boom town founded in the mad decade
-which followed Jim Butler’s strike at Tonopah. Records show locations of
-mining claims in the district as early as 1884, but all were abandoned.
-
-The location notice of a “gold and silver claim” was filed in 1884 by
-Doc Trotter, a famous character of the desert, remembered both for his
-good fellowship and his burro—Honest John—a habitual thief of incredible
-cunning, “Picked locks with baling wire....”
-
-The first location of a copper claim was made by Frank McAllister who,
-with a man named Cooper and Arthur Kunzie, may be credited with one of
-the West’s most spectacular mining booms.
-
-In 1905 Phil Creaser and Fred Birney took samples of the Copper Blue
-Ledge and sent them to Patsy Clark, who was so impressed that he
-dispatched Joseph P. Harvey, a prominent mining engineer to look at the
-property. Harvey started from Daggett and had reached Cave Spring in the
-Avawatz Mountains when he was caught in a cloudburst and lost all his
-equipment. He returned to Daggett, secured a new outfit and this time
-reached Black Mountain, but was unable to locate the claims.
-
-Again Birney and Creaser contacted Clark and this time the mining
-magnate came to Rhyolite, ordered another examination of the property,
-giving his agent authority to buy. Upon the assay’s showing, the claims
-were bought. Immediately Charles M. Schwab, August Heinze, Tasker L.
-Oddie, Borax Smith, W. A. Clark, and many other moguls of mining hurried
-to the scene or sent their agents. In their wake came gamblers,
-merchants, crib girls, soldiers of fortune, and thugs.
-
-$4,125,000 was paid for 2500 claims. Result—a hectic town with as many
-as 100 people a day pouring out of the canyons onto the barren, windy
-slope.
-
-Noted mining engineers announced that Black Mountain was one huge
-deposit of copper with a thin overlay of rock, dirt, and gravel. “It
-will make Butte’s ‘Richest Hill on Earth’ look like beggars’ pickings,”
-they announced.
-
-Greenwater stocks sky-rocketed and so many people poured into the new
-camp that the town was moved two miles from the mines in order to take
-care of the growth which it was believed would soon make it a
-metropolis. Before pick and shovel had made more than a dent on the
-crust of Black Mountain, two newspapers, a bank, express lines, and a
-magazine were in operation.
-
-Here Shorty Harris missed another fortune only because his partner went
-on a drunk.
-
-Leaving Rhyolite, Shorty had induced Judge Decker, a convivial resident
-of Ballarat to furnish a grubstake to look over Black Mountain. He made
-several locations, erected his monuments, returned to Ballarat and gave
-them to Decker to be recorded.
-
-When the papers reached Ballarat with the news that the copper barons
-were bidding recklessly for Greenwater claims Shorty was broke again.
-Bursting into Chris Wicht’s saloon, he shouted, “Where’s the Judge?”
-
-Chris nodded toward the end of the bar where the Judge, swaying
-slightly, was waving his glass in lieu of a baton while leading the
-quartet in “Sweet Adeline.” Wedging through the crowd, Shorty touched
-the Judge’s elbow: “Lay off that cooking likker, Judge. It’s Mum’s Extra
-for us from now on.”
-
-“Yeh? How come?” the Judge asked thickly.
-
-“We’re worth a billion dollars,” Shorty said. “I staked out that whole
-dam’ mountain. Where’re those location notices?”
-
-“What location notices?” Decker blinked.
-
-“The ones I gave you to take to Independence.”
-
-With one hand the Judge steadied himself on the bar. With the other he
-fumbled through his pockets, finally producing a frayed batch of papers,
-covered with barroom doodling, but no recorder’s receipt for the
-location notices. “Well, I’ll be damned,” he muttered.
-
-“So’ll I,” Shorty gulped.
-
-If Decker had recorded the notices both he and Shorty would have become
-rich through the sale of those claims.
-
-When laborers cleared the ground to begin work for Schwab, Patsy Clark,
-and others, they tore down the monuments containing the unrecorded
-notices.
-
-In a little cemetery on the gravel flats at Ballarat, lies Decker.
-
-Pleasantly refreshed with liquor one yawny afternoon he managed to have
-the last word in an argument with the constable, Henry Pietsch and went
-happily to his room. Later the constable thought of a way to win the
-argument and went to the Judge’s cabin. A shot was heard and Pietsch
-came through the door with a smoking gun in his hand. Decker, he said,
-had started for a pistol in his dresser drawer. But Decker was found
-with a hole in his back, his spine severed. At Independence, the
-constable was acquitted for lack of evidence and returned to Ballarat to
-resume his duties, but was told that he might live longer somewhere
-else. Pietsch didn’t argue this time and thus avoided a lynching. He
-left Ballarat and, I believe, was hanged for another murder.
-
-Among those who came early to Greenwater, none was more outstanding than
-a gorgeous creature with a wasp waist who stepped from the stage one
-day, patted her pompadour with jewelled fingers, gave the bustling town
-an approving glance. Then she turned to the bevy of blondes and
-brunettes she had brought. “It’s a man’s town, girls....”
-
-Bystanders were already eyeing the girls; their scarlet lips and the
-deep dark danger in their roving eyes.
-
-So Diamond Tooth Lil was welcomed to Greenwater and became important
-both in its business and social economy.
-
-It was agreed that Lil was a good fellow. Greenwater also learned that
-her word was good as her bond. She kept an orderly five dollar house and
-if anyone chose to break her rules of conduct, he ran afoul of her
-six-gun. Because she could fight like a jungle beast, she was also
-called Tiger Lil. Somewhere along the line, four of her upper teeth had
-been broken and in each of the replacements was set a diamond of first
-quality. As Greenwater prospered so did Diamond Tooth Lil.
-
-One day an exotic creature with a suggestion of Spanish-Creole and dark,
-compelling eyes dropped off the stage. She too had pretty girls and when
-the new bagnio had its grand opening, with champagne and imported
-orchestra, Diamond Tooth Lil sent a huge floral piece.
-
-A few nights later Lil was sitting in her parlor wondering where the men
-were. The girls were all banked around with folded hands.
-
-“Maybe there’s a celebration....” A moment later a belated male barged
-in.
-
-“Willie, where’s everybody?” Lil asked.
-
-Willie flicked a look at the idle girls. “Maybe,” he announced, “they’re
-down at that new cut-rate menage.”
-
-“Cut-rate?” Lil cried.
-
-“Yeh. Three dollars.”
-
-A steely glint came into Diamond Tooth Lil’s eyes.
-
-She tossed her cigarette into the cuspidor, went to her room, picked up
-her six-gun, saw that it was loaded and hurried to her rival’s.
-
-A rap on the door brought the dark beauty to the porch. “Listen dearie,”
-Diamond Tooth Lil began. “This is a union town. I hear you’re scabbing.”
-
-The hot Latin temper flared. “I run my business to suit myself....”
-
-“And you won’t raise the price?” asked Diamond Tooth Lil.
-
-“Never!” Suddenly the exotic one looked into hard steel and harder eyes.
-
-“Okay. You’re through. Start packing,” ordered Lil.
-
-Something in the eyes behind the six-gun told the madam that surrender
-was wiser than a funeral and the scab house closed forever.
-
-A wayfarer in Greenwater announced that he was so low he could mount
-stilts and clear a snake’s belly, but being broke, he could only sniff
-the liquor-scented air coming from Bill Waters’s saloon and look
-wistfully at the bottles on the shelves. Then he noticed that Bill
-Waters was alone, polishing glasses. A sudden inspiration came and he
-sauntered in. “Bill,” he said, “gimme a drink....”
-
-Bill Waters was no meticulous interpreter of English and slid a glass
-down the bar. A bottle followed. The drinker filled the glass, poured it
-down an arid throat. “Thanks,” he called and started out.
-
-“Hey—” cried Bill Waters. “You haven’t paid for that drink.”
-
-“Why, I asked you to give me a drink....”
-
-“Yeh,” Bill sneered. “Well, brother, you’d better pay.”
-
-“Horse feathers—” said the fellow and proceeded toward the door.
-
-Bill Waters picked up a double barrelled shotgun, pointed it at the
-departing guest and pulled the trigger. The jester fell, someone called
-the undertaker and the porter washed the floor.
-
-It looked bad for Bill. But lawyers solve such problems. Bill said he
-was joking and didn’t know the gun was loaded. The answer satisfied the
-court and Bill returned to his glasses.
-
-For a few years Greenwater prospered. Then it was noticed that the
-incoming stages had empty seats. Bartenders had more time to polish
-glasses. “The World’s Biggest Copper Deposit” which the world’s greatest
-experts had assured the moguls lay under the mountain just wasn’t there.
-
-Today there is barely a trace of Greenwater. A few bottles gleam in the
-sun. The wind sweeps over from Dante’s View or up Dead Man’s Canyon. The
-greasewood waves. The rotted leg of a pair of overalls protrudes from
-its covering of sand. A sunbaked shoe lies on its side.
-
-But somewhere under its crust is a case of champagne. Dan Modine, the
-freighter, buried it there one dark night over 40 years ago and was
-never able to find it.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XI
- The Amargosa Country
-
-
-In Hellgate Pass I met Slim again, resting on the roadside, his burro
-browsing nearby. Slim, I may add here, already had a niche in
-Goldfield’s hall of fame. He had walked into a gambling house one day
-broke, thirsty, nursing a hangover, and hoping to find a friend who
-would buy him a drink. Though it was a holiday and the place crowded, he
-saw no familiar face, but while waiting he noticed the cashier was busy
-collecting the winnings from the tables. He also noticed that in order
-to save the time it required to unlock the door of the cage, the cashier
-would dump the gold and silver coins on the shelf at his wicker window,
-then for safety’s sake, shove it off to fall on the floor inside.
-
-Slim watched the procedure awhile and with a sudden bright idea,
-sauntered out. A few moments later he returned through an alley with an
-auger wrapped in a tow sack, crawled under the house and soon a stream
-of gold and silver was cascading into Slim’s hat.
-
-A lookout at a table nearest the cage, hearing a strange metallic noise,
-went outside to investigate and peeking under the floor, saw Slim
-without being seen. It was just too good to keep. Stealthily moving
-away, he spread the news and half of Goldfield was gathered about when
-Slim, his pockets bulging with his loot, crawled out only to face a
-jeering, heckling crowd.
-
-Cornered like a rat in a cage, he couldn’t run; he couldn’t speak. He
-could only stand and grin and somehow the grin caught the crowd and
-instead of a lynching, Slim was handcuffed and led away and later the
-merciful judge who had been in the crowd declared Goldfield out of
-bounds for Slim and sent him on his way.
-
-At no other place in the world except Goldfield, with its craving for
-life’s sunny side, could such an incident have occurred.
-
-After greetings Slim confided that he was en route to a certain canyon,
-the location of which he wouldn’t even tell to his mother. There, not a
-cent less than $100,000,000 awaited him. No prospector worthy of the
-name ever bothers to mention a claim of less value. Not sure of the
-roads ahead, I asked him for directions.
-
-“You’d better go down the valley,” he advised, pointing to a small black
-cloud above Funeral Range. “Regular cloudburst hatchery—these
-mountains.”
-
-At a sudden burst of thunder we flinched and at another the earth seemed
-to tremble. Forked lightning was stabbing the inky blackness and I
-expected to see the mountains fall apart. “Something’s got to give,”
-Slim said. “Look at that lightning ... no letup.” Another roar rumbled
-and rolled over the valley. “God—” muttered Slim, “I haven’t prayed
-since I fell into a mine shaft full of rattlesnakes.”
-
-As we watched the incessant play of lightning, Slim told me about his
-fall into the shaft: “Arkansas Ben Brandt was working about 100 yards
-away. Deaf as a lamp post, Ben is, but I kept praying and hollering and
-just when I’d given up, here comes a rope. You can argue with me all day
-but you can’t make me believe the Lord didn’t unstop old Ben’s ears.”
-
-Slim gave me a final warning. “Take the road over the mountain when you
-come to the Shoshone sign. When you get there be sure to see Charlie
-before you go any farther.”
-
-At every water hole where prospectors were gathered I’d heard someone
-tell someone else to see Charlie. At Furnace Creek I’d heard the vice
-president of the Borax Company tell an official of the Santa Fe railroad
-to see Charlie and only an hour before I met Slim I had stopped to give
-a tire patch to a young miner with a flat. While I waited to see that
-the patch stuck, I learned he was on his way to consult Charlie.
-
-“My helper,” he confided, “jumped my claim after he learned I hadn’t
-done last year’s assessment work. That’s legal if a fellow’s a skunk but
-when he stole my wife and chased me off with my own shotgun,
-bigod—that’s different.” I suggested a lawyer. “I’ll see Charlie
-first....”
-
-Naturally I became curious about this Charlie, who seemed to be a
-combination of Father Confessor and the Caliph Haroun Alraschid to all
-the desert. “Just who is Charlie?” I asked Slim.
-
-“He runs the store at Shoshone. Tell him I’ll be down soon. I want him
-to handle my deal.” He slapped his burro and we parted—he for his
-$100,000,000, I to leave the country. Watching the spring in his step a
-moment, I got into my car and knew at last the why of those dark
-alluring canyons that ran up from the hungry land and hid in the hills.
-I knew why there are riches that nothing can take away and why rainbows
-swing low in the sky. The good God had made them so that fellows like
-Slim could climb one and ride.
-
-Driving along I found myself trying to appraise the endless waste. Was
-it a blunder of creation, hell’s front yard or God’s back stairs? It was
-easy to understand the appeal of vast distances, of desert dawns and
-desert nights but what was it that made men “go desert”?
-
-The answer was becoming clearer. Fellows like Slim had found God in a
-snake hole, or if you prefer—a way of life patterned with infinite
-precision to their needs. It is easy enough to tear into scraps,
-another’s formula for happiness and recommend your own but that is an
-egotism that only the fool will flaunt and I began to suspect that the
-Slims and the Shortys had found a freedom for which millions in the
-tired world Outside vainly struggled and slowly died.
-
- “I wanted the gold, and I got it—
- Came out with a fortune last fall—
- Yet somehow life’s not what I thought it,
- And somehow the gold isn’t all.
-
- It grips you like some kinds of sinning;
- It twists you from foe to a friend;
- It seems it’s been since the beginning;
- It seems it will be to the end.”
- —_Robert W. Service._
-
-Rounding a sharp turn in the road that led over and around a hill
-jutting out from a mountain of black malpai, I saw a sign: “Shoshone”
-and just beyond, a little settlement almost hidden in a thicket of
-mesquite. A sign on a weather-beaten ramshackle building read, “Store.”
-A few listing shacks on a naked flat. An abandoned tent house, its torn
-canvas top whipping the rafters in the wind. Whirlwinds spiraling along
-dry washes to vanish in hummocks of sand.
-
-The presence of three or four prospectors strung along a slab bench
-either staring at the ground at their feet or the brown bare mountains,
-only emphasized the depressing solitude and I decided if I had to choose
-between hell and Shoshone I’d take hell.
-
-Reaching the store through deep dust, I guessed correctly that the big
-fellow giving me an appraising look was Charlie. He was slow in his
-movements, slow in his speech and I had the feeling that his keen, calm
-eyes had already counted the number of buttons on my shirt and the
-eyelets in my shoes. I asked about the road to Baker.
-
-“Washed out. Won’t be open for two weeks.”
-
-“Two weeks?” I gasped. “Long enough to kill a fellow, isn’t it?”
-
-“Well, there’s a little cemetery handy. Just up the gulch.”
-
-Impulsively I thrust out my hand. “Shake. You win. Now that we
-understand each other, have you a cabin for rent for these two weeks?”
-
-“Yes, but you’d better take it longer,” he chuckled. “In two weeks
-you’ll be a native and won’t want to get out.”
-
-The showing of the cabin was delayed by a lanky individual who was
-pawing over a pile of shoes. “Charlie, soles on my shoes are worn
-through. These any good?”
-
-“Not worth a dam’,” Charlie said. He picked up hammer and nails, handed
-them to the lanky one. “Some old tires outside. Cut off a piece and tack
-it on. I’ll have some good shoes next time you’re in.”
-
-A miner in an ancient pickup stopped for gas. As Brown filled the tank
-he noticed a tire dangerously worn. “Blackie, you need a new casing to
-get across Death Valley.”
-
-“These’ll do,” Blackie answered as he dug into all his pockets, paid for
-the gas and got into the car.
-
-“Wait a minute,” Brown said and in a moment he was rolling a new tire
-out, lifting it to the bed of the pickup. He handed Blackie a new tube.
-“If you use them, pay me. If you don’t, bring ’em back.”
-
-Blackie regarded him a moment. “How’d you know I was broke?” he grinned,
-and chugged away.
-
-A man stopped a truck in front of the door, came in and asked how far it
-was to Furnace Creek. Charlie looked him over, then glanced at the
-truck. “Fifty-eight miles the short way. Nearly 80 the other. You’ll
-have to take the long way.”
-
-“Why?” the fellow bristled.
-
-“Your load is too high for the underpass on the short route. Road’s
-washed out anyway.”
-
-The man frowned and turned to go.
-
-“Wait a minute,” Charlie called. He reached for a sack of flour, laid it
-on a counter. Then he stood a slab of bacon on its edge and cut off a
-chunk. “You’ll stop at Bradbury Well—”
-
-“I won’t stop nowhere,” the truckman said.
-
-“You’ll have to. Your radiator will be boiling.” He got a carton, put
-the flour and bacon in it and reaching on a shelf behind, got coffee,
-sugar, and canned milk and put these in. “Old Dobe Charlie Nels is
-camped there. Poor old fellow hasn’t been in for two weeks....”
-
-The man looked at Charlie, uncertain. “You want me to drop it off, huh?”
-
-“Yes,” Charlie said and lugging the carton to the truck, he shoved it
-in.
-
-With squinted eyes the driver watched. “Mister, I’ll surely fill up here
-on my way back,” and with a friendly wave, climbed into his cab and I
-began to understand why all over the desert I’d heard of Charlie.
-
-The cabin assigned me was the usual box type, shaded by the overhanging
-branches of a screwbean mesquite.
-
-“Cabin’s not much,” Charlie said, “but you’ll have a Beauty Rest
-mattress to sleep on. My wife says folks’ll put up with most anything if
-they have a good bed.” He looked the room over and I noticed that
-nothing escaped him. Wood and kindling. Oil in the lamp. Water in the
-pitcher—an ornate vessel with enormous roses edged with gilt. He opened
-a closet door, saw that the matching vessel was in place and went out.
-After arranging my belongings, with time to kill, I returned to the
-store, hoping to learn something about nearby trails.
-
-A short woman who preceded me slammed a can of coffee on the counter,
-removed her long cigarette holder, blew a ring of smoke at the ceiling
-and asked Charlie where he got the coffee. He told her that it came in a
-shipment.
-
-“Well bigod, you send it back.”
-
-Charlie laughed and turned to me: “This is Myra Benson. You want to stay
-on the good side of Myra. She has charge of the dining room.”
-
-My remark that good coffee was my early morning weakness led to an
-invitation to sample her brew. “Mine too,” she said. “The pot’s on the
-stove before daylight, if you’re up that early.”
-
-I soon discovered that Myra’s language was just a bit of color Death
-Valley imparts to speech, for she was deeply religious if not in all its
-forms, in all of its essentials and the occasional use of a two-fisted
-phrase did not in the least detract from the eternal feminine of one of
-Death Valley’s most remarkable women.
-
-Guided by the light in her kitchen, I joined her the next morning while
-Shoshone still slept, and over a delicious cup learned something about
-people and places.
-
-The man with the wide Stetson was Dan Modine, deputy sheriff. Liked
-poker. The quiet, squat fellow with the blue pop eyes was Billy de Von.
-“College man. Works on the roads. Taught in the University of Mexico
-before he came here. Siberian Red? Oh, that’s Ernie Huhn. No place on
-Godamighty’s earth he hasn’t been. As soon bet $1000 as two bits on a
-pair of jacks.”
-
-“The tall thin fellow they called Sam? Must be Sam Flake. Here before
-Noah built the ark.”
-
-Knowing that Mormons had pioneered in the area, I was curious about an
-undersized man pushing an oversize baby carriage loaded with infants and
-a dozen youngsters trailing him. “Does he happen to be one of the
-Faithful who has clung to his wives?” I asked.
-
-“That’s Eddie Main,” Myra laughed. “Bachelor. Just loves kids. He was
-born in San Francisco in the days when a nickel just wasn’t counted
-unless it had a dime alongside. His folks sent him to New York to be
-educated. Eddie didn’t like it. ‘It’s a nickel town,’ Eddie said.
-‘Cheapest hole on earth.’ He came to the desert and the desert took him
-over. When he’s not hauling kids around he’s reading. Don’t get out on a
-limb in an argument with Eddie. You’ll lose sure. Every now and then
-Eddie goes East for a vacation. It’s awful on the mothers. They have to
-take care of their own children and the children want Eddie.”
-
-“Who is Hank, the fellow that came in with the pickup Ford?” I asked.
-
-“Our bootlegger. Comes Wednesdays and Saturdays. Regular as a bread
-route. Always tell when he’s due. Bench is crowded. Didn’t you notice
-the tarpaulin over his truck? Always two kegs and a sack of empty pints
-and quarts. Rough roads here. Siphons out what you want. Death Valley
-Scotty? Around yesterday. Lit up like a barn afire.” The short man with
-the black whiskers was Henry Ashford who, with his brothers Harold and
-Rudolph owned the Ashford mine.
-
-“How does such a little store in a place like this make a living for the
-Browns?”
-
-“I wonder myself, at times,” she said. “Everybody around here takes
-their troubles to Charlie or Stella. Maybe you noticed their home—the
-cottage with the screen porch a few steps from the store. Stella was
-telling me yesterday she needed a new carpet for her living room. I
-said, ‘I’m not surprised. You’re running a nursery, emergency hospital,
-and a domestic relations court.’ Sometimes young couples find their
-marriage going on the rocks. The woman goes to Stella to get the kinks
-out. As for Charlie, if you’re around long enough you’ll see him most
-every morning strolling over to the shacks in the jungle or up to the
-dugouts in Dublin Gulch. He thinks nobody knows what he’s doing or maybe
-they figure he’s just taking a walk. I know. Some of these old fellows
-are always in a bad way. Just last week Charlie came in here and told me
-to send something a sick man could eat over to old Jim. ‘I’ll have to
-take him to the hospital soon as I can get my car ready,’ he said. Three
-hundred miles—that trip.
-
-“And there’s Phil. You’ll see him around. Fine steady chap. Lost his job
-when the mine he worked in shut down. Long as he was working he was the
-first in the dining room when I opened the door. He began to miss a
-breakfast, then a dinner, and finally he didn’t show up at all. I
-supposed he was cooking his own and didn’t mention it. Kept his chin up.
-You could hear him laughing loud as anybody on the bench, but Charlie
-noticed that once a day Phil would follow his nose over into the
-mesquite where somebody was sure to share a mulligan stew.
-
-“One day when Phil was sitting alone on the woodpile just outside my
-kitchen, Charlie sat down beside him. They didn’t know I was there.
-‘Phil,’ Charlie says, ‘the ditch that carries the runoff up at the
-spring needs widening. Could you spare a few days to put it in shape?’
-
-“Phil left that bench running, got a pick and shovel and went singing up
-the road and to this day he doesn’t know that Charlie just created that
-job so he could eat.”
-
-I mentioned the fellow with black hair and blue eyes. “He complained of
-rheumatism and slapped his knees a lot.”
-
-“Oh, that’s Dutch Barr. It isn’t rheumatism. Just a sign he’s going on a
-drunk.”
-
-The lanky man with the blond eyebrows and sombre face which lighted so
-easily to laugh, was Whitey Bill McGarn. “... Never had a worry in his
-life....”
-
-I learned also that the mountain of malpai which lifts above Shoshone
-was a burial place for a race of Indians antedating the Piutes and
-Shoshones. “They buried their dead in a crouching position on their
-knees, elbows bent, hands at their ears. Old Nancy, who was Sam Yundt’s
-squaw wife before he got rich, says they were buried that way so they
-would be ready to go quick when the Great Spirit called.”
-
-The first rose of dawn was in the sky when I left Myra. “You’ll have
-time enough to look around before breakfast,” she told me and
-recommended a view of the valley from the flat-topped mesa above my
-cabin. “You can reach the top by climbing up a gully and holding on to
-the greasewood. You can see the dugouts in Dublin Gulch too. Some real
-old timers live there.”
-
-A sweeping view of the little valley rewarded the climb.
-
-Below, Shoshone lay, tucked away in the mesquite. No honking horns, no
-clanging cars. No swollen ankles dragging muted chains to bench or
-counter, desk or machine. Soon faint spirals of smoke leaned from the
-shanties. Shoshone was awakening. It would wash its face on a slab
-bench, eat its bacon and eggs, and somebody would go out to look for two
-million dollars.
-
-After breakfast, I joined the old timers on the bench. “No—nothing
-exciting happens around here,” Joe Ryan told me and stopped whittling to
-look at a car coming up the road. A moment later the car stopped at the
-gas pump and three smartly tailored men stepped out. I heard one say,
-“Odd looking lot on that bench, aren’t they?” Then Joe said to the
-fellow at his side, “Queer looking birds, ain’t they?”
-
-“How much is gas?” one of the tourists asked.
-
-“Thirty cents,” Charlie said.
-
-“Why, it’s only 18 in the city,” the man flared. “How far is it to the
-next gas?”
-
-Charlie told him, and Big Dan sitting beside me muttered: “Dam’ fool’ll
-pay 50 cents up there.”
-
-The driver climbed into the car and Charlie asked if he had plenty of
-water.
-
-“A gallon can full....”
-
-“Not enough,” Charlie warned.
-
-A fellow in the back seat spoke, “Aw, go on. He wants to sell a
-canteen....”
-
-As the car pulled out, Joe called to Charlie: “You’re sold out of
-canteens, ain’t you?”
-
-“Yes. But I was going to give him one of those old five gallon cans on
-the dump.” He went inside and Joe Ryan said, “Won’t get far on a gallon
-of water.” He waved his knife toward the little cemetery at the mouth of
-the gulch. “Lot of smart Alecs like him up there, that Charlie dragged
-in offa the desert.”
-
-It was five days almost to the hour when Ann Cowboy, a Piute squaw came
-to the store with an Indian boy who couldn’t speak English; nodded at
-the boy and said to Charlie: “Him see....” She pointed to the big black
-mountain of malpai above Shoshone, whirled her finger in a circle, shot
-it this way and that, then patted the floor. “You savvy?”
-
-Her dark eyes watched Charlie’s and when she had finished Charlie called
-Joe Ryan and together they went across the road, climbed into a pickup
-truck and left in a hurry. Even I understood that somebody on the other
-side of that mountain was in trouble, but I had no idea that in three or
-four hours the pickup would return with a cadaver under a tarpaulin and
-a thirst-crazed survivor whose distorted features bore little
-resemblance to those of man.
-
-Big Dan helped lift the victim from the truck. “There were three,” Dan
-said. “Where is the other fellow?”
-
-“We looked all over,” Joe shrugged.
-
-“The one that’s missing,” Dan said, “is the fellow that griped about the
-canteen. I remember his black hair.”
-
-They carried the still-living man over to Charlie’s house and left him
-to the ministrations of the capable Stella. Charlie returned to the
-store, got a pick and shovel from a rack, handed one to Ben Brandt and
-one to Cranky Casey. Not a word was spoken to them. They took the tools
-and started toward the little cemetery at the mouth of Dublin Gulch.
-
-I joined Dan on the bench. “Well,” Dan said, “they saved the price of a
-canteen.”
-
-
-Two spinsters—teachers of zoology in a fashionable eastern school for
-girls—came in search of a place they called Metbury Springs. Brown told
-them there were no such springs in the Death Valley region. Obviously
-disappointed, one produced a map, spread it on the counter, ran her
-finger over a maze of notes and looking up asked what sort of rats lived
-about Shoshone. Charlie told them that very few rats survived their
-natural enemies and were seldom seen.
-
-“What do they look like?” the teacher asked.
-
-“Just regular rats,” Charlie told her.
-
-Again she consulted her notes. “Do you mean to say the only rat you’ve
-seen here is _Mus decumanus_?”
-
-“Mus who?” Charlie asked. “Only rats around here besides the two-legged
-kind are just plain everyday rats.”
-
-The ladies gathered up their papers, went outside, looked over the
-hills, consulted their maps, and returned to Brown. “Sir, this is
-Metbury Spring,” one announced, “and for your own information we may add
-that in no other place in the world is there a rat like the one you have
-here.”
-
-The amazing feature of this incident is that it is true. The rats in
-some unexplained way had disappeared.
-
-The spinsters remained for weeks but failed to find the specimen they
-sought, but Charlie learned that the first man known to have settled at
-Shoshone was a man named Brown and Shoshone’s first name was Metbury
-Spring.
-
-
-Death came to Shoshone that week-end. George Hoagland, prospector,
-reached Trail’s End. Charlie announced the news to the bench and asked
-for volunteers to dig the grave. Bob Johnson, another prospector, jumped
-up. “I’ll help.”
-
-The others gave Bob a quick look and exchanged slow ones with each
-other, because it was known that Bob had not liked Hoagland. “I’ve been
-in lots of deals with that bastard,” he had often said. “Came out loser
-every time. Always left himself a hole to wiggle out of.”
-
-Right or wrong, Bob’s opinion was shared by many. Herman Jones glanced
-after Bob, now going for a pick and shovel. “That’s sure white of Bob,
-forgetting his grudge,” Herman said and all Shoshone approved.
-
-I joined the little group that filed up to the cemetery at the mouth of
-the gulch for the graveside ceremony. We stood about waiting for the box
-that contained all there was of George.
-
-They take death on the desert just as they do any other grim fact of
-nature. They talked of George and the hard, chalky earth Bob had to dig
-through in the hot sun. There were mild arguments about whose bones lay
-under this or that unmarked grave. “Dad Fairbanks brought that fellow
-in....” “No such thing. That’s Tillie Younger—member of Jesse James’s
-gang. I helped bury him....”
-
-Presently there was a stir and I saw Charlie over where the women were.
-He had another chore and was doing it because there was no one else to
-do it.
-
-“Usually reads a coupla verses,” Joe Ryan told me. “But somebody stole
-the only Bible in Shoshone.”
-
-The box was lowered, the grave filled and Charlie stepped forward. He
-held his hat well up in front of his chest and I suspected that he had a
-few notes pasted in the hat. Those about were listening intently as
-people will to one who has something to say and says it in a few words.
-
-Suddenly I was conscious of mumbling and the tramping of earth and
-seeing Brown flick a glance out of the corner of his eye toward the
-disturbing sound, I turned to see Bob Johnson jumping up and down on the
-earth that filled the grave—careful to miss no inch of it. When he had
-tamped it sufficiently he stepped aside and muttered angrily: “Now dam’
-you—let’s see you wiggle out of this hole!”
-
-Yet, when the hills are covered with wild flowers one may see on the
-unsodded graves of the little cemetery a bottle or a tin can filled with
-sun cups or baby blue eyes and in the dust the tracks of a hobnailed
-shoe.
-
-I soon discovered the bench was more than a slab of wood. It was a state
-of Hallelujah. For the most part those who gathered there were a silent
-lot, but as one unshaven ancient told me, “Too damned much talk in the
-world. Two-three words are plenty—like yes, naw, and dam’.” Some of them
-had beaten trails from Crede or Cripple Creek, Virginia City or Bodie.
-“It’s a clean life and clean money,” was an expression that ran like a
-formula through their conversation.
-
-“Of course, few keep the money they get,” Joe Ryan said. “Jack Morissey
-couldn’t read or write. He struck it rich. Bought a diamond-studded
-watch and couldn’t even tell the time of day. Went to Europe; hit all
-the high spots; came back and died in the poor house. But he had his
-fun, which makes more sense than what Nat Crede did. He hit it rich.
-Built a town and a palace. Then blew his brains out and left all his
-millions to a Los Angeles foundling.”
-
-One oldster remembered Eilly Orrum of Virginia City. “She had followed
-the covered wagons and made a living washing our clothes, but she got
-into our hearts. Everybody liked her. Some say she forgot to get a
-divorce from her second husband before she married Sandy Bowers. Nobody
-blamed her. She and Sandy ran a beanery. Eilly would feed anybody on the
-cuff. John Rodgers ran up a board bill and couldn’t pay it. He had a few
-shares in a no-count claim and talked Eilly into taking the shares to
-settle the bill.
-
-“Within two weeks Eilly was getting $20,000 a month from that deal. It
-wasn’t long before she was giggling happily and telling everybody she
-didn’t see how folks could live on less than $100,000 a year.”
-
-“Julia Bulette? Ran a snooty fancy house. But she taught Virginia City
-how to eat and what, and soon the rich fellows wouldn’t stand for
-anything except the world’s best foods.”
-
-“Oh yes, everybody knew Old Virginny. Gave the town its name. Always
-drunk. Discovered the Ophir. Swapped it for a mustang pony and a pint of
-likker to old Pancake Comstock. When he sobered up he discovered the
-pony was blind. Pancake swapped an eighth interest in the Ophir to a
-Mexican, Gabriel Maldonado, for two burros. The Mexican took out
-$6,000,000. Pancake was quite a lady-killer. Ran away with a miner’s
-wife. Fellow was glad to get rid of her, but decided he’d beat hell out
-of Pancake. Found him in new diggings nearby and jumped him. ‘You don’t
-want her,’ Pancake says. ‘Be reasonable. I’ll buy her.’
-
-“They haggled awhile and the fellow agreed to accept $50 and a plug
-horse. He took the money and started for the horse.
-
-“‘Wait a minute,’ Pancake says, ‘I want a bill of sale,’ and wrote it
-out on the spot, and made the fellow sign it. Didn’t keep her long
-though. She ran away with a tramp fiddler. The Comstock Lode produced
-over a billion dollars. He might have had a fifth of that. Just too
-smart for his own good. Finally paid the price. Found him on the trail
-one day. Brains blowed out. Suicide.”
-
-Dobe Charlie Nels was at Bodie, rendezvous of the toughest of the bad
-men when the United States Hotel rented its rooms in six-hour shifts and
-guests were awakened at the end of that period to make places for
-others. He recalled Eleanor Dumont, whose deft fingers dealt four kings
-to the unwary and four aces to herself. Smitten lovers had shot it out
-for her favors on the Mother Lode and on the Comstock, but when life and
-love still were fair, fate played a scurvy trick on the beauteous
-Eleanor. The shadow of a little down began to show on her lip and
-darkened with the years and so she became Madame Moustache. “She just
-got tired living and one night she went outside, swallowed a little
-pellet and passed the deal to God.”
-
-But the charmers of Bodie and its bad men and the millions its hills
-produced were not so deeply etched on his memory as the job he lost
-because he did it well. Hungry and broke when he arrived he took the
-first job offered—stacking cord wood.
-
-“It was a job I really knew. The boss drove stakes 4×8 feet alongside a
-mountain of cut wood. I figured I had a long job. He left and I took
-pains to make every cord level on top, sides even. When the boss came
-back he blew up, kicked over my piles and wanted to know if I was trying
-to ruin him. ‘If you’d picked out a few crooked sticks and crossed a few
-straight ones, you could have made a cord with half the wood. Get out
-and don’t come back.’” Charlie also had a story of a memorable night.
-
-A bartender in one of Bodie’s better saloons was putting his stock in
-order after a busy night when three celebrants in swallow tails and
-toppers came unsteadily through the doors. The two on the outside were
-gallantly steadying the one in the center as they led him to the bar.
-The bartender smiled understandingly when, coming for their orders, he
-noticed the center man’s head was pillowed on his arms over the bar, his
-topper lying on its side in front of his face. Recalling that the fellow
-had consumed often and eagerly but had paid for none in an earlier
-session, he nodded at the silent one: “Shall I count him out?”
-
-“Oh no. Bill’s buying this time.”
-
-The drinks served, the bartender left to attend another late patron and
-moments passed before he returned to find Bill just as he had left him,
-but alone—his drink untouched. He tapped Bill’s shoulder and asked
-payment for the drinks. When three taps and three demands brought no
-answer, he picked up a bung starter; went around the counter, seized
-Bill by the shoulder, wheeled him around only to discover that Bill was
-dead. Startled and panicky, the bartender now ran to the door, saw
-Bill’s friends weaving up the street and ran after them, told them
-excitedly that Bill had croaked.
-
-“Oh,” one said thickly. “Bill’s ticker jammed in our room an hour ago.
-His last words were, ‘Fellows, I want you to have a drink on me.’
-Couldn’t refuse old Bill’s last request.”
-
-When Dobe Charlie had finished this story he turned to a clear-eyed
-ancient standing nearby. “Jim, I reckon you’d call me a
-Johnny-come-lately since you were a Forty-Niner.”
-
-“No,” Jim said. “I was 12 when I came to Hangtown. I remember a fellow
-they called Wheelbarrow John, because he made a better wheelbarrow than
-anyone else. He saved $3000 and went back East. He was John Studebaker.
-Made wagons first. Then autos.
-
-“Young fellow named Phil Armour came. No luck. Pulled out. He did all
-right in Chicago though. Founded Armour Company.
-
-“Did I ever tell you about the Digger Ounce? No? Well, it’s history. The
-Digger Indians didn’t know what gold was. Actually they’d been throwing
-nuggets at rabbits and couldn’t believe their eyes when they saw miners
-exchange the same stuff for food and clothing at the store. The Indians
-had been getting it along the stream beds for ages. So they came in with
-their buckskin loin bags full of it. The merchant took it all right, but
-when he balanced his scales, he used a weight that gave the Digger only
-one dollar for every five he was entitled to. Then the Indian had to pay
-three prices for everything he bought. One miner loafing around the
-store, followed the Diggers one day, learned where they were getting it
-and cleaned up $40,000 in no time. That’s history too.
-
-“Crooked merchants used the same trick on drunken whites and anybody
-else who didn’t keep their eyes open. So the Digger Ounce became a
-byword all along the Mother Lode.”
-
-But of all the stories about the Comstock this fine old gentleman told
-us, I like best one about Joe Plato. Young, strong, and handsome as
-Apollo, Joe craved a fling after months of toil in the gulches with no
-sight of woman other than the flat-faced Washoe squaws.
-
-In San Francisco Joe saw a big red apple and he wanted it. A
-breath-taking girl sold him the apple and he wanted her. He acquired the
-girl also. His gambols over, Joe handed her five shares of ten he owned
-in a Comstock claim. ‘A little token,’ he grinned, never dreaming the
-beautiful wanton had a heart and loved him madly. So he forgot her. She
-didn’t forget Joe.
-
-Months later the ten shares were worth on the market $1,000,000. Joe
-remembered then. ‘Too much for a girl like that.’
-
-To beat the news and retrieve the stock, he braved Sierra storms, found
-her. In the battle of wits she played her cards superbly. “Of course,”
-she said at last, “... if we were married....”
-
-So the beaten Joe faced the preacher.
-
-When Joe Plato died she took her millions to San Francisco, married a
-rich merchant, became a social leader and the mother of nabobs.
-
-
-One morning at breakfast Myra informed me that I could get to Bradbury
-Well, a famous landmark on the road to Death Valley. To break the
-routine, I went. The route leads over Salsbury Pass, named for Jack
-Salsbury—a congenital promoter who was forever hunting something to
-promote. He had made and lost fortunes in cattle, lumber, and mines and
-for a while lived at Shoshone.
-
-In a ravine near Bradbury Well were two or three dugouts. In one was the
-ubiquitous Rocky Mountain George—lean, seamed, and soft voiced. On the
-box he used for a table lay a letter mailed in Denver and bearing this
-address: “Rocky Mountain George, Nevada.” Known all over the gold belt,
-a dozen postmasters had sent it from town to town and now it had caught
-up with George.
-
-Meeting George a few weeks later in Beatty I recalled our meeting. He
-hadn’t shaved in a week and his torn overalls were covered with grime. A
-well-tailored gentleman came out of the hotel across the street and
-stepped into a smart car. “Hey, Jim—” George called. “Come over here a
-minute....” The man left his car and walked over. “Jim, I want you to
-meet my friend....” Jim and I shook hands. “Jim’s our governor,” George
-added and I looked again at Nevada’s Governor James Scrugham, later its
-U. S. Senator. For an hour he and George talked of canyons in which,
-they decided, somebody would find a billion dollars and I decided
-Democracy was safe on the desert.
-
-Walking up the wash from George’s dugout I was surprised to see a slim
-blonde with blue eyes and a nice smile. Obviously she had just left her
-stove, for she had a steaming pot of coffee in her hand. I made some
-inane remark about the beauty of the morning.
-
-“It’s nearly always like this,” she said and after a moment I was
-sitting on the bench outside the dugout sipping coffee. I learned that
-her name was Helen. “Why shouldn’t I try prospecting? I’ve nothing to
-lose. I had a job clerking, but I just couldn’t scrimp enough to pay for
-medicine and the doctors’ bills.”
-
-That and the telltale spot on her cheek seemed reason enough for her
-presence and, as she explained, “I might make a strike.”
-
-Later in Beatty, I noticed a small crowd about the office of Judge W. B.
-Gray, Beatty’s marrying Justice, who was also interested in mines.
-“What’s the riot?” I asked Rocky Mountain George, who was whittling on
-the bench beside me. “Helen made a big strike,” he told me and I hurried
-over and met her coming out—radiant and excited.
-
-“I’ve just heard of your strike,” I said. “Where did you make it?”
-
-“Right in that wash,” she laughed. “He came along one day and—well, we
-just got to liking each other and—” She paused to introduce me to a good
-looking clean-cut fellow and added: “So we just up and married.”
-
-The population of Beatty had so changed in one generation that in 1949
-when the town wanted to put on a celebration, not a citizen could be
-found who knew Beatty’s first name. Finally a former acquaintance was
-located at Long Beach who advised a booster group that the name of its
-founder was William Martin Beatty. The gentleman is mistaken. Beatty’s
-first name was Montelius and was called Monte by all old timers.
-
-A feature of social life in Shoshone was the Snake House—an unbelievable
-structure made of shook from apple crates, scraps of corrugated iron
-found in the dump, tin cut from oil cans, and cardboard from packing
-cartons, which because of scant rainfall, served almost as well as wood
-or iron.
-
-A fellow comes in from the hills, craves relaxation and finds it in the
-Snake House. Though he never plays poker, Eddie Main who lived a few
-yards away was induced to function as a sort of Managing Director, to
-see that the game remained a gentleman’s game.
-
-Inside, swinging from the roof is a Coleman lantern and under it a big
-round table covered with a blanket stretched tight and tacked under the
-edges. A rack of chips. Chairs for players and kegs and beer crates for
-spectators. A stove in the corner furnishes heat when needed. If you
-limit your poker to penny ante, the game is not for you. I have seen
-more than $1000 in the pots and large bets are the rule.
-
-One night Sam Flake who has been in Death Valley country longer than any
-living man, joined the game. Sam, a student of poker, ran afoul of four
-queens and went home broke. The next day as he worked in a mine tunnel,
-Sam was holding a post mortem over his disaster. He went over his play
-point by point. Like many a desert man used to solitude, Sam
-occasionally talked to himself aloud, And unaware that Whitey Bill
-McGarn was in a stope just above him, Sam diagnosed his loss: “I opened
-right. I anted right. I bet right. I called right. Can’t be but one
-answer. I was sitting in the wrong seat.” (Sam Flake died suddenly at
-Tecopa Hot Springs in 1949.)
-
-The village of Tecopa is 11 miles south of Shoshone. When the railroad
-was built stations were given names of local significance and this
-honors the Indian chief, Cap Tecopa.
-
-Important discoveries of gold, silver, lead, and talc were made and are
-still being worked. In the early days murders of both whites and
-Indians, without any clues were of frequent occurrence. Someone recalled
-that every killing of an Indian by a white man had been followed by a
-white man’s murder.
-
-The Piute believed in blood atonement and when a young American was
-found butchered in the Ibex hills, friends of the deceased went to Cap
-Tecopa with evidence which indicated the murder was committed by Cap’s
-tribesmen. “We want these killings stopped,” they told him heatedly.
-
-Cap denied any knowledge of the crime and brushed aside the suggestion
-that he produce the assassin. “Too many Indians,” Cap said. “But if you
-help, I can stop the killings.”
-
-“How?” they demanded.
-
-“You tell hiko no kill Indian. I tell Indian no kill hiko.”
-
-Cap Tecopa was a good prospector and owned a coveted claim which he
-refused to sell.
-
-Among the fortune seekers was a flashily dressed individual who wore a
-tall silk topper. The beegum fascinated Cap and he wanted it. He
-followed the wearer about, his eyes never leaving the shiny headgear. At
-last the urge to possess was irresistible and he approached the owner. A
-lean finger gingerly touched the sacred brim. “How much?”
-
-All he got was a shake of the head. Failure only stimulated Tecopa’s
-desire. His money refused, Cap in his desperation thought of the claim
-which the cunning of the promoters, the wiles of gamblers, the pleas of
-friends had failed to get.
-
-The owner of the hat annoyed by Tecopa, decided to get rid of him. “You
-take hat. I take claim.”
-
-The Indian reached for the topper. “Take um,” he grunted and the deal
-was made. Several other versions of this story are recalled by old
-timers.
-
-The Tecopa Hot Springs were highly esteemed by the desert Indian, who
-always advertised the waters he believed to have medicinal value. In the
-Coso Range he used the walls of a canyon approaching the springs for his
-message. The crude drawing of a man was pictured, shoulders bent,
-leaning heavily on a stick. Another showed the same man leaving the
-springs but now walking erect, his stick abandoned.
-
-The Tecopa Springs are about one and a half miles north of Tecopa and
-furnish an astounding example of rumor’s far-reaching power. Originally
-there was only one spring and when I first saw it, it was a round pool
-about eight feet in diameter, three feet deep and so hidden by tules
-that one might pass within a few feet of it unaware of its existence.
-The singularly clear water seeped from a barren hill. About, is a
-blinding white crust of boron and alkali. There Ann Cowboy used to lead
-Mary Shoofly, to stay the blindness that threatened Mary Shoofly’s
-failing eyes. When the whites discovered the spring, the Indians
-abandoned it.
-
-Later it became a community bath tub and laundry. Prospectors would
-“hoof” it for miles to do their washing because the water was hot—112
-degrees, and the borax content assured easy cleansing. Husbands and
-wives began to go for baths and someone hauled in a few pieces of
-corrugated iron and made blinds behind which they bathed in the nude. A
-garment was hung on the blind as a sign of occupation and it is a
-tribute to the chivalry of desert men that they always stopped a few
-hundred feet away to look for that garment, and advanced only when it
-was removed.
-
-Today you will see two new structures at the spring and long lines of
-bathers living in trailers parked nearby. They are victims of arthritis,
-rheumatism, swollen feet, or something that had baffled physicians,
-patent medicines, and quacks. They come from every part of the country.
-Somebody has told them that somebody else had been cured at a little
-spring on the desert between Shoshone and Tecopa.
-
-Some live under blankets, cook in a tin can over bits of wood hoarded
-like gold, for the vicinity is bare of growth. It is government land and
-space is free. Some camp on the bare ground without tent, the soft silt
-their only bed. “Something ails my blood. Shoulder gets to aching. Neck
-stiff. Come here and boil out” ... “Like magic—this water. I’ve been to
-every medicinal bath in Europe and America. This beats ’em all.”
-
-You finally turn away, dazed with stories of elephantine legs, restored
-to perfect size and symmetry. Of muscles dead for a decade, moving with
-the precision of a motor. Of joints rigid as a steel rail suddenly
-pliable as the ankles of a tap dancer.
-
-Here they sit in the sun—patient, hopeful; their crutches leaning
-against their trailer steps. They have the blessed privilege of
-discussing their ailments with each other. “Oh, your misery was nothing.
-Doctors said I would never reach here alive....”
-
-An analysis shows traces of radium.
-
-A few miles below Tecopa is another landmark of the country known as the
-China Ranch. To old timers it was known as The Chinaman’s Ranch. One
-Quon Sing, who had been a cook at Old Harmony Borax Works quit that job
-to serve a Mr. Osborn, wealthy mining man with interests near Tecopa.
-His service with Osborn covered a period of many years.
-
-“I can’t state it as a fact,” Shorty Harris once told me, “but I have
-been told by old settlers that Osborn located him on the ranch as a
-reward for long and faithful service.”
-
-The land was in the raw stage, with nothing to appeal to a white man
-except water. It was reached through a twisting canyon which filled at
-times with the raging torrents dropped by cloudbursts. Erosion has left
-spectacular scenery. In places mud walls lift straight up hundreds of
-feet. Nobody but a Chinaman or a bandit hiding from the law would have
-wanted it.
-
-There was a spring which the Chinaman developed and soon a little stream
-flowed all year. The industrious Chinaman converted it into a profitable
-ranch. He planted figs and dates and knowing, as only a Chinaman does,
-the value and uses of water the place was soon transformed into a garden
-with shade trees spreading over a green meadow—a cooling, restful little
-haven hidden away in the heart of the hills. He had cows and raised
-chickens and hogs. He planted grapes, dates, and vegetables and soon was
-selling his produce to the settlers scattered about the desert. From a
-wayfaring guest he would accept no money for food or lodging.
-
-After the Chinaman had brought the ranch to a high state of production a
-white man came along and since there was no law in the country, he made
-one of his own—his model the ancient one that “He shall take who has the
-might and he shall keep who can.” He chased the Chinaman off with a shot
-gun and sat down to enjoy himself, secure in the knowledge that nobody
-cared enough for a Chinaman to do anything about it.
-
-The Chinaman was never again heard of.
-
-The ranch since has had many owners. Though the roads are rough and the
-grades difficult, on the broad verandas that encircle the old ranch
-house, one feels he has found a bit of paradise “away from it all.”
-
-Sitting on the porch once with Big Bill Greer, who owned a life interest
-in it until his demise recently, we talked of the various yarns told of
-the Chinaman.
-
-“The best thing he did was that planting over there by the stream.” He
-lifted his huge form from the chair. “Just wait a minute. I’ll get you a
-specimen.”
-
-While he was gone I strolled around to see other miracles wrought by the
-heathen chased from his home by a Christian’s gun. When I returned Bill
-was waiting with two tall glasses, diffusing a tantalizing aroma of
-bourbon. Floating on the liquor were bunches of crisp, cooling mint. He
-gave me one, lifted the other. “Here’s to Quon Sing. God rest his soul,”
-Bill said.
-
-As we slowly sipped I asked him if he had brought the specimen.
-
-“It’s the mint,” Bill said.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XII
- A Hovel That Ought To Be a Shrine
-
-
-An Indian rode up to the bench, leaped from his cayuse and tried to tell
-Joe Ryan something about a “hiko.” Joe matched his pantomime and broken
-English, finally jerking a thumb over his shoulder and the Indian went
-into the store.
-
-“That’s Indian Johnnie,” Joe said: “Hundred and fifty miles to his
-place, other side of the Panamint. Awful country to get at. Shorty
-Harris is in a bad way at Ballarat.”
-
-A few moments later Charlie drove his pickup to the pump, filled the gas
-tank and before we realized it, was swallowed in a cloud of dust. “He’s
-in for a helluva trip,” Joe said.
-
-Before the day was over, snow covered the high peaks and a biting wind
-drove us from the bench. “Let’s go over to the Mesquite Club,” Joe said.
-
-We hurried across the road to the sprawling old building hidden in a
-thicket and listing in every direction of the compass, but over the
-roof, like friendly arms crooked the branches of big mesquite trees.
-Among mining men that ramshackle was known around the world.
-
-Inside was a big pot-bellied stove. Beside it, a huge woodbox. Chairs
-held together with baling wire. Two or three old auto seats hauled in
-from cars abandoned on the desert. An ancient, moth-eaten sofa on which
-the wayfarer out of luck was privileged to sleep. Three or four tables,
-each with a dog-eared deck of cards where old timers played solitaire or
-a spot of poker. There were books and magazines—high and low-brow, left
-by the tourists. But there was a friendliness about the shabby room that
-had nothing to gain from mahogany or chandeliers of gold.
-
-Wind kept us indoors for two days. On the third we were on the bench
-again when someone said, “Here comes Charlie....”
-
-A moment later Joe and Big Dan were helping Charlie take Shorty Harris,
-dean of Death Valley prospectors, more dead than alive, into a cabin and
-lay him on the bed. “You must have had an awful time,” Joe said to
-Charlie.
-
-“Not too bad ... made it,” Charlie answered as he started a fire in the
-stove. He brought in water and wood and turned to Joe. “Wish you’d fill
-up that gas tank and see about the oil....”
-
-Joe looked at him, puzzled.
-
-“Got to take him to the hospital,” Charlie said.
-
-We knew that meant another trip of 140 miles.
-
-“Damned if you do,” Joe said. “I’ll get somebody to go.”
-
-I supposed after the all night trip under such conditions Brown would go
-to bed but an hour later when I went to the store for some small
-purchase a woman climbed out of a pickup truck and with three small
-children, came in. She lived on her ranch 60 miles away and had come to
-buy her month’s supply of provisions—a full load for the truck. When she
-paid her bill she nodded toward her brood: “Charlie, those kids look
-like brush Indians with all that hair....”
-
-Charlie got scissors and comb and went to work. Before he had swept out
-the shorn locks Ben Brandt came in, holding his jaw.
-
-“Feels like a stamp mill,” he groaned. “Haven’t slept in a week. Be dead
-by the time I get to Barstow.” It was 125 miles to Barstow and Ben was
-waiting for a ride with someone going that way.
-
-Charlie went behind the counter, returned with forceps, opening and
-closing the jaws of the instrument two or three times as if in practice
-and then he turned to the sufferer: “You understand it’s against the law
-for me to use these things. In a pinch—”
-
-“To hell with the law,” Ben snapped. “Yank it out!”
-
-Charlie took a chair to the back porch. Ben sat down and with a
-vice-like arm about Ben’s head, the forceps went in and the tooth came
-out.
-
-I went outside and sat on the bench with a better understanding of
-Shoshone and people and values which come only from friendships closely
-knitted and help unselfishly given.
-
-Why does a man like the desert? As good an answer as any is another
-question: Why does he like chicken? Students of human behavior, poets,
-writers, gushing debutantes and greying dowagers, humorless scientists,
-and bored urbanites have labored mightily to explain it.
-
-“Something just gets into the blood,” one says, frankly groping for an
-answer. Immensities of space. Solitudes that whittle the ego down to
-size. Detachment from routine cares. A feel of nearness to whatever it
-is that is God. Stars to finger. The muted symphonies of farflung sky
-and earth.
-
-Whatever it is, I was now aware that as between hell and Shoshone, I
-would give the nod to Shoshone. I was getting used to Shoshone and
-desolation when a few days later Charlie came out of the store and sat
-beside me on the bench. “Road’s open,” he said. “I reckon you’re in a
-hurry to get away.”
-
-I didn’t answer at once but conscious of his searching look, finally
-stammered that Dan Modine wanted me to go with him to Happy Jack’s
-party. “I can spare another day....” Charlie lit a cigarette, took a
-puff or two. “You’ve gone desert,” he chuckled and went back into the
-store.
-
-For a week I’d been hearing of Happy Jack’s party and when Dan told me
-that everyone within 100 miles would be on hand, I was glad to go. Dan
-gave me Jack’s background on the 35 mile trip across dry washes, deep
-sands, and hairpin turns on pitching hills.
-
-Born on the desert, Jack was the son of a Forty Niner and a Piute squaw.
-He had grown up as an Indian and had married Mary, a full blood Piute.
-Jack’s brother Lem married Anna, another squaw.
-
-“Lem had worked at odd jobs and in the mines,” Dan said. “Now and then
-he and Anna would do a little prospecting. Anna found a claim that
-showed a little color. Lem worked alongside his squaw a couple weeks,
-but it was a back breaking job and Lem quit it. But Anna kept digging
-and one day she came up to their shack with a piece of ore that was
-almost pure gold. Anna’s find made them rich.
-
-“I reckon money does things to people. Anyway, it didn’t take Lem long
-to get rid of Anna. He gave her enough so that she could take it easy.
-Then he pushed off to the city to live high, wide, and handsome. I see
-Anna now and then. She’s not jolly like she used to be. Lem has always
-wanted Jack to get rid of Mary and come to the city. In fact, Jack told
-me once that Lem offered to give him half of his money if he would do
-that. But Jack said, to hell with the city. He’s the happy go lucky
-sort. Big, good looking, and lazy. His old dobe under the cottonwood
-tree and the water running by with plenty of outdoors—that suits Jack.”
-
-We found, as Dan had predicted, that everybody in the country had come
-to Jack’s party. A long U shaped table was placed outside under the
-shade of a tree. From nearby pits came a tantalizing aroma of barbecue.
-A keg of bourbon encircled with glasses stood beside a bucket of
-dripping mint. Cigars and cigarettes were on top of the keg and Jack saw
-that his guests were always supplied.
-
-There was an orchestra with capable musicians, Jack occasionally pinch
-hitting for the bull fiddler when the latter took time out for a drink
-or a dance. But when the snare drum player wanted his bourbon, Jack was
-like a kid pulling doodads from a Christmas tree. “It will last a week,”
-Dan said. “A few may pull out after a day or two, but others will take
-their places.”
-
-“This must have cost Jack a year’s labor,” I said. “I told him that
-once,” Dan laughed. “He asked me what else would a fellow work a year
-for.”
-
-Jack’s views of life and things were Mary’s, except that Mary knew lean
-years come and if any provisions were to be made for them she would have
-to make them. She tended the goats and the sheep, cut the deer and the
-mountain sheep into strips and hung them high, where the flies wouldn’t
-get them, to cure in the breeze. If Jack wanted to throw a party, so did
-Mary. “... Big party ... kill fat steer. Five sheep. Heap good time....”
-To Jack’s everlasting credit, be it said that whatever Mary did, suited
-Jack.
-
-“Oh, him fine man,” Mary would say. “Like home. Play with children. No
-get mad....”
-
-There may be somewhere in this world a morsel approaching Mary’s
-barbecued mountain sheep, but I’ve never tasted it.
-
-Jack told me later that the best meat is that from an old ram with no
-teeth. “He hasn’t eaten all winter, because his teeth won’t let him cut
-the hard, woody sage and being starved when spring comes, he gorges on
-the new sacatone. He fattens quickly and his flesh is tender.”
-
-While Dan and I were walking about, a long limousine came across the
-valley and parked behind a screen of mesquite well away from the house
-and the guests. Dan and I happened to be nearby as a big, dark man
-expensively tailored stepped out. A lady fashionably dressed remained in
-the car.
-
-“That’s Lem,” Dan explained. “When he was a kid he ran around in a gee
-string. I reckon his wife doesn’t want to meet the in-laws.”
-
-We came upon him a moment later and while he and Dan talked of old times
-Jack rushed down and embraced Lem. “Come up,” he urged, but Lem’s
-interest was lukewarm. Mary was busy and he would see her later. No, he
-didn’t wish a drink. He had cigars. Just stopped in to see how Jack was
-and if he’d changed his mind.
-
-Dan and I moved away and sat under a shed along the runoff of the spring
-and had no choice about listening to a conversation not intended for our
-ears.
-
-Jack was squatted on his heels and his brother was sitting on a boulder.
-Lem was talking, his voice brittle: “Of course, we married squaws ...
-but we are more white than Indian. I’ll give you all the money you need.
-Let Mary go back to her people. She’ll be happy. Look at Anna ... she’s
-contented and better off with her own people and it will be the same
-with Mary.”
-
-Lem lifted his hand, a big diamond ring flashing on his finger as he
-pointed to the squalid cabin where Jack’s fat squaw, her face beaming,
-was serving the guests. “Look at that hovel. Just a pig sty. If you
-prefer that to $10,000 a year, it’s your business. I’ve come out for the
-last time....”
-
-Jack, bareheaded, rose, his hair rumpled in the wind as he glanced at
-the things about—the sagging roof, the shade tree beside it and
-following his glance I saw Mary smile at him and wave. Then he turned to
-Lem: “A pig sty, huh? Ten thousand a year. Mansion in the city.” His
-eyes traveled over Lem’s smart tailored suit, the diamond, the malacca
-cane pecking the gravel at his feet. I could see Jack’s fingers digging
-at his palms, the muscles rippling along his wrists and I sensed that he
-was seething inside.
-
-“Pig sty.... One year I recollect, no crop. No meat. No game. Nothing. I
-was down with fever. She was down too, but she got up and walked and
-crawled from here to Indian Springs. Through the brush. Over the
-mountain to get grub from her people. Why, sometimes I’d feel like going
-off by myself and bawling....” Jack turned again to his brother, flint
-in his dark eyes. “I ought to brain you. To hell with your money. She
-stuck with me and bigod, I’ll stick with her.”
-
-Then Jack calmly strode back to his party, and somehow it seemed to me
-the hovel had suddenly become a holy shrine.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIII
- Sex in Death Valley Country
-
-
-Sex, of course, went with the white man to the desert, but because there
-were no Freuds, no Kinseys stirring the social sewage, it was considered
-merely as a biologic urge and thus its impact on the lives of the early
-settlers was a realistic one. It was not good for man to live alone. The
-husky young adventurer found a water hole and a cottonwood tree and
-built a cabin. But he found it wasn’t a home. The lonely immensity of
-space he knew, was no place for a white woman and none were there. He
-faced the fundamental problem squarely and looked about for a squaw.
-
-He paid Hungry Bill or some other Indian head man $10 for the mate of
-his choice and that sanctified the relation. She brought a certain
-degree of orderliness to the cabin, washed his clothes, cooked his
-meals. A child was born and the cabin became a home. The squaw could
-sharpen a stick, walk out into the brush and return with herbs and roots
-and serve a palatable dinner. She worked his fields, groomed his horses
-and relieved him of responsibility for the children. The progeny
-followed the rules of breeding. Some good. Some bad.
-
-Said old Jim Baker, who married a Shoshone, pleading for a “squar” deal
-for his son: “There’s only one creature worse than a genuine Indian and
-that’s a half breed. He has got two devils in him and is meaner than the
-meanest Indian I ever saw. That boy of mine is a half-breed and he ain’t
-accountable.”
-
-Almost all of the first settlers were squaw men and the matings were
-tolerated because they were understood. It was often a long journey to
-obtain the sanction of a Chief and the squaw was taken without
-formality. Many of these matings lasted and the offspring were absorbed
-without social embarrassment in the life of the community. Dr. Kinsey
-would have had little joy in his search for perversion or infidelities,
-though there is the instance of a drunken squaw who aroused the owner of
-a saloon at midnight on the Ash Meadows desert and shouted: “I want a
-man....”
-
-Once Shoshone faced the desperate need of a school. There were only
-three children of school age in the little settlement and the nearest
-school was 28 miles away. Parents complained, but authorities at the
-county seat nearly 200 miles away, pointed out that the law required 13
-children or an average attendance of five and a half to form a school
-district.
-
-Like other community problems it was taken to Charlie, though none
-believed that even Charlie could solve it.
-
-The time for the opening of schools was but a few weeks away when one
-day Brown headed his car out into the desert. “Hunting trip,” he
-explained.
-
-In a hovel he found Rosie, a Piute squaw with a brood of children. “How
-old?” Charlie asked.
-
-“Him five ... him six now,” she said. “Him seven. Him eight.”
-
-“How’d you like to live at Shoshone? Plenty work. Good house.”
-
-“Okay. Me come,” Rosie said.
-
-With the half breeds, the school was able to open.
-
-Rosie was a challenging problem. She would have taken no beauty prize
-among the Piutes, but when along her desert trails she acquired these
-children of assorted parentage, Fate dealt her an ace.
-
-With the few dollars Rosie wangled from the several fathers for the
-support of their children, she lived unworried. She liked to get drunk
-and the only nettling problem in her life was the federal law against
-selling liquor to Indians. So she established her own medium of
-exchange—a bottle of liquor. Unfortunately she spread a social disease
-and that was something to worry about.
-
-“Rosie has Shoshone over a barrel,” Joe Ryan said. “If we run her out,
-we won’t have enough children for school.”
-
-Then there was the economic angle—the loss of wages by afflicted miners
-and mines crippled by the absence of the unafflicted who would take time
-off to go to Las Vegas for the commodity supplied by Rosie.
-
-Charlie arranged for Ann Cowboy to look after Rosie’s children and
-called up W. H. Brown, deputy sheriff at Death Valley Junction and told
-him to come for Rosie. Brownie, as he is known all over the desert, came
-and took Rosie into custody. “What’ll I charge her with?”
-
-“She has a venereal disease,” Charlie said.
-
-“There’s no law I know of against that....”
-
-“All right. Charge her with pollution. She got drunk and fell into the
-spring.” Then Charlie called up the Judge and suggested Rosie have a
-year’s vacation in the county jail.
-
-The paths that radiated from Rosie’s shack in the brush like spokes from
-the hub of a wheel, were soon overgrown with salt grass. She served her
-sentence and returned to Shoshone and the paths were soon beaten smooth
-again.
-
-Eventually Brown declared Shoshone out of bounds for Rosie and she moved
-over into Nevada. There she found a lover of her tribe and one night
-when both were drunk, Rosie decided she’d had enough of him and with a
-big, sharp knife she calmly disemboweled him—for which unladylike
-incident she was removed to a Nevada prison where the state cured her
-syphilis and turned her loose—if not morally reformed, at least
-physically fit.
-
-One of Rosie’s patrons was a man thought to be in his middle fifties.
-Always carefully groomed, his white shirts, spotless ties, and tailored
-suits were conspicuous in a place where levis were the rule. He was also
-a total abstainer. When he died suddenly and it was learned he was 82
-years old, Shoshone gasped. An item in his will read: “To Rosie, $50 to
-buy whiskey.”
-
-Living in a wickiup in the mesquite was the Indian, Tom Weed, who shared
-with his squaw a passion for liquor. Sober, Tom was industrious in the
-Indian way. He knew the country, when and where the mountain sheep were
-fattest; the herbs that cured and the best grasses for the beautiful
-baskets woven by his wife.
-
-Tom filed on a deposit of non-metallic ore near Shoshone and forgot it.
-A subsequent locater found a buyer. Considerable capital was to be
-invested and the purchaser decided that Tom, if so disposed, could at
-least challenge the title. In order to dispose of Tom he sent the
-document to Dad Fairbanks together with a check payable to Tom for $1000
-and asked Dad to get a quit claim deed from Tom.
-
-Since $1000 was more than Tom ever expected to see in his life he was
-eager to sign. “You cash check?” he asked Dad.
-
-“Sure,” Dad told him.
-
-As Dad was getting the money he said, “Tom, long winter ahead. Hard to
-get work. Don’t you think you’d better leave money with me? Might come
-in handy.” Dad saw that Tom was impressed and added: “You told me
-yesterday you were going over to Las Vegas. That’s another good reason.
-Think it over.”
-
-“Okay. Me think.” Tom stood for a long moment staring at the floor,
-studying every angle of the problem. Finally he thrust his palm at Dad
-and said gravely: “Might die....”
-
-Dad gave him the money and Tom went to Las Vegas. In an hour he was
-drunk. In three he was broke and in jail.
-
-One night he and his squaw got blissfully drunk. They were sleeping in a
-shed full of combustible junk when it caught fire. Other Indians
-attracted by their screams rushed to the scene but both were dead. From
-Tom’s wickiup, a few feet from the shed, they took Tom’s guns and
-saddles, his squaw’s priceless baskets—all the belongings of both—and
-tossed them into the flames. Thus the evil spirits were kept away and
-the souls of Tom and his squaw passed happily to the Piute heaven which
-is a place where there is a big lake and forests filled with game and
-the squaws are strong and plentiful.
-
-
-The Johnnie Mine, an important gold producer, east of Shoshone, was
-located by John Tecopa, son of Cap Tecopa, Pahrump Chief.
-
-Tecopa found the float; gave Ed Metcalf an interest to help him locate
-the ledge. Bob and Monte Montgomery bought the claim. They interested
-Jerry Langford, who induced the Mormon Church to get behind the project.
-
-The Potosi was an early discovery on Timber Mountain between the Johnnie
-Mine and Good Springs. (It was here that Carole Lombard, wife of Clark
-Gable, was killed in an airplane accident in 1941.) From this mine came
-the lead which made the bullets used in the Mountain Meadows massacre.
-Jeff Grundy, a prospector of early days, said his father molded the
-bullets and delivered them to John D. Lee, who after 20 years was
-executed for the murder of the 123 victims of the massacre.
-
-Lee was the owner of Lee’s Ferry, which was the only place where the
-Colorado River could be crossed in the Grand Canyon area until the
-present suspension bridge 500 feet high was built.
-
-Near Johnnie are Ash Meadows and the beautiful Pahrump Valley,
-overlooked by the Charleston Mountains—the summer sleeping porch of Las
-Vegas, 35 miles south.
-
-At Ash Meadows lived Jack Longstreet, who wore his hair long enough to
-cover his ears. He claimed kinship with the distinguished South Carolina
-family of that name. Easier to prove is that Mr. Longstreet came from
-Texas and as a 14 year old youngster was caught with a band of horse
-thieves in Colorado. The older ones were hanged but because of his youth
-Longstreet was released after his ears were cropped to brand him for
-identification by others. He lived and drank lustily for 96 years and
-died with a competency.
-
-Near Johnnie also lived Mary Scott, who discovered the Confidence Mine,
-a landmark in Death Valley. Mary was a squaw who, after consorting with
-several white men, chose for her mate a half-breed named Bob Scott. On a
-hunting and trapping trip Mary picked up some ore which Scott decided
-was silver. Since silver could not be profitably handled because of
-transportation costs, Scott filed no notice.
-
-Years after Scott’s death, Mary showed samples of the ore to her cousin,
-an Indian named Bob Black and Bob showed it to Frank Cole, a millwright
-at the Johnnie Mine. Cole and Jimmy Ashdown grubstaked Mary and Bob, who
-returned to Death Valley and located the property. Samples showed rich
-gold.
-
-For a wagon with a canopy and a spavined horse Cole and Ashdown secured
-the interest of Mary and Bob. Cole and Ashdown then sold to the
-Montgomery brothers, who through Bishop Cannon secured backing for the
-venture from the Mormon Church.
-
-Dan Driscoll built the road to the mine. Shorty Harris, Bob Warnack, and
-Rube Graham dug the well and mine shaft. It produced rich ore to a depth
-of 65 feet, where the vein was broken up.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIV
- Shoshone Country. Resting Springs
-
-
-The country about Shoshone is identified with the earliest migration of
-Americans to California.
-
-It is a curious fact that prior to the coming of Jedediah Smith who, in
-1826 was actually the first American to enter the state from the east,
-the contented Spanish believed that the Sierras were insurmountable
-barriers to invasion by the hated American or any attacking enemy.
-
-After Smith the first white American to look upon the Shoshone region so
-far as known, was William Wolfskill, a Kentucky trapper who left Santa
-Fe in 1830-31 on a trading expedition with stores of cloth, garments,
-and gimcracks.
-
-Having had poor luck in disposing of his cargo, when he reached the
-Virgin River he decided to push westward across the Mojave Desert and
-entered California by way of Cajon Pass. After resting at San Gabriel he
-went north into the San Joaquin Valley. There he disposed of his stock
-at fabulous prices, taking in trade mules, horses, silks, and other
-items which he took to Taos and Santa Fe, receiving for this merchandise
-equally huge profits.
-
-Wolfskill later settled in Los Angeles, one of the earliest Americans in
-the pueblo where he acquired large land holdings. There he established
-the citrus industry, planting a grove in what is now the heart of Los
-Angeles.
-
-In 1832 Joseph B. Chiles organized a party at Independence, Missouri,
-and started for California. It numbered 50 men, women, and children.
-Upon reaching Fort Laramie, Wyoming (which was officially Fort John, but
-for some reason was never so called) Chiles met Joseph Reddeford Walker
-and employed him as guide.
-
-Eighteen years before the Bennett-Arcane party came to grief, Walker had
-discovered Walker River and Walker Lake in Nevada, afterward named for
-him. After reaching the Sierras, his jaded teams were unable to cross
-and had to be abandoned, the party narrowly escaping death. Having heard
-of the southerly course over the old Spanish Trail, he turned back and
-over it guided the Chiles party.
-
-Early in 1843, John C. Fremont led a party of 39 men from Salt Lake City
-northward to Fort Vancouver and in November of that year, started on the
-return trip to the East. This trip was interrupted when he found his
-party threatened by cold and starvation and he faced about; crossed the
-Sierra Nevadas and went to Sutter’s Fort. After resting and outfitting,
-he set out for the East by the southerly route over the old Spanish
-trail, which leads through the Shoshone region.
-
-At a spring somewhere north of the Mojave River he made camp. The water
-nauseated some of his men and he moved to another. Identification of
-these springs has been a matter of dispute and though historians have
-honestly tried to identify them, the fact remains that none can say “I
-was there.”
-
-In the vicinity were several springs any of which may have been the one
-referred to by Fremont in his account of the journey. Among these were
-two water holes indicated on early maps as Agua de Tio Mesa, and another
-as Agua de Tomaso.
-
-There are several springs of nauseating water in the area and some of
-the old timers academically inclined, insisted that Fremont probably
-camped at Saratoga Springs, which afforded a sight of Telescope Peak or
-at Salt Spring, nine miles east on the present Baker-Shoshone Highway at
-Rocky Point.
-
-Kit Carson was Fremont’s guide. Fremont records that two Mexicans rode
-into his camp on April 27, 1844, and asked him to recover some horses
-which they declared had been stolen from them by Indians at the
-Archilette Spring, 13 miles east of Shoshone.
-
-One of the Mexicans was Andreas Fuentes, the other a boy of 11
-years—Pablo Hernandez. While the Indians were making the raid, the boy
-and Fuentes had managed to get away with 30 of the horses and these they
-had left for safety at a water hole known to them as Agua de Tomaso.
-They reported that they had left Pablo’s father and mother and a man
-named Santiago Giacome and his wife at Archilette Spring.
-
-With Fremont, besides Kit Carson, was another famed scout, Alexander
-Godey, a St. Louis Frenchman—a gay, good looking dare devil who later
-married Maria Antonia Coronel, daughter of a rich Spanish don and became
-prominent in California.
-
-In answer to the Mexicans’ plea for help, Fremont turned to his men and
-asked if any of them wished to aid the victims of the Piute raid. He
-told them he would furnish horses for such a purpose if anyone cared to
-volunteer. Of the incident Kit Carson, who learned to write after he was
-grown, says in his dictated autobiography: “Godey and myself volunteered
-with the expectation that some men of our party would join us. They did
-not. We two and the Mexicans ... commenced the pursuit.”
-
-Fuentes’ horse gave out and he returned to Fremont’s camp that night,
-but Godey, Carson, and the boy went on. They had good moonlight at first
-but upon entering a deep and narrow canyon, utter blackness came, even
-shutting out starlight, and Carson says they had to “feel for the
-trail.”
-
-One may with reason surmise that Godey and Carson proceeded through the
-gorge that leads to the China Ranch and now known as Rainbow Canyon.
-When they could go no farther they slept an hour, resumed the hunt and
-shortly after sunrise, saw the Indians feasting on the carcass of one of
-the stolen horses. They had slain five others and these were being
-boiled. Carson’s and Godey’s horses were too tired to go farther and
-were hitched out of sight among the rocks. The hunters took the trail
-afoot and made their way into the herd of stolen horses.
-
-Says Carson: “A young one got frightened. That frightened the rest. The
-Indians noticed the commotion ... sprang to their arms. We now
-considered it time to charge on the Indians. They were about 30 in
-number. We charged. I fired, killing one. Godey fired, missed but
-reloaded and fired, killing another. There were only three shots fired
-and two were killed. The remainder ran. I ... ascended a hill to keep
-guard while Godey scalped the dead Indians. He scalped the one he shot
-and was proceeding toward the one I shot. He was not yet dead and was
-behind some rocks. As Godey approached he raised, let fly an arrow. It
-passed through Godey’s shirt collar. He again fell and Godey finished
-him.”
-
-Subsequently it was discovered that Godey hadn’t missed, but that both
-men had fired at the same Indian as proven by two bullets found in one
-of the dead Indians. Godey called these Indians “Diggars.” The one with
-the two bullets was the one who sent the arrow through Godey’s collar
-and when Godey was scalping him, “he sprang to his feet, the blood
-streaming from his skinned head and uttered a hideous yowl.” Godey
-promptly put him out of his pain.
-
-They returned to camp. Writes Fremont: “A war whoop was heard such as
-Indians make when returning from a victorious enterprise and soon Carson
-and Godey appeared, driving before them a band of horses recognized by
-Fuentes to be part of those they had lost. Two bloody scalps dangling
-from the end of Godey’s gun....”
-
-Fremont wrote of it later: “The place, object and numbers considered,
-this expedition of Carson and Godey may be considered among the boldest
-and most disinterested which the annals of Western adventure so full of
-daring deeds can present.” It was indeed a gallant response to the plea
-of unfortunates whom they’d never seen before and would never see again.
-
-When Fremont and his party reached the camp of the Mexicans they found
-the horribly butchered bodies of Hernandez, Pablo’s father, and Giacome.
-The naked bodies of the wives were found somewhat removed and shackled
-to stakes.
-
-Fremont changed the name of the spring from Archilette to Agua de
-Hernandez and as such it was known for several years. He took the
-Mexican boy, Pablo Hernandez, with him to Missouri where he was placed
-with the family of Fremont’s father-in-law, U. S. Senator Thomas H.
-Benton. The young Mexican didn’t care for civilization and the American
-way of life and in the spring of 1847 begged to be returned to Mexico.
-Senator Benton secured transportation for him on the schooner Flirt, by
-order of the Navy, and he was landed at Vera Cruz—a record of which is
-preserved in the archives of the 30th Congress, 1848.
-
-Three years later a rumor was circulated that the famed bandit, Joaquin
-Murietta was no other than Pablo Hernandez.
-
-Lieutenant, afterwards Colonel, Brewerton was at Resting Springs in 1848
-with Kit Carson who then was carrying important messages for the
-government to New Mexico. He found the ground white with the bleached
-bones of other victims of the desert Indians. Brewerton calls them Pau
-Eutaws.
-
-The Mormons began early to look upon this region as a logical part of
-the State of Deseret, for the creation of which, Brigham Young
-petitioned Congress, setting forth among reasons for the recognition of
-such a state that: “... We are so far removed from all civilized society
-and organized government and also natural barriers of trackless deserts,
-including mountains of snow and savages more bloody than either, so that
-we can never be united with any other portion of the country.”
-
-As early as 1851, the far-seeing Young decided to found a colony of
-Saints in San Bernardino, California, to extend Mormon influence. Sam
-Brannan, brilliant adherent of that faith, had already come to
-California with the nucleus of a Mormon colony in 1846, two years before
-Marshall discovered gold.
-
-Brannan became an outstanding figure among the Argonauts. None exceeded
-him in leadership or popularity in the building of San Francisco and the
-state. He grew rich and unfortunately began drinking; finally abandoned
-Mormonism and died poor.
-
-The colonizers sent out by Brigham Young were in three divisions. One
-under the leadership of Amasa Lyman, who brought his five wives. Another
-was headed by Charles C. Rich, who was accompanied by three of his
-wives. It is interesting to note that Rich became the father of 51
-children by five wives.
-
-The third division was under the command of Captain Jefferson Hunt,
-guide for the entire party. These leaders were all able men who were
-highly regarded by gentiles. They also camped at Agua de Hernandez and
-it was the Mormons who junked the previous name and gave one with
-significance. They called it “Resting Springs” and this more fitting
-name has lasted.
-
-On May 21, 1851, the Mormon elder, Parley P. Pratt, heading a party of
-missionaries en route to the South Sea Islands writes in his diary: “We
-encamped at a place called Resting Springs.... This is a fine place for
-rest.... Since leaving the Vegas (Las Vegas) we have traveled 75 miles
-through the most horrible desert.... Twenty miles from the Vegas we were
-assailed ... by a shower of arrows from the savage mountain robbers....
-Leaving Resting Springs the party arrived at Salt Spring gold mines
-toward evening....”
-
-In 1850, Phineas Banning, pioneer resident of Los Angeles and later
-owner of Catalina Island, hauled freight from Los Angeles to the gold
-mine at Salt Spring opposite Rocky Point just south of the Amargosa
-River on the Baker road and in 1854 Mormons discovered gold 25 miles
-south of Resting Springs, long before Dr. French searched for the
-Gunsight in Death Valley.
-
-The Amargosa River is one of the world’s most remarkable water courses.
-Originating at Springdale, north of Beatty, Nevada, it twists southward
-in zigzag pattern until it reaches a point about 34 miles south of
-Shoshone. There it turns west, crosses Highway 127, enters Death Valley
-at its most southerly point and then turns north to disappear 60 miles
-from the place of its origin.
-
-You may cross and re-cross it many times totally unaware of its
-existence, but in the cloudburst season it can and does become a
-terrible agent of destruction.
-
-In 1853 Major George Chorpenning obtained a contract to carry mail
-between the Mormon colony of San Bernardino, California, and Salt Lake.
-To reach Resting Springs, a station on the route, required five days.
-Today it is a journey of four hours.
-
-Resting Springs was also a relay station for white outlaws and Indian
-raiders from Utah, Wyoming, and the Dakotas. Even before Fremont,
-Carson, or the Mormons old Bill Williams, for whom Bill Williams River,
-Bill Williams Mountain, and the town of Williams, Arizona, are named was
-at Resting Springs.
-
- [Illustration: Map of Death Valley]
-
- [Illustration: John W. Searles, looking for gold, made a fortune in
- borax.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Like Weepah which “Boomed
- and Busted” after one day, Gilbert died after a few weeks.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD G. WEIGHT Saratoga Springs]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. The Bottom
- of America]
-
- BAD WATER
- 279.6 FEET BELOW SEA LEVEL
- LOWEST POINT IN THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE
-
- ⇐ SHOSHONE 57
- ⇐ BAKER 93
- FURNACE CREEK 17 ⇒
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Grave of
- Jas. Dayton.
- Bones are those of his horses.]
-
- [Illustration: Dugouts in Dublin Gulch at Shoshone.]
-
- [Illustration: Mesquite Club, Shoshone. Known throughout the West.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Golden
- Canyon]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. One of the
- famous Twenty Mule Teams.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Here boomed
- and busted the C. C. Julian swindle. Great names and great banks
- were shamefully involved.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Yellow Aster Mine
- (foreground) made owners rich. Randsburg in the background.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Belle Springs (Agua Tomaso)
- on old Salt Lake trail. Camp site of John C. Fremont.]
-
- [Illustration: Ralph Jacobus Fairbanks, outstanding pioneer, every
- man’s friend.]
-
- [Illustration: Dobe Charlie Nels.
- He saw Bodie boom and die.]
-
- [Illustration: Bodie, hellroarer from cemetery. Now another ghost
- town.]
-
- [Illustration: Seldom-seen Slim, colorful desert character.]
-
- [Illustration: Senator Charles Brown, benevolent overlord of Death
- Valley.]
-
- [Illustration: Panamint Tom, noted Piute, brother of Hungry Bill,
- Indian Chief]
-
- [Illustration: Where these wickiups were, now stands luxurious
- Furnace Creek Inn.]
-
- [Illustration: Courtesy Frasher’s Photo. Pomona, Calif. Darwin
- Falls]
-
- [Illustration: First House in Shoshone, built by Cub Lee.]
-
- [Illustration: Shorty Harris and his cabin at Ballarat, Panamint
- Valley.]
-
- [Illustration: Jim Butler, the discoverer of Tonopah Silver.]
-
- [Illustration: Sir Harry Oakes, booted off a train one day,
- discovered one of the world’s richest mines the next.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Beatty, Nevada. Bare
- Mountain in distance.]
-
- [Illustration: “Ma” and “Dad” Fairbanks.
- He was known to the Indians as Long Man.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Old Road Sign in Emigrant
- Wash.]
-
- Townsend Pass →
- ← Skidoo 7 M.
-
- [Illustration: Rock resting on gravel, gravel on sand. Here Quon
- Sing, heathen, created an oasis, was chased off by Christian’s
- guns.]
-
- [Illustration: Death Valley Scotty on his native heath.]
-
- [Illustration: Charles and Stella Brown, Shoshone.]
-
- [Illustration: Station at Rhyolite, Nevada, long a ghost town.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Monument in
- Death Valley honors Shorty Harris.]
-
- BURY ME BESIDE JIM DAYTON IN THE VALLEY WE LOVED. ABOVE ME WRITE:
- “HERE LIES SHORTY HARRIS, A SINGLE BLANKET JACKASS
- PROSPECTOR.”—EPITAPH REQUESTED BY SHORTY (FRANK) HARRIS BELOVED GOLD
- HUNTER. 1856-1834. HERE JAS. DAYTON, PIONEER, PERISHED 1898.
-
- TO THESE TRAILMAKERS WHOSE COURAGE MATCHES THE FOUNDERS OF THE LAND
- THIS BIT OF EARTH IS DEDICATED FOREVER.
-
- [Illustration: Pete Harmon, prospector. He walked more than 400
- miles in July to visit Shorty Harris when he heard that he was ill.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD. O. WEIGHT Calico, Ghost Town]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Wild Burro
- Colt]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Death Valley’s fantastic
- rock formations seen from Auguerreberry’s Point.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Old Harmony Borax Works,
- opposite Furnace Creek.]
-
- [Illustration: January 2, 1926. We camped our second night out at
- the Phantom City of Rhyolite.]
-
- [Illustration: Dublin Gulch, Shoshone. In these dugouts lived Joe
- Volmer, Dobe Charley and Jack Crowley, prospectors.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Golden Street, Rhyolite]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Bad Water, here the thirsty
- drank and died.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Ballarat, once an important
- freight station, now sand and sage.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Stables of Tufa Works used
- by Twenty Mule Teams, where borax was mined.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Zabriskie Ruins. Opals may
- be found in the canyon at right.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Charcoal
- Pits]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Typical
- Death Valley Canyon]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Death Valley
- sand dunes]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Effect of
- prehistoric convulsions]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Furnace
- Creek wash]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER’S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Ryan, and an
- abandoned borax mine.]
-
-Williams was a Baptist preacher, turned Mountain Man. He had guided
-Fremont through the terrors of the San Juan country and was accused of
-cannibalism when hunger threatened one detachment. Of Williams Kit
-Carson said: “In starving times, don’t walk ahead of Bill Williams.”
-
-Williams brought a band of Chaguanosos Indians to Resting Springs and
-made it an outpost for a horse stealing raid. With him were Pegleg Smith
-and Jim Beckwith, the mulatto who after having been a blacksmith with
-Ashley’s Fur Traders in 1821, became a famous guide, Indian Chief,
-trader, and scout. (Also called Beckwourth and Beckworth.)
-
-Leaving Resting Springs, they proceeded through Cajon Pass for their
-loot and on May 14, 1840, Juan Perez, administrator at San Gabriel
-Mission excited Southern California when he announced that every ranch
-between San Gabriel and San Bernardino had been stripped of horses. Two
-days later posses from every settlement in the valley started in
-pursuit. The raiders made it a running battle, defeated several
-detachments, adding the latter’s stock and grub to their plunder.
-
-Five days later, reinforcements were sent from Los Angeles, Chino, and
-other settlements, all under command of Jose Antonio Carrillo—ancestor
-of the movie celebrity, Leo Carrillo. He had “225 horses, 75 men, 49
-guns with braces of pistols, 19 spears, 22 swords and sabers, and 400
-cartridges.”
-
-The posse threw fear into the raiders, but didn’t catch them, though the
-latter lost half of the stolen horses. At Resting Springs, Carrillo
-found some abandoned clothing, saddles, and cooking utensils. Fifteen
-hundred horses that had died from thirst or lack of food were counted
-during the chase.
-
-Later, when Pegleg Smith was chided about the high price he demanded of
-an emigrant for a horse, he remarked: “Well, the horses cost me plenty.
-I lost half of them getting out of the country and three of my best
-squaws....”
-
-The earliest American settler at Resting Springs remembered by old
-timers was Philander Lee, a rough and somewhat eccentric squaw man. He
-was big, straight as a ramrod, afraid of nothing, and of an undetermined
-past. He was there in the early Eighties. He cleared 200 acres, raised
-alfalfa, stock, and some fruit. He had a way of adding the last part of
-his first name to his offspring, Leander and Meander are samples. Some
-of his descendants still live in the country.
-
-It was near Resting Springs Ranch while Phi Lee owned it that Jacob
-Breyfogle, of lost mine fame, was scalped by Hungry Bill’s tribesmen.
-The story is told in another chapter.
-
-Phi Lee’s brother, Cub Lee, who added spicy pages to the annals of Death
-Valley country, built the first home erected at Shoshone—an adobe which
-still stands. It was long the home of the squaw, Ann Cowboy. Another
-brother of Phi Lee was known as “Shoemaker” because he roamed the desert
-as a cobbler. All were squaw men.
-
-Cub Lee established a reputation for keeping his word and it was said no
-one ever disputed it and lived. Indians over in Nevada were giving a
-“heap big” party. His squaw wanted to go. Cub didn’t. “You stay home,”
-he ordered. “If you go, I’ll kill you.” He rode away and upon returning,
-discovered she was absent. He leaped on his cayuse, went to the party
-and found her. Whipping out his gun he killed both wife and son, blew
-the smoke out of his pistol and leisurely rode away.
-
-But the Nevada officials thought Cub Lee was too meticulous about
-keeping his word and Cub had a brief cooling off period in the pen.
-
-Pegleg Smith made Resting Springs his headquarters for the greatest haul
-in the history of California horse stealing and reached Cajon Pass
-before the theft was discovered. These horses were driven into Utah and
-there sold to emigrants, traders, and ranchers. Smith may be said to be
-the inventor of the Lost Mine, as a means of getting quick money. The
-credulous are still looking for mines that existed only in Pegleg’s fine
-imagination.
-
-Thomas L. Smith was born at Crab Orchard, Kentucky, October 10, 1801.
-With little schooling, he ran away from home to become a trapper and
-hunter, and following the western streams eventually settled in Wyoming.
-He married several squaws, choosing these from different tribes, thus
-insuring friendly alliance with all.
-
-He had been a member of Le Grand’s first trapping expedition to Santa Fe
-and was an associate of such outstanding men as St. Vrain, Sublette,
-Platte, Jim Bridger, Kit Carson, the merchant Antoine Rubideaux
-(properly Robedoux) of St. Louis. He spoke several Indian languages and
-earned the gratitude of the Indians in his area by leading them to
-victory in a battle with the Utes. Able and likable, he also had iron
-nerves and courage. His morals, he justified on the ground that his were
-the morals of the day.
-
-J. G. Bruff, historian, whose “Gold Rush-Journal and Drawings” is good
-material for research, met Smith on Bear River August 6, 1849, and wrote
-in his diary: “Pegleg Smith came into camp. He trades whiskey.” Actually
-he traded anything he could lay his hands on.
-
-While trapping for beaver with St. Vrain on the Platte, Smith was shot
-by an Indian, the bullet shattering the bones in his leg just above the
-ankle. He was talking with St. Vrain at the moment and after a look at
-the injury, begged those about to amputate his leg. Having no experience
-his companions refused. He then asked the camp cook to bring him a
-butcher knife and amputated it himself with minor assistance by the
-noted Milton Sublette.
-
-Smith was then carried on a stretcher to his winter quarters on the
-Green River. While the wound was healing he discovered some bones
-protruding. Sublette pulled them out with a pair of bullet molds. Indian
-remedies procured by his squaws healed the stump and in the following
-spring of 1828 he made a rough wooden leg. Thereafter he was called
-Pegleg by the whites and We-he-to-ca by all Indians.
-
-A wooden socket was fitted into the stirrup of his saddle and with this
-he could ride as skillfully as before. In the lean, last years of his
-life, he could be seen hopping along under an old beaver hat in San
-Francisco to and from Biggs and Kibbe’s corner to Martin Horton’s.
-Something in his appearance stamped him as a remarkable man.
-
-Major Horace Bell, noted western ranger, lawyer, author, and editor of
-early Los Angeles, relates that he saw Pegleg near a Mother Lode town,
-lying drunk on the roadside, straddled by his half-breed son who was
-pounding him in an effort to arouse him from his stupor.
-
-Smith had little success as a prospector, but saw in man’s lust for
-gold, ways to get it easier than the pick and shovel method.
-
-In the pueblo days of Los Angeles, Smith was a frequent visitor at the
-Bella Union, the leading hotel. Always surrounded by a spellbound group,
-he lived largely. When his money ran out he always had a piece of
-high-grade gold quartz to lure investment in his phantom mine.
-
-And so we have the Lost Pegleg, located anywhere from Shoshone to
-Tucson. Nevertheless, no adequate story of the movement of civilization
-westward can ignore South Pass and Pegleg Smith.
-
-
-About 25 miles east of Shoshone and set back from the road under willows
-and cottonwoods, an old house identifies a landmark of Pahrump
-Valley—the Manse Ranch, once owned by the Yundt family.
-
-The original Yundt was among the first settlers, contemporary with
-Philander and Cub Lee and Aaron Winters. Yundt was a squaw man and his
-children, Sam, Lee, and John followed the father in taking squaws for
-their wives.
-
-Sam Yundt was operating a small store at Good Springs and making a
-precarious living when a sleek and talented promoter secured a mining
-claim nearby and induced Sam to enlarge his stock in order to care for
-the increased business promised by supplying provisions for the mine’s
-employees. Sam, with visions of quick, profitable turnovers, stocked the
-empty shelves. For a few months the bills were paid promptly, then
-lagged. Sam yielded to plausible excuses and carried the account.
-Finally his own credit was jeopardized and wholesalers began to threaten
-suits. Then he heard the sheriff had an attachment ready to serve. In
-his desperation Sam went to the debtor. “I’m ruined,” he pleaded. “You
-fellows will have to raise some money or we’ll all quit eating.”
-
-The fellow said, “All I can give you is stock in the Yellow Pine. It’s
-that or nothing.”
-
-Sam Yundt had done with next to nothing all his life, took the stock and
-waited for the sheriff. Then the miracle—pay dirt and Sam Yundt was
-rich, and now he did the natural thing. He decided he would live at a
-pace that matched his means.
-
-George Rose, an old friend, had a mine in the Avawatz and he needed
-money. He went to Sam. “Now that you’re rich,” he told Sam, “you’ll be
-taking life easy. I’ve got some swamp land on the coast near Long Beach.
-Best duck shooting I know of and I’ll sell it cheap.”
-
-Sam didn’t want it but he bought it just to accommodate his friend. In a
-little while the swamp land was an oil field and oil added another
-fortune to Yellow Pine’s gold. Sam put his squaw Nancy, away, moved to
-the city and married a white woman. Nancy was provided for and for years
-she could be seen driving all over the desert in her buggy.
-
-A later owner of the Manse was one of whom the writer has a revealing
-memory. A battered Ford stopped at Shoshone and an unshaven individual
-stepped out, went into the store and came out with a loaf of bread and a
-chunk of bologna. Dirty underwear showed through a flapping rent in his
-patched overalls as he tore off a piece of bread and a chunk of the
-bologna and had his meal. The uneaten portions he tossed into the tool
-box, wiped his hands on his thighs and his mouth on his hand.
-
-“Jean Cazaurang,” Brown chuckled, “won’t pay six bits for lunch in the
-dining room. Worth $2,000,000.”
-
-When the dinner gong sounded Cazaurang went to his tool box, retrieved
-the rest of the bologna, twisted a hunk from the bread loaf, tossed the
-rest back into the tool box. This time he saved a dollar. He curled
-himself up in the Ford that night and saved $2.00. Besides the Manse
-Ranch he had a 10,000 acre ranch in Mexico, stocked with sheep, cattle,
-and horses, and had several mines.
-
-Jean’s end was not a happy one. One payday at his ranch, the good
-looking and likable young Mexican who worked for him, came for his
-money. Jean counted out the money from a poke and poured it into the
-palm of the Mexican. The Mexican counted it and with a smile looked at
-Jean. “Pardon me, Señor ... it’s two bits short.”
-
-“Be gone,” ordered Jean.
-
-“But Señor, I have worked hard. My wife is hungry and I am hungry. My
-children are hungry.”
-
-“Be gone,” again shouted Jean and whipped out his gun.
-
-But the Mexican was young, lean, and lithe and he seized Jean’s wrist
-and when he turned the wrist loose Jean Cazaurang was dead. And then the
-Mexican made one mistake. Instead of going to the sheriff he became
-panic stricken and taking the body to a nearby ravine, he heaved it into
-the brush where it was found later, feet up.
-
-But Jean Cazaurang had saved two bits.
-
-A big luxuriously appointed hearse came for Jean and people said it was
-the first decent ride he’d ever had in his life.
-
-Sentiment was with the Mexican, but he drew a short term for bungling.
-
-Because in one will Jean left his property to his wife and in another to
-his housekeeper, the estate was tied up in court, where it remained for
-11 years—fat pickings for lawyers. Finally the widow was awarded one
-half the estate under community property law, but the widow was dead.
-The housekeeper got the other half, and so ends the story of Jean
-Cazaurang and two bits.
-
-Rarely did desert ranches show other profits than those which one finds
-in doing the thing one likes to do, as in the case of a recent owner of
-the Manse—the wealthy Mrs. Lois Kellogg—the soft-voiced eastern lady who
-fell in love with the desert, drilled an artesian well, the flow of
-which is among the world’s largest. Small, cultured, she yet found
-thrills in driving a 20-ton truck and trailer from the Manse to Los
-Angeles or to the famed Oasis Ranch 200 miles away in Fish Lake
-Valley—another desert landmark which she bought to further gratify her
-passion for the Big Wide Open.
-
-And there you have a slice of life as it is on the desert—one miserably
-dying in his lust for money, one fleeing its solitude; another seeking
-its solace.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XV
- The Story of Charles Brown
-
-
-The story of Charles Brown and the Shoshone store begins at Greenwater.
-In the transient horde that poured into that town, he was the only one
-who hadn’t come for quick, easy money. On his own since he was 11 years
-old, when he’d gone to work in a Georgia mine, he wanted only a job and
-got it. In the excited, loose-talking mob he was conspicuous because he
-was silent, calm, unhurried.
-
-There were no law enforcement officers in Greenwater. The jail was 130
-miles away and every day was field day for the toughs. Better citizens
-decided finally to do something about it. They petitioned George Naylor,
-Inyo county’s sheriff at Independence to appoint or send a deputy to
-keep some semblance of order.
-
-Naylor sent a badge over and with it a note: “Pin it on some husky
-youngster, unmarried and unafraid and tell him to shoot first.”
-
-Again the Citizens’ Committee met. “I know a fellow who answers that
-description,” one of them said. “Steady sort. Built like a panther. Came
-from Georgia. Kinda slow-motioned until he’s ready for the spring.
-Name’s Brown.”
-
-The badge was pinned on Brown.
-
-Greenwater was a port of call for Death Valley Slim, a character of
-western deserts, who normally was a happy-go-lucky likable fellow. But
-periodically Slim would fill himself with desert likker, his belt with
-six-guns, and terrorize the town.
-
-Shortly after Brown assumed the duties of his office, Slim sent word to
-the deputy sheriff at Death Valley Junction that he was on his way to
-that place for a little frolic. “Tell him,” he coached his messenger,
-“sheriffs rile me and he’d better take a vacation.”
-
-After notifying the merchants and the residents, who promptly barricaded
-themselves indoors, the officer found shelter for himself in Beatty,
-Nevada.
-
-So Slim saw only empty streets and barred shutters upon arrival and
-since there was nothing to shoot at he headed through Dead Man’s Canyon
-for Greenwater. There he found the main street crowded to his liking and
-the saloons jammed. He made for the nearest, ordered a drink and
-whipping out his gun began to pop the bottles on the shelves. At the
-first blast, patrons made a break for the exits. At the second, the
-doors and windows were smashed and when Slim holstered his gun, the
-place was a wreck.
-
-Messengers were sent for Brown, who was at his cabin a mile away. Brown
-stuck a pistol into his pocket and went down. He found Slim in Wandell’s
-saloon, the town’s smartest. There Slim had refused to let the patrons
-leave and with the bartenders cowed, the patrons cornered, Slim was
-amusing himself by shooting alternately at chandeliers, the feet of
-customers and the plump breasts of the nude lady featured in the
-painting behind the bar. Following Brown at a safe distance, was half
-the population, keyed for the massacre.
-
-Brown walked in. “Hello, Slim,” he said quietly. “Fellows tell me you’re
-hogging all the fun. Better let me have that gun, hadn’t you?”
-
-“Like hell,” Slim sneered. “I’ll let you have it right through the
-guts—”
-
-As he raised his gun for the kill, the panther sprang and the battle was
-on. They fought all over the barroom—standing up; lying down; rolling
-over—first one then the other on top. Tables toppled, chairs crashed.
-For half an hour they battled savagely, finally rolling against the
-bar—both mauled and bloody. There with his strong vice-like legs wrapped
-around Slim’s and an arm of steel gripping neck and shoulder, Brown
-slipped irons over the bad man’s wrists. “Get up,” Brown ordered as he
-stood aside, breathing hard.
-
-Slim rose, leaned against the bar. There was fight in him still and
-seeing a bottle in front of him, he seized it with manacled hands,
-started to lift it.
-
-“Slim,” Brown said calmly, “if you lift that bottle you’ll never lift
-another.”
-
-The bad boy instinctively knew the look that pages death and Slim’s
-fingers fell from the bottle.
-
-Greenwater had no jail and Brown took him to his own cabin. Leaving the
-manacles on the prisoner he took his shoes, locked them in a closet. No
-man drunk or sober he reflected, would tackle barefoot the gravelled
-street littered with thousands of broken liquor bottles. Then he went to
-bed.
-
-Waking later, he discovered that Slim had vanished and with him, Brown’s
-number 12 shoes. He tried Slim’s shoe but couldn’t get his foot into it.
-There was nothing to do but follow barefoot. He left a blood-stained
-trail, but at 2 a.m. he found Slim in a blacksmith shop having the
-handcuffs removed. Brown retrieved his shoes and on the return trip Slim
-went barefoot. After hog-tying his prisoner Brown chained him to the bed
-and went to sleep.
-
-Thereafter, the bad boys scratched Greenwater off their calling list.
-
-Slim afterwards attained fame with Villa in Mexico, became a good
-citizen and later went East, established a sanatorium catering to the
-wealthy and acquired a fortune.
-
-Among the first arrivals in Greenwater was a lanky adventurer known to
-the Indians as Long Man and to whites for his ability to make money in
-any venture and an even more marvelous inability to keep it. He was
-Ralph Jacobus Fairbanks. Broke at the time, he was seeking the quickest
-way to a “comeback.”
-
-Foreseeing that the biggest names in copper meant a rush, he had taken a
-look at the little stagnant spring with a green scum that was to give
-the town its name.
-
-“Not enough water in it to do the family washing,” he decided and with
-uncanny talent for seeing opportunity where others would starve to
-death, he was soon peddling water at a dollar a bucket. He had hauled it
-40 miles uphill from Furnace Creek wash.
-
-A hopeful, but late arrival who expected to find the town crowded with
-killers was an undertaker who came with a huge stock of coffins. The
-prospect of a quick turnover seemed to guarantee success, but in two
-years Greenwater had exactly one funeral and he sold but one coffin.
-Disgusted he stacked the caskets in the center of his shop; left and was
-never again heard of.
-
-Fairbanks came into town one day with his sweat-stained 16 mule team,
-noticed the abandoned coffins, picked out the largest and best and gave
-Greenwater its first watering trough, which was used as long as the town
-lasted.
-
-Fairbanks soon made enough money to acquire a hotel, store, and a bar,
-which became a popular rendezvous. Fairbanks was born of well-to-do
-parents, in a covered wagon en route to Utah in 1857. Of the thousands
-who flocked into Greenwater, only he and Charles Brown were to remain in
-Death Valley country and wrest fortunes from America’s most desolate
-region. To Greenwater he brought his wife, Celestia Abigail, who shared
-his spirit of adventure, but fortunately for him she possessed a caution
-which he lacked. Among their children was a beautiful and vivacious
-daughter, Stella.
-
-Fairbanks, who was of the quick, go-getting type, didn’t care for Brown.
-Born in the North, he was critical of the slow-moving, silent, young
-Georgian and unacquainted with the Deep South’s drawl, he referred to
-him as “that damned foreigner.”
-
-The reputation of the Fairbanks camaraderie spread, and Mrs. Fairbanks,
-who understood the longing of a youngster for a home-cooked meal,
-invited Brown to dinner.
-
-There were other young fortune seekers in Greenwater who were also
-occasional guests at the Fairbanks dinners—among them a Yankee from
-Maine—Harry Oakes, of whom the world was to hear later. Allen Gillman,
-known as the Rattlesnake Kid, because of his stalking rattlesnakes to
-indulge his hobby of making hat bands and trinkets, later to become
-associated with Bernarr McFadden. Wealthy young mining engineers. Bank
-clerks with futures. Brown apparently had none.
-
-“He’ll get out of the country like he came in—afoot and broke,” rivals
-told Stella. So when romance came, there was still a long trail ahead.
-
-Then came Greenwater’s first warning of trouble. A few miners were laid
-off; a few padlocks appeared on a few cabins; a few merchants
-complained. Soon it was noticed that the tinny pianos from which
-slim-fingered “professors” swept the two-step and the waltz were
-gathering dust while the girls lolled in empty honkies. But when Diamond
-Tooth Lil padlocked her door and joined the rush to a new copper strike
-at Crackerjack in the Avawatz Mountains the wiser knew that Greenwater
-was through.
-
-With no guests Fairbanks told off on his fingers, departed patrons, mine
-owners, doctors, lawyers. “Just Charlie left. Wonder what’s keeping
-him?” Celestia Abigail knew. She knew that the big Georgian was
-desperately in love with Stella and didn’t care how many of her suitors
-left.
-
-With mines closing and few official duties, Brown loaded a burro with
-supplies and with Joe Yerrin went on a prospecting trip. Their course
-led across Death Valley. They were caught in a heat that was a record,
-even for the Big Sink, and ran out of water. Fortunately they were
-within a few miles of Surveyor’s Well—a stagnant hole north of
-Stovepipe. The burros were also suffering and Brown and Yerrin staggered
-to water barely in time to escape death.
-
-The well there is dug on a slant and looking down they saw a prospector
-kneeling at the water, filling a canteen and blocking passage.
-
-“Reckon you fellows are thirsty,” he greeted. “I’ll hand you up a drink.
-Have to strain it though. Full of wiggletails.” He pulled his shirt tail
-out of his pants, stretched it over a stew pan, strained the water
-through it and handed the pan up to Brown. “Now it’s fit to drink,” he
-said proudly.
-
-“It was no time to be finicky,” Charlie said. “We drank.”
-
-Brown and Yerrin combed hill and canyon but failed to find anything of
-value. Yerrin knew of another place. “You can have it,” Brown said. “I
-left a good claim.”
-
-Yerrin eyed him a long moment, then grinned: “Stella, huh?”
-
-The sage in Greenwater streets was rank now and again Ralph Fairbanks
-looked out over the dying town. “Ma, we’re getting out,” he said. He
-emptied his pockets on the table; counted the cash. “Ten dollars and
-thirty cents. Can’t get far on that—”
-
-He was interrupted by a knock at the door. There stood a stranger who
-wanted dinner and lodging for the night. During the evening the guest
-disclosed that he was en route to his mining claim near a place called
-Shoshone, 38 miles south. It was near a spring with plenty of water,
-warm, but usable. He wanted to put 50 miners to work but first he had to
-find someone willing to go there and board them.
-
-“Maybe we’d go,” Fairbanks said. “What’ll you pay for board?”
-
-“A dollar and a half a day. Figures around $2250 a month.”
-
-Ralph looked at Ma. She nodded. “It’s a deal,” he said.
-
-The next morning the guest left.
-
-Fairbanks turned to his wife. “I can haul these abandoned shacks down
-there in no time. Charlie’s not working, I can get him to help.”
-
-Ralph Fairbanks had stayed with Greenwater to the bitter end. Now he
-hauled it away.
-
-The road to the new site was over rough desert, gutted with dry washes.
-Brown slept in the brush, put the shacks up while Fairbanks went for
-others. Both worked night and day to get the place ready. Finally they
-had lodging for 50 men, a dining room, and quarters for the family. With
-$2250 a month they could afford a chef and Ma could take it easy. Stella
-could go Outside to a girl’s school.
-
-Then like a bolt of lightning came the bad news. The Greenwater guest,
-they learned, was just an engaging liar, with no mine, no men. He was
-never heard of again.
-
-Without a dollar they were marooned in one of the world’s most desolate
-areas. Stumped, Fairbanks looked at Brown. “I’ve been rich. I’ve been
-poor. But this is below the belt. What’ll we do?”
-
-“I can get a job with the Borax Company,” Brown said. “But you?”
-
-“We have that canned goods we brought to feed that liar’s hired men.
-I’ll figure some way to live in this God-forsaken hole.”
-
-From the dining room, prepared for the $2250 monthly income, he lugged a
-table, set it outside the door facing the road. Then he went to the
-pantry, filled a laundry basket with the cans of pork and beans,
-tomatoes, corned beef, and milk brought from Greenwater. He arranged
-them on the table, wrenched a piece of shook from a packing crate and on
-it painted in crude letters the word, “Store.” He propped it on the
-table and went inside. “Ma,” he announced, “we’re in business.”
-
-You could have hauled the entire stock and the table away in a
-wheelbarrow and every person in the country for 100 miles in either
-direction laid end to end would not have reached as far as a bush league
-batter could knock a baseball.
-
-The wheelbarrow load of canned goods went to the Indians living in the
-brush and the prospectors camped at the spring. Another replaced it and
-the “store” moved then into the dining room prepared for the
-non-existent boarders. Powder, a must on the list of a desert store, was
-added. The desert man, they knew, needed only a few items but they must
-be good. Overalls honestly stitched. Bacon well cured. Shoes sturdily
-built for hard usage.
-
-“If we sell a shoddy shirt, an inferior pick or shovel to one of our
-customers,” they told the wholesaler, “we will never again sell anything
-to him nor to any of his friends.”
-
-Soon the prospectors were telling other prospectors they met on the
-trails: “Square shooters—those fellows. Speak our language....” The
-squaws and the bucks told other squaws and bucks. Soon new trails cut
-across the desert to Shoshone and soon the store outgrew the dining room
-in the Fairbanks residence.
-
-From Zabriskie, now an abandoned borax town a few miles south of
-Shoshone, an old saloon and boarding house was cut into sections and
-hauled to Shoshone. It had been previously hauled from Greenwater where
-it had served as a labor union hall and club house. It was deposited
-directly across the road from the original store.
-
-So began in 1910 an empire of trade that is almost unbelievable.
-
-Charlie had at last coaxed the right answer from Stella but there wasn’t
-enough in the business at the start to support two families, plus the
-score of children and grandchildren of Fairbanks. At Greenwater he had
-known all the moguls of mining and he had only to ask for a job to get
-one. Retaining his interest in the Shoshone store he became
-superintendent of the Pacific Borax Company’s important Lila C. mine and
-thus formed a connection which grew into valuable friendships with the
-executives. The Shoshone business grew and soon required his entire time
-and that of Stella.
-
-Born in Richfield, Utah, Stella Brown grew up in Death Valley country
-and a reel of her life would show an exciting story of triumph over life
-in the raw; in desolate deserts and in boom towns where bandits and
-bawdy women rubbed elbows with the virtuous, millionaire with crook, and
-caste was unknown. If a girl went wrong; if an Indian was starving; a
-widow in need—there you would find her. Some day somebody will write the
-inspiring story of Stella Brown.
-
-Not all those who were told to see Charlie were seeking directions or
-suffering from toothache. When General Electric desperately needed talc,
-its agents were so advised. When Harold Ickes came out to promote
-President Roosevelt’s conservation ideas and officials of the War
-Department sought critical material, they too were given the old
-familiar advice and took it, and one day I saw the President of the
-Southern Pacific Railroad stand around for an hour while Charlie waited
-for a Pahrump Indian to make up his mind about a pair of overalls.
-
-Today the store that started on a kitchen table requires a large
-refrigerating plant and lighting system, three large warehouses, two
-tunnels in a hill. About a dozen employees work in shifts from seven in
-the morning till ten at night, to take care of the store, cabins, and
-cafe. Three big trucks haul oil, gas, powder, and provisions to mines in
-the region. Out of canyon, dry wash, and over dunes they come for every
-imaginable commodity, and get it.
-
-A millionaire city man who vacations there sat down on the slab bench
-beside Brown, aimlessly whittling. “Listen, Charlie,” he said. “Why
-don’t you get out of this desolation and move to the city where you can
-enjoy yourself?”
-
-“Hell—” Charlie muttered, and went on with his whittling.
-
-The new store stands upon the site where Ma Fairbanks’ kitchen table
-displayed the canned goods brought from Greenwater. Modern to the minute
-and air-cooled it would be a credit to any city.
-
-
-Again I heard the old familiar, “See Charlie,” and while he was telling
-someone how to get to a place no one around had ever heard of, I glanced
-over the Chalfant Register, a Bishop paper, and noticed a letter it had
-published from a lady in Wisconsin seeking information about a brother
-who had gone to Greenwater more than 40 years ago. She had never heard
-of him since.
-
-When Charlie joined me I called his attention to the letter. “I saw it,”
-he said. “Nobody answered and the editor sent the letter to me. I have
-just written her that the brother who came to find out what happened,
-died suddenly at Tonopah, only a few hours by auto from Greenwater. The
-other brother was killed in a saloon. I knew him and the man who killed
-him.”
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XVI
- Long Man, Short Man
-
-
-Before Tonopah, the first, and Greenwater, the last of the boom camps,
-Indians roaming the desert from Utah westward were showing trails to two
-hikos, who were to become symbols for the reckless courage needed to
-exist in the wasteland. They were known as Long Man and Short Man.
-
-Previous pages have given part of the story of Long Man.
-
-Coming into Death Valley country in the late Nineties, Ralph Jacobus
-Fairbanks wanted to know its water holes, trails, and landmarks. He
-hired Panamint Tom, brother of Hungry Bill, as a guide. Because Tom’s
-name was linked with Bill’s in stories of missing men, Fairbanks carried
-his six-gun.
-
-Panamint Tom was also armed. When they reached the rim of Death Valley
-and started down, Fairbanks said, “Tom, this is Indian country. You know
-it. I don’t. You go first....”
-
-Taking no chance on a surprise night attack, he directed the layout of
-the camp so that their beds were safely apart. Each slept with his gun.
-Around the camp fire, Tom nonchalantly confessed that he’d had to kill
-five white men.
-
-The mission accomplished, they started back. When they came out of the
-valley Tom said, “Long Man, this is white man’s country. You know it. I
-don’t. You go first.” In after years, referring to their trip, Tom said,
-“Long Man, you heap ’fraid that time.” “I was,” Fairbanks confessed. “Me
-too,” Tom said.
-
-When the Goldfield strike was made, Fairbanks saw that a supply station
-on the main line of travel was a surer way to wealth than the gamble of
-digging. He knew of a ranch with good water and luxuriant wild hay at
-Ash Meadows. Hay was worth $200 a ton. The owner had abandoned the
-ranch, however, and moved into the hills. Fairbanks could get little
-information concerning his whereabouts. “Up there somewhere,” he was
-told, with a gesture indicating 50 miles of sky line. But he wanted the
-hay and started out and by patient inquiry located his man just before
-daylight on the second day. “What will you give for it?” the man asked.
-
-“Well,” Fairbanks parried, “you know it’ll cost me as much as the ranch
-is worth to get rid of that wild grass.” Having only a vague idea of its
-real worth he had decided to offer $4000, but sensed the man’s eagerness
-to sell and started to offer $1000. Suddenly it occurred to him that
-someone else might have made an offer. “I’ll go $2000 and not a nickel
-more.”
-
-“You’ve bought a ranch,” the owner said.
-
-Elated, Fairbanks wrote a contract by candlelight on the spot. Both
-signed and they started back to find a notary. “I determined the fellow
-should not get out of my sight until the deed was recorded. If he wanted
-a drink of water, so did I. If he wished to speak to someone, I wanted a
-word with the same man.”
-
-Finally the deal was closed and Fairbanks started home. Outside, he met
-Ed Metcalf, chuckling.
-
-“What’s so funny, Ed?”
-
-Metcalf pointed to the departing seller. “He was just telling me about
-being worried to death all morning for fear a sucker he’d found would
-get out of his sight. He’s been trying to unload his ranch for $500 and
-some idiot gave him $2000.”
-
-Fairbanks also operated a freighting service to the boom towns in the
-gold belt as far north as Goldfield and Tonopah. Rates were fantastic
-and he made a fortune. He opened Beatty’s first cafe in a tent.
-
-Money was plentiful and after a trip with a 16 mule team over rough
-roads to Goldfield, he was ready for a relaxing change to poker. When
-the white chips are $25, the reds $50, and the blues $500 the game is
-not for pikers and he would bet $10,000 as calmly as he would 10 cents.
-
-In such a game one night he found himself sitting beside a player who
-had removed his big overcoat with wide patch pockets and hung it on his
-chair. Fairbanks noticed the fellow had a habit of gathering in the
-discards when he wasn’t betting and his deal would follow. He also
-noticed intermittent movements of the fellow’s deft fingers to the big
-patch pocket and soon saw that every ace in the deck reposed in the
-pocket.
-
-Later in the game, Fairbanks opened a jackpot. Every man stayed. The
-crook raised discreetly and most of the players stayed. Fairbanks bet
-$1000.
-
-“Have to raise you $5000,” the crook said.
-
-Fairbanks met the raise. “... and it’ll cost you $5000 more,” he said
-evenly.
-
-With the confidence that came from the cached aces, the sharper shoved
-out the five, smiled exultantly as he spread four kings and a deuce and
-reached for the pot.
-
-“Not so fast,” Fairbanks said as he laid four aces and a ten on the
-table.
-
-The crook gave him a quick look. Fairbanks’ eyes were steady. Neither
-said a word. The crook couldn’t. He knew that Fairbanks’ long fingers
-had found the big patch pocket.
-
-When three men and a jackass no longer made a crowd in Shoshone, Ralph
-Fairbanks became restless. With a population of 20—half of it his own
-progeny, he felt that civilization was closing in on him. “Charlie, I’ve
-been in one place too long....” He had now become “Dad Fairbanks” to all
-who knew him.
-
-The automobile was being increasingly used in desert travel and
-transcontinental trips were no longer a daring adventure or the result
-of a bet. Sixty miles south of Shoshone there was a wretched road that
-pitched down the washboard slope of one range into a basin, then up the
-gully-crossed slopes of another. Part of the transcontinental highway,
-it was a headache to the traveler. Radiators usually boiled down hill
-and up.
-
-To this desolate spot went Dad Fairbanks. The hot blasts from the dunes
-of the Devil’s Playground and the dry bed of Soda Lake made summer a
-hell and the freezing winds from Providence Mountains turned it into a
-Siberian winter.
-
-Here in 1928 Dad Fairbanks built cabins and a store and installed a gas
-pump. Water was hauled in. “Coming or going,” he said, “when they reach
-this place they’ve just got to stop, cool the engine, and fill up for
-the hill ahead.” The place is Baker on Highway 91.
-
-Here, as at Shoshone, sales technique was tossed into the ash can.
-Stopping for dinner one day I met Dad coming out of the dining room.
-“How’s the fare?” I asked.
-
-“Are you hungry?”
-
-“Hungry as a bear....”
-
-“All right. Go in. A hungry man can stand anything.” Then in an
-undertone he added: “Employment agent sent me the world’s worst cook.
-Take eggs.”
-
-Later as we talked in the sheltered driveway a Rolls-Royce limousine
-drove up and a well-fed and smartly tailored tourist stepped out and
-spoke to Dad: “Do you know me?” he asked.
-
-Dad looked at him hesitantly. “Face is familiar.”
-
-“You loaned me $300, 25 years ago.”
-
-“I loaned a lotta fellows money.”
-
-“But I never paid it back.”
-
-“A helluva lot of ’em didn’t,” Dad said.
-
-The stranger reached into his pocket, pulled $1000 from a roll and
-handed it to Dad. “I’m Harry Oakes,” he said. “Where’s Ma?”
-
-So they went over to Dad’s house and with Ma Fairbanks who had shared
-all of Dad’s fortunes, good and bad, they sat down and Oakes talked of
-the long trail that led from 300 borrowed dollars to an annual income of
-five million.
-
-Harry Oakes had gone to Canada and learning that the legal title to a
-mining claim would expire at midnight on a certain date, he and his
-partner W. G. Wright sat up in a temperature of forty below, to relocate
-the Lakeshore Mine—Canada’s richest gold property.
-
-Born in Maine, Harry Oakes became a subject of England and was at this
-time Canada’s richest citizen, with an estimated fortune of
-$200,000,000.
-
-It was a long way from the Niagara palace back to Greenwater and
-Shoshone and as Ma Fairbanks and Dad and Harry sat in the plain little
-desert cottage, I couldn’t keep from wondering why a man with
-$200,000,000 would wait 25 years to repay that $300.
-
-In his native town of Sangerville in Maine, Harry Oakes was criticized
-when, as a youngster with every opportunity to pursue a successful
-career according to the staid Maine formula, he became excited by gold.
-“Quick easy money.” “Just a dreamer.” He talked big, acted big, and was
-big.
-
-But Harry Oakes started out in life to make a fortune by finding a gold
-mine and you can’t laugh aside the determination and courage with which
-he stuck to his purpose until he succeeded.
-
-Dad Fairbanks spent nearly 50 years in Death Valley country and it is a
-bit ironical that at last, the Baker climate drove him from the desert
-to Santa Paula and later, of all places, to Hollywood.
-
-“I should never have believed it of you,” I kidded.
-
-“Hell—” Dad retorted, “I wanted solitude. Haven’t you got enough sense
-to know that the lonesomest place on Godamighty’s earth is a city?”
-
-He died in 1943 and at the funeral were the state’s greatest men and its
-humblest—bankers, lawyers, doctors, beggarmen, muckers and miners, and
-with them, those he loved best—sun-baked fellows from the towns and the
-gulches along the burro trails. No man who has lived in Death Valley
-country did more to put the region on the must list of the American
-tourist and none won more of the regard and affections of the people.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XVII
- Shorty Frank Harris
-
-
-No history of Death Valley has been written in this century without
-mention of the Short Man—Frank (Shorty) Harris—and none can be. Previous
-pages have given most of his story. After his death at least two hurried
-writers who never saw him have stated that Shorty discovered no mines,
-knew little of the country.
-
-From a page of notes made before I had ever met him, I find this record:
-“Stopped at Independence to see George Naylor, early Inyo county sheriff
-and now its treasurer. We talked of early prospectors. Naylor said: ‘I
-have known all of the old time burro men and have the records. Shorty
-Harris has put more towns on the map and more taxable property on the
-assessors’ books than any of them.’”
-
-I first met Shorty at Shoshone. Entering the store one day, Charles
-Brown told me there was a fellow outside I ought to know, and in a
-moment I was looking into keen steady eyes—blue as water in a canyon
-pool—and in another Shorty Harris was telling me how to sneak up on
-$10,000,000. Thus began an acquaintance which was to lead me through
-many years from one end of Death Valley to the other, with Shorty,
-mentor, friend, and guide.
-
-Of course I had heard of him. Who hadn’t? In the gold country of western
-deserts one could find a few who had never heard of Cecil Rhodes or John
-Hays Hammond, but none who had not heard of Shorty Harris. Wherever
-mining men gathered, the mention of his name evoked the familiar, “That
-reminds me,” and the air thickened with history, laughter, and lies.
-
-He was five feet tall, quick of motion. Hands and feet small. Skin soft
-and surprisingly fair. Muscles hard as bull quartz. With a mask of
-ignorance he concealed a fine intelligence reserved for intimate friends
-in moments of repose.
-
-It is regrettable that since Shorty’s death, writers who never saw him
-have given pictures of him which by no stretch of the imagination can be
-recognized by those who had even a slight acquaintance with him. Authors
-of books properly examine the material of those who have written other
-books. In the case of Shorty this was eagerly done—so eagerly in fact,
-that each portrayal is the original picture altered according to the
-ability of the one who tailors the tale. All are interesting but few
-have any relation to truth.
-
-Shorty Harris was so widely publicized by writers in the early part of
-the century that when the radio was invented, he was a “natural” for
-playlets and columnists. It was natural also that the iconoclast appear
-to set the world right. He employed Shorty to guide him through Death
-Valley. “I want to write a book,” he explained, “and I have only three
-weeks to gather material.”
-
-The trip ended sooner. “What happened?” I asked Shorty when I read the
-book and was startled to see in it a statement that Shorty became lost;
-had never found a mine; and never even looked for one.
-
-“Did he say that?” Shorty laughed.
-
-“And more of the same,” I said.
-
-“Well, let’s let it go for what it’s worth.... He bellyached from the
-minute we set out.”
-
-Those who knew Shorty best—Dad Fairbanks, Charles Brown, Bob Montgomery,
-George Naylor, H. W. Eichbaum, and the old timers on the trails had
-entirely different impressions. There was, however, around the barrooms
-of Beatty and other border villages a breed of later
-comers—“professional” old timers always waiting and often succeeding in
-exchanging “history” for free drinks. Though they may have never known
-Shorty in person, they were not lacking in yarns about him and rarely
-failed to get an audience.
-
-There were also among Shorty’s friends a few who had another attitude.
-“What has he ever done that I haven’t?” the answer being that nothing
-had been written about them.
-
-With variations the original pattern became the pattern for the
-succeeding writer. In the interest of accuracy it is not amiss to say
-that Shorty Harris was not buried standing up. The writer saw him
-buried. It is not true that he ever protested the removal of the road
-from the site of the place where he wished to be buried, because he
-never knew that he would be buried there. Nor did he have the remotest
-idea that a monument would be erected to him, because the idea of the
-monument was born after his death, as related elsewhere.
-
-He did not leave Harrisburg on July 4, 1905 to get drunk at Ballarat.
-Instead, he went to Rhyolite to find Wild Bill Corcoran, his grubstaker.
-
-He did enjoy the yarns attributed to him and their publication in
-important periodicals. But he was also painfully shy and ill at ease
-away from his home. Even at the annual Death Valley picnics held at
-Wilmington, near Los Angeles, he could never be persuaded to face the
-crowds.
-
-One cannot laugh aside the part he played nor the monument that honors
-one of God’s humblest. His strike at Rhyolite brought two railroads
-across the desert, gave profitable employment to thousands of men, added
-extra shifts in steel mills and factories making heavy machinery and
-those of tool makers. The building trades felt it, banks, security
-exchanges, and scores of other industries over the nation—all because
-Shorty Harris went up a canyon. And it is not amiss to ask if these
-historians did their jobs as well.
-
-At my home it was difficult to get Shorty to accept invitations to
-dinners to which he was often invited by service clubs, but in the
-Ballarat cabin he was as sure of himself as the MacGregor with a foot
-upon his native heath and an eye on Ben Lomond.
-
-His passion for prospecting was fanatical. I asked him once if he would
-choose prospecting as a career if he had his life to live over.
-
-“I wouldn’t change places with the President of the United States. My
-only regret is that I didn’t start sooner. When I go out, every time my
-foot touches the ground, I think ‘before the sun goes down I’ll be worth
-$10,000,000.’”
-
-“But you don’t get it,” I reminded him.
-
-He stared at me with a sort of “you’re-too-dumb” look. “Who in the hell
-wants $10,000,000? It’s the game, man—the game.”
-
-Nor is the picture of his profligacy altogether true. Despite Shorty’s
-disregard for money he had a canniness that made him cache something
-against the rainy day. At Lone Pine Charlie Brown was packing Shorty’s
-suit case before taking him to a doctor. “Shorty, what’s this lump in
-the lining of your vest?”
-
-“Oh, there was a hole in it. Poor job of mending I guess,” Shorty
-answered guilelessly.
-
-“I’ll see,” Charlie said and ripping a few stitches removed $600 in
-currency.
-
-Shorty’s last years furnish a story of a man too tough to die. He had
-had three major operations, when in 1933 I received the following
-telegram: “Wall fell on me. Hurry. Bring doctor. Shorty Harris.” It had
-been sent by Fred Gray from Trona, 27 miles from Ballarat, nearest
-telegraph station.
-
-My wife and I hurried through rain, snow, sleet; over washed out desert
-and mountain roads. Outside the cabin in the dusk, shivering in a cold
-wind, we found two or three of Shorty’s friends and Charles and Mrs.
-Brown, who had also made a mad dash of 150 miles over roads—some of
-which hadn’t been traveled in 30 years.
-
-Puttering around his cabin, Shorty had jerked at a wire anchored in the
-walls and brought tons of adobe down upon himself. He was literally dug
-out, his ribs crushed, face black with abrasions. With rapidly
-developing pneumonia he had lain for 60 hours without medical attention
-and with nothing to relieve pain. We learned later from Dr. Walter
-Johnson, who had preceded us, that if a hospital had been within a block
-it would have been fatal to move him. All agreed that Death sat on
-Shorty’s bedside.
-
-“A cat has only nine lives,” Fred Gray said gravely, and outside in the
-gathering gloom we planned his funeral. Because of the isolation of
-Ballarat and lack of communication we arranged that when the end came,
-Fred Gray would notify Brown and bring the body down into Death Valley
-for burial. There we would meet the hearse.
-
-Because bodies decompose quickly in that climate, time was important.
-While we planned these details, my wife, who had been at Shorty’s
-bedside, joined us. “Shorty’s not going to die,” she said. “He’s
-planning that trip up Signal Mountain you and he have been talking
-about.”
-
-I tiptoed into the room. He was staring at the ceiling, seeing faraway
-canyons; the yellow fleck in a broken rock. Suddenly he spoke: “I’m
-losing a thousand dollars a day lying here. Why, that ledge—”
-
-A week after returning to our home we received another telegram from
-Trona asking that we come for him. He had insisted upon being laid in
-the bed of a pickup truck and taken across the Slate Range to Trona,
-where we met him.
-
-At our home he lay on his back for weeks, fed with a spoon. Always
-talking of putting another town on the map. Always losing a million
-dollars a day. He was miraculously but slowly recovering when an
-Associated Press dispatch bearing a Lone Pine date made front page
-headlines with an announcement of his death.
-
-Though the report was quickly corrected, his presence at our house
-brought reporters, photographers, old friends, and the merely curious.
-At the time the Pacific Coast Borax Company’s N.B.C. program was
-featuring stories based on his experiences over a nation-wide hook-up.
-Among the callers also were moguls of mining and tycoons of industry who
-had stopped at the Ballarat cabin to fall under the spell of his ever
-ready yarns.
-
-Among these guests, one stands out.
-
-It was a hot summer day when I saw on the lawn what appeared to be a big
-bear, because the squat, bulky figure was enclosed in fur. Answering the
-door bell I looked into twinkling eyes and an ingratiating smile. “They
-told me in Ballarat that Shorty Harris was here.” I invited him in.
-
-“I’ll just shed this coat,” he said, stripping off the bearskin garment.
-“... sorta heavy for a man going on 80.” He laid it aside. “It’s double
-lined. Fur inside and out. You see, I sleep in it. Crossed three
-mountain ranges in that coat before I got here. May as well take this
-other one off too.” He removed another heavy overcoat, revealing a cord
-around his waist. “Keep this one tied close. Less bulky....”
-
-Under a shorter coat was a heavy woolen shirt and his overalls concealed
-two pairs of pants. He went on: “I was with Shorty at Leadville. My
-name’s Pete Harmon. We ought to be rich—both of us. Why, I sold a hole
-for $2500 in 1878. Thought I was smart. They’ve got over $100,000,000
-outa that hole. I was at Bridgeport when I heard Shorty was sick, so I
-says, ‘I’ll just step down to Ballarat and see him.’ (The ‘step’ was 298
-miles.) When I got there Bob Warnack tells me he’s in Los Angeles. When
-I get there they tell me he’s with you. So I just stepped out here.”
-
-He had “stepped” 481 miles to see his friend.
-
-I ushered him in and left them alone. After an hour I noticed Pete
-outside, smoking. I went out and urged him to return and smoke inside,
-but he refused. “It’s not manners,” he insisted.
-
-Later I happened to look out the window and saw him empty the contents
-of a small canvas sack into his hand. There were a few dimes and nickels
-and two bills. He unfolded the currency. One was a twenty. The other, a
-one. He put the coins in the sack and came inside. A few moments later,
-from an adjacent room I heard his soft, lowered voice: “Shorty, I’m
-eatin’ reg’lar now and got a little besides. I reckon you’re kinda shy.
-You take this.”
-
-“No—no, Pete. I’m getting along fine....”
-
-I fancy there was a scurry among the angels to make that credit for Pete
-Harmon.
-
-Late in the afternoon Pete donned his coats. “I’d better be going. I’ve
-got a lotta things on hand. A claim in the Argus. When the money comes
-in, well—I always said I was going to build a scenic railroad right on
-the crest of Panamint Range. Best view of Death Valley. It’ll pay. How
-far is it to San Diego?”
-
-“A hundred and forty miles....”
-
-“Well, since I’m this far along I’ll just step down and see my old
-partner. Take care of Shorty....” And down the road he went.
-
-With humility I watched his passage, hoping that the good God would go
-with him and somehow I felt that of all those with fame and wealth or of
-high degree who had gone from that house, none had left so much in my
-heart as Pete.
-
-During this period of convalescence Shorty was often guest in homes of
-luxury and when at last I took him to Ballarat I was curious to see what
-his reaction would be to the squalor of the crumbling cabin.
-
-When we stepped from the car, he noticed Camel, the blind burro drowsing
-in the shade of a roofless dobe. “Old fellow,” he said, “it’s dam’ good
-to see _you_ again....” I unloaded the car, brought water from the well
-and sat down to rest. Shorty sat in a rickety rocker braced with baling
-wire. I regarded with amusement the old underwear which he’d stuffed
-into broken panes; the bare splintered floor; the cracked iron stove
-that served both for cooking and heating. The wood box beside it. The
-tin wash pan on a bench at the door.
-
-Then I noticed Shorty was also appraising the things about—the hole in
-the roof; the box nailed to the wall that served as a cupboard. A
-half-burned candle by his sagging bed. For a long time he glanced
-affectionately from one familiar object to another and finally spoke:
-“Will, haven’t I got a dam’ fine home?”
-
-For ages poets have sung, orators have lauded, but so far as I’m
-concerned, Shorty said it better.
-
-The last orders from the surgeon had been, “Complete rest for three
-months.”
-
-In the late afternoon we moved our chairs outside. The sun still shone
-in the canyons and after he had seen that all his peaks were in place,
-he turned to me: “I’m losing $5,000,000 a day sitting here. Soon as
-you’re rested, we’ll start. You’ll be in shape by day after tomorrow,
-won’t you?”
-
-I restrained a gasp as he pointed to the side of a gorge 8000 feet up on
-Signal Mountain. “No trip at all....”
-
-No argument could convince him that the trip was foolhardy and on the
-third day we started through Hall’s Canyon opposite the Indian Ranch.
-The ascent from the canyon is so steep that in many places we had to
-crawl on hands and knees. The three and a half miles were made in seven
-hours, but on the return the inevitable happened. Shorty, exhausted,
-staggered from the trail and collapsed. When he rose, he wobbled, but
-managed to reach a bush and rolled under it. I ran to his side. It
-seemed the end. “You go ahead,” he said weakly. “I’m through.”
-
-I had given him all my water and exacting a promise that he would remain
-under the bush, I started for help at the Indian Ranch, to bring him
-out.
-
-Coming up, I had paid no attention to the trail and was uncertain of my
-way—which was further confused by criss-crossed trails of wild burros
-and mountain sheep. Coming to a canyon that forked, I was not sure which
-to take and panicked with fear took a sudden uncalculated choice and
-started up a trail. The desert gods must have guided my feet, for it
-proved to be the right one and an hour later I came upon the green
-seepage of water.
-
-I dug a hole; let the scum run off then drank slowly and lay down to
-rest. In my last conscious moment a huge rattler passed within a few
-inches of my face. But rattlers were unimportant then and I went to
-sleep.
-
-The swish of brush awoke me and I saw Shorty staggering down the trail.
-He fell beside the water and was instantly asleep. Time I knew, was the
-measure of life and I allowed him twenty minutes to rest, then awoke him
-and made him go in front. On a ledge, he slumped again, his body hanging
-over the cliff with a 1000 foot fall to rocks below.
-
-I managed to catch him by the seat of his trousers as he began to slip,
-and dragged him back on the trail. Somehow I got him to the bottom.
-There the canyon widens upon a level area covered with dense growth.
-Walking ahead I suddenly missed him. He had crawled from the trail and
-it required an hour to find him and this I did by the noise of his
-rattly breathing.
-
-I half carried, half dragged him to the car and lifted him in. He was
-asleep before I could close the door and remained unconscious for the
-entire 11 miles of corduroy road to Ballarat. There Fred Gray and Bob
-Warnack lifted him from the car and laid him on his bed. None of us
-believed that Shorty Harris would ever leave that bed alive.
-
-The next morning I tiptoed softly out of the room, went over to the old
-saloon and had breakfast with Tom, the caretaker. Afterward we sat
-outside smoking and talking of Hungry Hattie’s feuding and her sister’s
-mining deals, when we heard steady thumping sounds coming from Shorty’s
-place. We looked. Bareheaded, Shorty Harris was chopping wood.
-
-Shorty was born near Providence, Rhode Island, July 2, 1856. He had only
-a hazy memory of his parents. His father, a shoemaker, died impoverished
-when Shorty was six years old. “... I went to live with my aunt. If she
-couldn’t catch me doing something, she figured I’d outsmarted her and
-beat me up on general principles.”
-
-At nine he ran away and obtained work in the textile mills of Governor
-William Sprague, dipping calico. The village priest taught him to read
-and write and apart from this, his only school was the alley. The
-curriculum of the alley is hunger, tears, and pain but somehow in that
-alley he found time to play and learned that with play came laughter.
-Thenceforth life to Shorty Harris was just one long playday.
-
-In 1876 he started West and crawled out of a boxcar in Dodge City,
-Kansas. About were stacks of buffalo hides, bellowing cattle,
-“chippies,” gamblers, cow hands, and a chance for youngsters who had
-come out of alleys.
-
-“... Among those I remember at Dodge City were my friends Wyatt Earp and
-a thin fellow with a cough. If he liked you he’d go to hell for you. He
-was Doc Holliday—the coldest killer in the West. I had a job in a livery
-stable. Job was all right, but too much gunplay. Cowboys shooting up the
-town. Gamblers shooting cowboys.”
-
-Flushed with his pay check, Shorty wandered into a saloon and met one of
-the percentage girls—a lovely creature, not altogether bad. They danced
-and Shorty suggested a stroll in the moonlight. And soon Shorty was in
-love.
-
-“Shorty,” she asked, “why be a sucker? Why don’t you go to Leadville?
-You might find a good claim.”
-
-“I’m broke,” he told her.
-
-“I’ve got some money,” she said, and reached into her purse.
-
-“I’m no mac,” he snapped.
-
-Finally she thrust the bills into his pocket.
-
-At Leadville he went up a gulch. Luck was kind. He found a good claim
-and going into Leadville sold it for $15,000. Later it produced
-millions. Within a week he was penniless. “Why, all I’ve got to do is to
-go up another gulch,” he told sympathetic friends.
-
-On this trip his feet were frozen and he was carried out on the back of
-his partner. Taken to the hospital, the surgeon told him that only the
-amputation of both feet could save his life.
-
-Telling a group of friends about it in the Ballarat cabin later, Shorty
-of course had to add a few details of his own: “Dan Driscoll came to see
-me and I told him what the sawbones said. ‘Why hell,’ Dan says. ‘Won’t
-be nothing left of you. You’ve got to get outa here. When that nurse
-goes, I’ll take you to a doc who’ll save them feet.’ And the first thing
-I knew I was in the other hospital.
-
-“The doc whetted his meat cleaver, picked up a saw and was about to go
-to work, when he found there was nothing to dope me with. ‘I’ll fix it,’
-Doc says, and wham—he slapped me stiff. I don’t know what he did, but
-when I came to I was good as new.”
-
-After selling a second claim to Haw Tabor, Shorty was again in the money
-and remembered the girl in Dodge City. Returning, he looked her up, took
-her to dinner. They danced and dined and Shorty toasted her in “bubble
-water.” “I reckon everybody in Dodge City thought a caliph had come to
-town. No little girl suffered for new toggery. No bum lacked a tip. In a
-week I was broke again.
-
-“Going down to the freight yard to steal a ride on the rods I met the
-girl and the next I knew, I was begging her to marry me. ‘Shorty, you
-don’t know anything about my past, and still you want to marry me?’
-
-“‘You don’t know anything about my past either,’ I said. But it was no
-go.”
-
-Years afterward when Shorty and I were camped in Hall Canyon, I asked
-him if he would actually have married a girl like her.
-
-“Who am I to count slips?” he bristled. “I did ask her,” and he swabbed
-a tear that had dried fifty years ago.
-
-In 1898, after working for a grubstake he started on the trip that led
-at last to Death Valley, by way of the San Juan country—one of the
-world’s roughest regions. “I walked through Arizona, to Northern
-Mexico—every mile of it desert. A labor strike in Colonel Green’s mines
-threw me out of a job and I started back. Ran out of water and lived
-five days on the juice of a bulbous plant—la Flora Morada. Each bulb has
-a few drops.
-
-“On the Mojave I ran out of water again. Finally saw a mangy old camel
-drinking at a pool. I had enough sense left to know there were no camels
-around and went on till I flopped. A fellow picked me up. I told him I’d
-been so goofy I’d seen a camel and water, but I knew it was just a
-mirage. ‘You damned fool,’ he said. ‘It was a camel and you saw water.
-Hi Jolly turned that camel loose.’”
-
-Shorty reached Tintic, Utah, and from there walked over a waterless
-desert to the Johnnie mine, where he was given shelter, food, and
-clothing.
-
-Bishop Cannon of the Mormon Church sent him into the Panamint to
-monument a gold claim. “I was the only fool they could find to cross
-Death Valley in mid summer. I found the claim but it proved to be
-patented land.”
-
-Shorty was recuperating from his last operation at my home when he came
-into the house one morning with fire in his eyes and a paper in his
-hand. “Read that and let’s get going.” (It has been erroneously stated
-that Shorty couldn’t read. Though he had little schooling and a cataract
-impaired his sight, he could read to the end.)
-
-The paper announced a strike in Tuba Canyon near Ballarat. “Why, I know
-a place nobody ever saw but me and a few eagles....” His losses
-increased from a thousand to a million dollars a day because he wasn’t
-on the job, and in May we started for Ballarat by the longer route
-through Death Valley.
-
-When we reached Jim Dayton’s grave, he asked me to stop and getting out
-of the car, he walked into the brush, returning with a few yellow and
-blue wild flowers, laid them on Dayton’s grave. “God bless you, old
-fellow. You’ll have to move over soon and make room for me.”
-
-Then turning to me, he said: “When I die bury me beside old Jim.”
-Raising his hand and moving his finger as if he were writing the words,
-he added: “Above me write, ‘Here lies Shorty Harris, a single blanket
-jackass prospector.’”
-
-It was his way of saying he had played his game—not by riding over the
-desert with a deluxe camping outfit, but the hard way—with beans and a
-single blanket. He was also saying, I think, goodbye to the Death Valley
-that he loved; its golden dunes, its creeping canyons and pots of gold.
-
-About one o’clock in the morning, Sunday, November 11, 1934, the phone
-awakened me. At the other end of the line was Charles Brown. Shorty
-Harris lay dead at Big Pine. “He just went to sleep and didn’t wake up,”
-Charlie said.
-
-Shorty had died Saturday morning, November 10, and Charlie had arranged
-for the remains to be brought down into Death Valley and buried beside
-James Dayton Sunday afternoon.
-
-Out of Los Angeles, out of towns and settlements, canyons, and hills
-came the largest crowd that had ever assembled in Death Valley, to wait
-at Furnace Creek Ranch for the hearse that would come nearly 200 miles
-over the mountains from Big Pine. It was delayed at every village and by
-burro-men along the road, who wanted a last look upon the face of
-Shorty.
-
-At one o’clock the caravan arrived and then began the procession down
-the valley. The sun was setting and the shadows of the Panamint lay
-halfway across the valley when the grave was reached. Brown had sent
-Ernest Huhn from Shoshone the night previous, a distance of about 60
-miles, to dig the grave.
-
-On the desert a man dies and gets his measure of earth—often with not so
-much as a tarpaulin. With this in mind Ernie had made the hole to fit
-the man, but with the coffin it was a foot too short. While waiting for
-the grave to be lengthened, the casket was opened and in the fading
-twilight Shorty’s friends passed in file about the casket, while the
-Indians, silhouetted against the brush paid silent tribute to him whom
-their fathers and now their children knew as “Short Man.”
-
-So began the first funeral ever held in the bottom of Death Valley.
-Drama, packed into a few moments of a dying day. No discordant ballyhoo.
-No persiflage.... “The Lord is my shepherd. I shall not want....” A
-bugler stepped beside the grave and silvered notes of taps went over the
-valley. The casket was lowered into the grave as the stars came out, and
-he was covered with the earth he loved. Thoughtful women placed wreaths
-of athol and desert holly and, with his face toward his desert stars,
-Shorty Harris holed-in forever.
-
-Going back to Shoshone with the Browns, I told Charlie of the time I had
-stopped at Jim Dayton’s grave with Shorty. “I made up my mind then that
-I would do something about his last wish. There’s no liar like a
-tombstone, but Shorty deserves a marker.”
-
-“I’ll join you,” Charlie said.
-
-Charlie consulted Park officials and they approved. Chosen to write the
-epitaph, I knew from the moment the task was assigned to me what it
-would be. In order to get the reaction of others to the use of the word
-“jackass” on the monument, I decided to try it out on the Browns. “This
-epitaph,” I said, “may be unconventional, but unless I am mistaken it
-will be quoted around the world.”
-
-I read it. “It’s all right,” Mrs. Brown laughed. Charlie approved. The
-epitaph, as predicted has been quoted and pictures of the plaque
-published around the world.
-
-It has been stated that the Pacific Coast Borax Company paid for the
-monument. Actually it was provided by the Park Service. I had the bronze
-tablet made in Pomona, California, and Charlie Brown insisted that he
-pay for it. “Shorty left a little money,” he said. “Whatever is lacking,
-I will pay myself.”
-
-On March 14, 1936, the monument was dedicated. Streamers of dust rolled
-along every road that led into the Big Sink trailing cars that were
-bringing friends from all walks of life to pay tribute to Shorty. At the
-grave the rich and the famous stood beside the tottering prospector, the
-husky miner, the silent, stoic Indian. Brown was master of ceremonies.
-Telegrams were read from John Hays Hammond and other distinguished
-friends. Old timers, whose memories spanned 30 years, one after another
-wedged through the crowd to tell a funny story that Shorty had told or
-some homely incident of his career.
-
-One was revealing: “We had the no-’countest, low-downest hooch drinking
-loafer on the desert at Ballarat. We called him Tarfinger. He came over
-to Shorty’s cabin one day and said he was hungry. Shorty loaned him
-$5.00. When I heard about it I went over. I said, ‘You know he’s a
-no-good loafing thief.’ I figured I was doing Shorty a favor. Instead,
-he blew up. ‘Well, he can get as hungry as an honest man, can’t he?’”
-
-They understood what O. Henry meant when he sang:
-
- “Test the man if his heart be
- In accord with the ultimate plan,
- That he be not to his marring,
- Always and utterly man.”
-
-The epitaph Shorty Harris wanted seemed fitting: “_Above me write, ‘Here
-lies Shorty Harris, a single blanket jackass prospector.’_”
-
-As I turned away I thought of the monuments erected to dead Caesars who
-had left trails of blood and ruin. Shorty Harris simply followed a
-jackass into far horizons, and by leaving a smile at every water hole, a
-pleasant memory on every trail, attained a fame which will last as long
-as the annals of Death Valley.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XVIII
- A Million Dollar Poker Game
-
-
-Herman Jones, young Texan with keen blue eyes and a guileless grin,
-dropped off the train at Johnnie, a railroad siding, named for the
-nearby Johnnie mine. At the ripe age of 21 he had been through a
-shooting war between New Mexico cattle men, and needing money to marry
-the prettiest girl in the territory, he had come for gold.
-
-Finding it lonesome on his first night he sought the diversion of a
-poker game in a saloon and gambling house. He bought a stack of chips,
-sat down facing the bar and a moment later another stranger entered,
-inquired if he could join the game.
-
-Told that $20 would get a seat, the stranger standing with his back to
-the bar was reaching for his purse when Herman saw the bartender pick up
-a six-gun. With his elbows on the bar and his pistol in two hands, he
-aimed the gun at the back of the stranger’s head and pulled the trigger.
-
-The victim dropped instantly to the floor, his brains scattered on the
-players. The poker session adjourned and Jones was standing outside a
-few moments later when he was tapped on the shoulder. “Come on,” he was
-told. “We’re giving that fellow a floater.” Herman didn’t know what a
-floater was, but decided it was best to obey orders and followed the
-leader into the saloon.
-
-Approaching the bartender, the spokesman pulled out his watch. “Bob,” he
-said quietly. “It’s six o’clock. It won’t be healthy around here after
-6:30.” He set a canteen on the bar and walked out.
-
-Without a word, the bartender pulled off his coat, gathered up the cash,
-called the painted lady attached to his fortune and said, “Sell out for
-what you can get. I’ll let you know where I am.” Picking up his hat he
-left. No one ever learned the cause of the murder or the identity of the
-dead.
-
-With no luck in the Johnnie district or at Greenwater, Herman left the
-latter place on a prospecting trip in partnership with another luckless
-youngster previously mentioned—Harry Oakes.
-
-On a hill overlooking the dry bed of the Amargosa River about four miles
-north of Shoshone, he saw a red outcropping on a hill so steep he
-decided nothing that walked had ever reached the summit, and for that
-reason he might find treasure overlooked.
-
-Herman, being lean and agile, climbed up to investigate. Oakes remained
-under a bush below. Jones returned with a piece of ore showing color. A
-popular song of the period was called “Red Wing” and because he liked
-sentimental ballads, Herman named it for the song. Camp was made at the
-bottom of the hill. Oakes assumed the dish washing job to offset an
-extra hour which Herman agreed to give to work on the trail. Somebody
-told Oakes how to bake bread and while Herman was wheeling muck to the
-dump, Harry experimented with his cookery. The bread turned out to be
-excellent and Oakes took the day off to show it to friends.
-
-“That’s the sort of fellow Harry was,” Herman says. “You just couldn’t
-take him seriously.”
-
-The Red Wing didn’t pay and when abandoned, all they had to show for
-their labor was a stack of bills. On borrowed money, Oakes left the
-country. Herman remained to pay the bills.
-
-
-A few miles east of Shoshone is Chicago Valley, which began in a
-startling swindle, and ended in fame and fortune for one defrauded
-victim.
-
-A convincing crook from the Windy City found government land open to
-entry and called it Chicago Valley. It was a desolate area and the only
-living thing to be seen was an occasional coyote skulking across or a
-vulture flying over. The promoter needed no capital other than a good
-front, glib tongue, and the ability to lie without the flicker of a
-lash.
-
-A few weeks later Chicago widows with meager endowments, scrub women
-with savings, and some who coughed too much from long hours in sweat
-shops began to receive beautifully illustrated pamphlets that described
-a tropical Eden with lush fields, cooling lakes, and more to the point,
-riches almost overnight. For $100 anyone concerned would be located.
-
-Soon people began to swing off The Goose, as the dinky train serving
-Shoshone was called, and head for Chicago Valley. Among the victims was
-a widow named Holmes with a family of attractive, intelligent children.
-One of these was a vivacious, beautiful teen-ager named Helen.
-
-The Holmes were handicapped because of tuberculosis in the family. This
-in fact had induced the widow to invest her savings.
-
-Herman Jones used to ride by the Holmes’ place en route to the Pahrump
-Ranch on hunting trips and owning several burros, he thought the Holmes’
-children would like to have one. Taking the donkey over, he told Helen,
-“You can use him to work the ranch too. Better and faster than a
-hoe....” He brought a harness and a cultivator, showed her how to use
-the implement.
-
-It was inevitable that investors in Chicago Valley would lose their
-time, labor, and money.
-
-Thus when Helen Holmes returned the burro to Herman one day, Herman was
-not surprised when she told him she was on her way to Los Angeles to
-look for a job.
-
-“But what can you do?”
-
-“I wish I knew. I can get a job washing dishes or waiting on table.”
-
-Shortly afterward he heard from her—just a little note saying she was a
-hello girl on a switchboard. “Knew she’d land on her feet,” Herman
-grinned, and having a bottle handy he gurgled a toast to Helen. He had
-to tell the news of course and with each telling he produced the bottle.
-
-So he was in a pleasant mood when somebody suggested a spot of poker. To
-mention poker in Shoshone is to have a game and in a little while Dad
-Fairbanks, Dan Modine, deputy sheriff, Herman, and two or three others
-were shuffling chips over in the Mesquite Club.
-
-Herman had the luck and quit with $700. “Fellows,” he said as he folded
-his money, “take a last look at this roll. You won’t see it again.”
-
-“Oh, you’ll be back,” Fairbanks said.
-
-But Herman didn’t come back. Instead he went to Los Angeles, found Helen
-at the switchboard. She confided excitedly that she had a chance to get
-into the movies as soon as she could get some nice clothes.
-
-“Fine,” Herman said. “When can I see you?” He made a date for dinner,
-had a few more drinks and when he met her he had a comfortable binge and
-a grand idea. “... Listen Helen. You wouldn’t get mad at a fool like me
-if I meant well, would you?”
-
-“Why Herman—you know I wouldn’t,” she laughed.
-
-“I’m a little likkered and it’s kinda personal....”
-
-“But you’re a gentleman, Herman—drunk or sober....”
-
-“I’ve been thinking of this picture business. I nicked Dad Fairbanks in
-a poker game. You know how I am. Lose it all one way or another. You
-take it and buy what you need and it’ll do us both some good.”
-
-The refusal was quick. “It’s sweet of you Herman, but not that. I just
-couldn’t.”
-
-“You can borrow it, can’t you ... so I won’t drink it up?”
-
-The argument won and soon theater goers all over the world were
-clutching their palms as they watched the hair-raising escapes from
-death that pictured “The Perils of Pauline”—the serial that made Helen
-Holmes one of the immortals of the silent films. She died at 58, on July
-8, 1950.
-
-When Charlie Brown became Supervisor in charge of Death Valley roads, he
-wanted a foreman who knew the country. Herman Jones had hunted game,
-treasure, fossils, artifacts of ancient Indians all over Death Valley
-and knew the water courses, the location of subterranean ooze, the dry
-washes which when filled by cloudbursts were a menace. Brown made him
-foreman of the road crew.
-
-At Shoshone, Herman Jones, grey now, was tinkering with a battered Ford
-when a big Rolls-Royce stopped. He looked around at the slam of the
-door, stared a moment at the man approaching, dropped his tools, wiped
-his hands on a greasy rag. “Well, I’ll be—” he laughed. “Harry
-Oakes—where’ve you been all these years?”
-
-“Oh, knocking around,” grinned Oakes. “Wanted to see this country
-again.”
-
-They sat in the shade of a mesquite, talked over Greenwater days and the
-homely memories that leap out of nowhere at such a time.
-
-Oakes noticed Herman’s Ford. Then he pointed to the $20,000 worth of
-long, sleek Rolls-Royce. “Herman, I’m going back to New York in a plane.
-I want to make you a present of that car.”
-
-Herman Jones, dumbfounded for a moment, looked at his Ford, smiled, and
-shook his head. “Thanks just the same, Harry. That old jalopy’s plenty
-good for me.” No amount of persuasion could make him accept it.
-
-Knowing that Herman Jones could use any part of $20,000, I marvelled
-that he didn’t accept the proffered gift. Then I remembered that the
-Redwing had produced only sweat and debts and Jones had paid the debts
-through the bitter years.
-
-In the little town of Swastika in the province of Ontario, Canada, you
-will be told that Oakes was booted off the train there because he was
-dead-beating his way. The country had been prospected, pronounced
-worthless and nobody believed there was pay dirt except a Chinaman.
-
-Harry Oakes had an ear for anybody’s tale of gold and listened to the
-Chinaman. He was 38 years old. Lady Luck had always slammed the door in
-his face but this time, (January, 1912) she flung it open. Eleven years
-later Oakes was rich.
-
-He had always talked on a grand scale even when broke at Shoshone. With
-a taste for luxury he began to gratify it. He bought a palatial home at
-Niagara Falls and served his guests on gold platters. As his fortune
-increased he gave largely to charities and welfare projects such as city
-parks, playgrounds, hospitals. These gifts lead one to believe that the
-belated payment of $300 borrowed from Dad Fairbanks was a calculated
-delay so that Harry Oakes could enjoy the little act he put on at Baker.
-
-During World War I he gave $500,000 to a London hospital, was knighted
-by King George V in 1939. He became a friend of the Duke of Windsor and
-at his Nassau residence was often the host to the Duke and his Duchess,
-the amazing Wallis Warfield, Baltimore girl who went from a boarding
-house to wed a British king.
-
-Sir Harry Oakes was murdered in the palatial Nassau home, July 7, 1943,
-allegedly by a titled son-in-law who was later acquitted—a verdict
-denounced by many.
-
-_In connection with the story of Helen Holmes told above, it should be
-explained that the original title was “Hazards of Helen” and following
-an old Hollywood custom, Pathe produced a new version called “Perils of
-Pauline.” In this the heroine’s part was taken by Pearl White._
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIX
- Death Valley Scotty
-
-
-A strictly factual thumbnail sketch of Walter Scott would contain the
-following incidents:
-
-He ran away from his Kentucky home to join his brother, Warner, as a cow
-hand on the ranch of John Sparks—afterward governor of Nevada. He worked
-as a teamster for Borax Smith at Columbus Marsh. He had a similar job at
-Old Harmony Borax Works.
-
-In the Nineties he went to work with Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. He
-married Josephine Millius, a candy clerk on Broadway, New York, and
-brought her to Nevada.
-
-He became guide, friend, companion, and major domo for Albert
-Johnson—Chicago millionaire who had come to the desert for his health.
-He did some prospecting in the early part of the century, but never
-found a mine of value.
-
-America was mining-mad following the Tonopah and Goldfield strikes and
-Scotty went East in search of a grubstake. He obtained one from Julian
-Gerard, Vice President of the Knickerbocker Trust Company and a brother
-of James W. Gerard who had married the daughter of Marcus Daly, Montana
-copper king and who was later U.S. Ambassador to Germany.
-
-Scotty staked a claim near Hidden Spring and named it The Knickerbocker.
-He gave Gerard glowing reports of a mine so rich its location must be
-kept secret.
-
-Scotty appeared in Los Angeles unheard of, in a ten gallon hat and a
-flaming necktie and with the natural showman’s skill, tossed money
-around in lavish tips or into the street for urchins to scramble over.
-
-This was the well-staged prelude to the charter of the famed Scotty
-Special for a record-breaking run from Los Angeles to Chicago. Though
-Scotty stoutly denies it, he was lifted to fame by a big and talented
-sorrel-headed sports editor and reporter on the Los Angeles Examiner,
-named Charles Van Loan, and John J. Byrnes, passenger agent of the Santa
-Fe railroad. Scotty meant nothing to either of these men, but the
-publicity Byrnes saw for the Santa Fe did, and the red necktie, the big
-hat, the scattering of coins, and the secret mine made the sort of story
-Van Loan liked.
-
-Here Scotty’s trail is lost in the fantastic stories of writers, press
-agents, and promoters. Several years afterward when his yarns began to
-backfire, Scotty swore in a Los Angeles court that E. Burt Gaylord, a
-New York man, furnished $10,000 for the Scotty Special’s spectacular
-dash across the continent—the object being to promote the sale of stock
-in the “secret mine.”
-
-More remarkable than any yarn Scotty ever told is the fact that although
-headlines made Scotty, headlines have failed to kill the Scotty legend.
-
-You may toss our heroes into the ash can, but we dust them off and put
-them back. Likable, ingratiating, Scotty will brush aside any attack
-with a funny story and let it go at that.
-
-In a law suit for an accounting against Scotty, Julian Gerard asserted
-he was to have 22½% of any treasure Scotty found. Judge Ben Harrison
-decided in Gerard’s favor, but the only claim found in Scotty’s name was
-the utterly worthless Knickerbocker and Gerard got nothing. The claim
-showed little sign of ever having been worked. A few broken rocks. A few
-holes which could be filled with a shovel within a few moments.
-
-Passing the claim once, I stopped to talk with a native: “This is the
-scene of the Battle of Wingate Pass,” he told me. “In case you never
-heard of it, it was fought for liberty, Scotty’s liberty—that is. Gerard
-got suspicious about Scotty’s mine and decided to send his own engineers
-out to investigate. He ordered Scotty to meet them at Barstow and show
-them something or else. It worried Scotty a little, not long. He’d
-learned about Indian fighting with Buffalo Bill and met the fellows as
-ordered. When he led them to his wagon waiting behind the depot, the
-Easterners took a look at the wagon, another look at Scotty and one at
-each other. The wagon had boiler plate on the sides, rifles stacked army
-fashion alongside. Outriders with six-guns holstered on their belts and
-Winchesters cradled in their arms.
-
-“‘Don’t let it worry you,’ Scotty said. ‘Piutes on the warpath. Old
-Dripping Knife, their Chief claims my gold belongs to them. Dry-gulched
-a couple of my best men last week.’
-
-“The Easterners turned white and Scotty gave ’em another jolt.
-‘Butchered my boys and fed ’em to their pigs. But we are fixed for ’em
-this trip. They sent word they aim to exterminate us. Maybe try it, but
-I’ve got lookouts planted all along. Let’s go....’ He shunted them
-aboard, shaking in their knees and headed out of Barstow.
-
-“The party had reached that hill you see when suddenly out of the brush
-and the gulches and from behind the rocks came a horde of ‘redskins,’
-yelling and shooting. Scotty’s men leaped from their saddles and the
-battle was on. The Easterners jumped out of the wagon and hit the ground
-running for the nearest dry wash and that was the closest they ever got
-to Scotty’s mine. You’ve got to hand it to Scotty.”
-
-The story made front page from coast to coast and it was several days
-before the hoax was revealed. Unexplained though undenied, was the
-statement that Albert Johnson was in Scotty’s party listed as “Doctor
-Jones.” It is assumed that he had no guilty knowledge of the hoax.
-
-The most astounding achievement of Scotty’s career was attained when he
-interested in an imaginary Death Valley mine, Al Myers, a hard-bitten
-prospector and mining man who had made the discovery strike at
-Goldfield; Rol King, of Los Angeles, bon vivant and manager of the
-popular Hollenbeck Hotel, and Sidney Norman who as mining editor of the
-Los Angeles Times knew mines and mining men.
-
-These were certainly not the gullible type. But with a yarn of gold,
-Scotty induced them to hazard a trip into Death Valley in mid-summer
-when the temperature was 124 degrees.
-
-Scotty may have missed the acquisition of a good mine when he failed to
-find one lost by Bob Black. While hunting sheep in the Avawatz Range,
-Bob found some rich float. “Honest,” Bob said, “I knocked off the quartz
-and had pure gold.” He tried to locate the ledge but he couldn’t match
-his specimen. Later he returned with Scotty, but a cloudburst had mauled
-the country. They found the corners of Bob’s tepee, but not the ledge.
-They made several later attempts to find it, but failed.
-
-Bob always declared that some day he would uncover the ledge and might
-have succeeded if he hadn’t met Ash Meadows Jack Longstreet one day when
-both were full of desert likker. Bob passed the lie. Jack drew first.
-Taps for Bob.
-
-
-All kinds of stories have been told to explain Albert Johnson’s
-connection with Scotty. The first and the true one is that Johnson,
-coming to the desert for his health, hired Scotty as a guide, liked his
-yarns and his camping craft and kept him around to yank a laugh out of
-the grim solitude.
-
-But that version didn’t appeal to the old burro men. They could believe
-in the hydrophobic skunks or the Black Bottle kept in the county
-hospital to get rid of the old and useless, but not in a Santa Claus
-like Albert Johnson. “It just don’t make sense—handing that sort of
-money to a potbellied loafer like Scotty....”
-
-Albert Johnson was able to afford any expenditure to make his life in a
-difficult country less lonely. He could have searched the world over and
-found no better investment for that purpose than Scotty.
-
-Genial, resourceful, and never at a loss for a yarn that would fit his
-audience, Scotty was cast in a perfect role. As a matter of fact,
-whatever it cost Johnson for Scotty’s flings in Hollywood, or alimony
-for Scotty’s wife, it probably came back in the dollar admissions that
-tourists paid to pass the portals of the Castle for a look at Scotty. Of
-course they seldom saw Scotty—never in later years. Mrs. Johnson was an
-intensely religious woman and didn’t like liquor and that disqualified
-Scotty.
-
-“This is Scotty’s room,” the attendant would say. “And that’s his bed.”
-
-“Oh, isn’t he here?”
-
-“Not today. Scotty’s a little under the weather. Went over to his shack
-so he wouldn’t be disturbed....”
-
-Mrs. Johnson was killed in an auto driven by her husband in Towne’s Pass
-when, to avoid going over a precipice, he headed the machine into the
-wall of a cut.
-
-In 1939 Albert Johnson testified that he first met Scotty in Johnson’s
-Chicago office when a wealthy friend appeared with Scotty, who was
-looking for a grubstake. Johnson said he gave Scotty “something between
-$1000 and $5000.” When the attorney asked him to be more definite,
-Johnson replied that at the time, his income was between one-half
-million and two million dollars a year and the exact amount consequently
-was of no importance then. “Since then,” Johnson testified, “I have
-given him $117,000 in cash and about the same in grubstakes, mules,
-food, and equipment.”
-
-They went together into the mountains as Johnson explained, “because I
-was all hepped up with his ... claims.” Further explaining his
-connection with Scotty, he said: “I was crippled in a railroad accident.
-My back was broken. I was paralyzed from the hips down. Through the
-years I got to have a great fondness for him.”
-
-Albert Johnson, whose fortune came from the National Insurance Company,
-died in 1948, leaving a will that contained no mention of Scotty.
-
-But one laurel none can deny Walter Scott. He did more to put Death
-Valley on the must list of the American tourists than all the histories
-and all the millions spent for books, pamphlets, and radio broadcasts.
-
-
-The almost incredible case of Jack and Myra Benson proves that P. T.
-Barnum was not wholly wrong in his dictum regarding the birthrate of
-suckers.
-
-Newly married in Montana they loaded their car and set out to seek
-fortune in the West. “We didn’t know anything about gold,” Jack
-confided. “If anyone had told us to throw a forked stick up a hillside
-and dig where it fell, we would have done it.”
-
-Near Parker, Arizona, they were having supper in camp when another
-traveler stopped and asked permission to erect his tent nearby. Myra
-invited him to share their supper and during the meal the stranger told
-them he was a chemist and that he had prospected over most of the West.
-He had found a clay that cured meningitis, he said, and this had led to
-fortune. In one town he had found the entire population, including
-doctors and nurses down and out. The clay had cured them within a week.
-Among the cured, was the son of a rich woman who had given him $5000.
-
-Grateful for the fate that had brought this man into their lives, the
-Bensons confided that they had hoped to reach the California gold
-fields, but car trouble had depleted their cash and asked if he knew of
-any place where they could pan gold.
-
-“Go to Silver Lake, in San Bernardino County, California,” he advised
-them, “and your troubles will be over. On the edges of the lake is a
-thick mud. Get some tanks and boil it. You’ll have a residue of gold.”
-
-Jack and Myra set out over the Colorado Desert; then climbed the
-Providence Mountains to worry through the deep blow sand of the Devil’s
-Playground. After three gruelling weeks they reached the lake. There
-they boiled the mud. Then an old prospector became curious about their
-unusual performance. The world slipped out from under the Bensons when
-he told them they were the victims of a liar.
-
-With $5.00 they headed for Death Valley; found themselves broke and
-gasless at Cave Spring. Jack knocked upon the door of a shack he saw
-there. The woman who opened the door was Jack’s former school teacher,
-Mrs. Ira Sweatman, who was keeping house for her cousin, Adrian
-Egbert—there for his health.
-
-Those who traveled the Death Valley road by way of Yermo and Cave Spring
-will remember that every five miles tacked to stake or bush were signs
-that read: “Water and oil.” This was Adrian Egbert’s fine and practical
-way of aiding the fellow in trouble.
-
-Myra and Jack later acquired a claim near Rhodes Spring, a short
-distance from Salsbury Pass road into Death Valley and moved there to
-develop it. I had been away from Shoshone with no contacts and returning
-was surprised to find Myra there. I inquired about Jack.
-
-“Why, haven’t you heard?” she asked, and from the expression in her eyes
-I knew that Jack was dead.
-
-As best I could, I expressed my condolence, knowing how deeply she had
-loved.
-
-She said: “He went up to the tunnel to set off three blasts. I heard
-only two. He was to come after the third blast. I knew something was
-wrong and went up. Bigod, Mr. Caruthers, Jack’s head was blown off to
-hellangone....”
-
-Myra’s language failed to mask the grief her welling eyes disclosed.
-
-Only once in her long, helpful life did Myra ever stoop to deception.
-The old age pension law was passed and Myra was entitled to and needed
-its benefits, but Myra wouldn’t sign the application. She made one
-excuse after another, but finally Stella Brown got at the bottom of her
-refusal. Myra had been married to Jack for 40 years and just didn’t want
-him to find out that she was a year older than he. Mrs. Brown at last
-persuaded her to put aside her vanity.
-
-“Hell—” Jack grinned when told about it. “I knew her age when I married
-her.”
-
-On cold winter nights Myra could always be found in the Snake House
-where a chair beside the stove was reserved for her. One night I said
-jestingly: “You never play poker. What are you doing here?”
-
-She whispered: “Wood’s hard to get. I’m saving mine.”
-
-Then came one of those mornings when one’s soul tingles with the feel of
-a perfect desert day and Myra was up early. She came to the store.
-
-“What got you up at this hour?” Bernice asked.
-
-“I felt too dam’ good to stay indoors....”
-
-There were a few old timers in the store and these surrounded
-her—because she was the kind who could tell you that it was hotter than
-hell, in a thrilling way. She bought a few groceries and started back to
-her cabin. Friendly eyes followed her passage along a path across the
-playground of the little school. Children sliding down the chute or
-riding teeter boards, waved affectionately. Myra was seen to falter in
-her step, then sag to the sand. The children ran to her aid and in a
-moment Shoshone was gathering about her. Myra Benson was dead.
-
-Sam Flake, nearing 80, on the fringe of the crowd paid his simple
-tribute in a voice a bit shaky, but in language hard as the rock in the
-hills: “Dam’ her old hide—us boys are going to miss Myra....” He turned
-aside, his hand pulling at the bandana in his hip pocket and Shoshone
-understood.
-
-Though she was buried 500 miles away, every man, woman, and child in
-Shoshone wanted a token of love to attend her and about the grave that
-received her casket was a wilderness of flowers.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XX
- Odd But Interesting Characters
-
-
-In these pages the reader has seen familiar names—the favored of Lady
-Luck—but what of those who failed—the patient, plodding kind of whom you
-hear only on the scene? They too followed jackasses into hidden hills;
-made trails that led others to fortunes which built cities, industries,
-railroad; endowed colleges and made science function for a better world.
-To these humbler actors we owe more than we can repay.
-
-For nearly half a century John (Cranky) Casey roamed the deserts of
-California and Nevada looking for gold. His luck was consistently bad.
-Grim, tall, erect, with a deep slow voice, he was noted for picturesque
-speech which gained emphasis from an utterly humorless face.
-Congenitally he was an autocrat—his speech biting.
-
-A prospector whom Casey didn’t like died and friends were discussing the
-disposition of the remains. “Chop his feet off,” suggested Casey, “and
-drive him into the ground with a doublejack....”
-
-From others one could always hear tales of fortunes made or missed; of
-veins of gold wide as a barn door. But no trick of memory ever turned
-Casey’s bull quartz into picture rock. “Never found enough gold to fill
-a tooth,” he would say.
-
-Casey’s leisure hours were spent over books and magazines, chiefly
-highbrow—particularly books and journals of science.
-
-A tenderfoot was brought in unconscious from Pahrump Valley. A city
-doctor happened to be passing through and after an examination of the
-victim, turned to the men in overalls and hobnail shoes, who’d brought
-him in: “He’s suffering from a derangement of the hypothalamus.”
-
-“Why in the hell don’t you say he had a heat stroke?” Casey barked.
-
-A notorious promoter had a city victim ready for the dotted line.
-“Double your money in no time.... Samples show $200 to the ton....”
-Assuming all prospectors were crooked he called to Casey sitting nearby:
-“Casey, you know the Indian Tom claim?” “Yes, I know it,” Casey
-thundered. “Not a fleck of gold in the whole dam’ hill.”
-
-In the thick silence that followed, the beaten rascal flushed, looked
-belligerently at Casey but Casey’s big, hard fists he knew, could almost
-dent boiler plate and the long arms wrapped about a barrel, could crush
-it flat.
-
-In time Casey acquired an ancient flivver. Only his genius as a mechanic
-kept it going. There were lean years when it bore no license and he kept
-to little-traveled roads. The car, like Casey, was cranky and
-phlegmatic. One day as he was coming into Shoshone it balked in the
-middle of the road, coughed, shivered, and died. Inside the store it was
-120 degrees. Out on the road where Casey stopped it was probably 130.
-For two hours he patiently but vainly tried to coax it back to life.
-Finally he stood aside, wiped the grease from his gnarled hands, calmly
-stoked his pipe and shoved the car from the road. Then he gathered an
-armful of boulders and with a blasting of cussing that shook Shoshone he
-let go with a cannonade of stones that completed its ruin.
-
-At the age of ten Casey had been taken from the drift of a city’s
-backwash and put in an orphanage. Nothing was known of his parentage or
-of relatives. He came to the desert after a colorful career as a
-conductor on the Santa Fe. The late E. W. Harriman, having gained
-control of the Southern Pacific system had his private car attached to a
-Santa Fe train for an inspection tour. At a siding on the Mojave Desert,
-Harriman wanted the train held a few moments. His messenger went to
-Casey, explaining that Harriman was the new boss of the Southern
-Pacific.
-
-“This is the Santa Fe,” Casey bristled, looking at his watch. “I’m due
-in Barstow at 11:05 and bigod I’ll be there.”
-
-Aboard his train he was a despot and a stickler for the rules, demanding
-that even his superiors obey them. This finally was his downfall and he
-came to the desert.
-
-Elinor Glyn, who made the best seller list with “Three Weeks” in the
-early part of the century, came to Rawhide and Tex Rickard, spectacular
-gambler undertook to show her a bit of life a la Rawhide. He took her to
-the Stingaree district and later to a reception in his own place. The
-state’s notables were presented to the lady along with Nat Goodwin,
-Julian Hawthorne, and others internationally known.
-
-Tex saw Casey standing alone at the end of the bar and knowing he was a
-voracious reader he went to Casey: “Come on and meet the author of Three
-Weeks....”
-
-“I’ve read it,” Casey said. “They’ve hung folks for less.”
-
-Casey’s method of getting a job when his grub ran out was unique and
-unfailing. He would storm into the store and turn loose on Charlie, in
-charge of the roads and long his friend. “Who’s keeping up these roads?
-Chuck holes in ’em big as the Grand Canyon ... disgrace—”
-
-“Been waiting for you to come in,” Charlie would say with a sober face.
-“Get a shovel and fix ’em.”
-
-A good conscientious worker, Casey would put the road in shape, pay his
-debts and again head into the horizon.
-
-You who spin through Death Valley or along its approaches owe much to
-Casey, who made many of the original road beds the hard way—with pick
-and shovel.
-
-At last Casey got the old age pension and his latter years were the
-best. His home, a dugout in the bank of a wash near Tecopa. With no
-rent, with books and magazines and the solitude he loved, he lived
-happily. “When I croak,” he often said, “just put me in my dugout. Toss
-a stick of dynamite in after me. Shut the door and cave in the goddam’
-hill.”
-
-One night he went to Tecopa. Friends were doing a spot of drinking and
-far behind in his score with the years, Casey joined them. There was
-nothing out of line. Just yarns and memories and Casey had a lot of
-these. Tonopah. Goldfield. Rawhide. Ely. Foundling days.
-
-“... They put me in a religious school. Had no relatives. In those days
-they whaled hell outa you just to see you squirm. ‘Casey,’ the teacher
-would ask, ‘who swallowed the whale?’ How did I know? Then he’d drag me
-off by the ear and blister my bottom. I shoved off one night. Been on
-the loose ever since.”
-
-As he drank from his bottle of beer he suddenly slumped—and died
-instantly. Because of the intense heat, Maury Sorrells, now Supervisor
-but then Coroner, ordered immediate burial.
-
-Someone recalled Casey’s wish to be put in the dugout and the hill blown
-up and started for the dynamite. But Whitey Bill McGarn warned that it
-would violate the law. One-eyed Casey—no relation, but long a friend,
-suggested a wake until the grave was dug. “It will be daylight then and
-we’ll plant him in the wash right in front of his dugout.”
-
-This was done as the sun came over the hills and I like to think that
-somewhere in the after life, all is well with Casey.
-
-
-Ben Brandt, previously mentioned, was a big blond man with child-like
-blue eyes, huge gnarled hands and the strength of an ox. He wore
-enormous boots, but when he bought new ones he always complained that
-they lacked traction and would go immediately to the dump, salvage an
-old tire casing and add two inches of reinforcement to the soles, with
-half a pound of hobnails. Ben then was ready for travel—provided he
-could find his burros.
-
-Near remote Quail Springs Ben dug a 4×4 mine shaft 75 feet deep, without
-aid. Descending by ladder he would fill a 10 gallon bucket with dirt,
-climb out and bring it to the surface. Day after day, month after month
-Ben applied the power of two strong arms and two strong legs. “With an
-engine you could do it in half the time,” Ben was told. “I’ve got plenty
-of time,” Ben drawled.
-
-Ben disdained gold in quartz formation. “I like placer. It’s a poor
-man’s game. If you find gold you put it in your poke and you’ve got
-spending money.”
-
-Ben kept five burros and being industrious, never lacked a grubstake. He
-avoided argument except upon one subject, and that was burros versus
-Fords in prospecting. “I can get anywhere with my burros. I find stalled
-flivvers all over the desert and my burros drag ’em in.”
-
-Ben believed that a burro had at least some of the intellectual powers
-of man. “Read a clock good as you,” he said. “I worked my burro,
-Solomon, on a hoist. He didn’t like it. I got up every morning at
-daylight, by an alarm clock. Slept out and kept the clock on a boulder
-at my head and got up when the alarm went off. One morning I woke up
-with the sun shining straight down in my eyes. It was noon. That burro
-had sneaked up and taken that clock down the canyon a mile away. Don’t
-tell me they can’t think! I sold him. Too smart.”
-
-I asked Ben once what he would do if he suddenly found a million dollar
-claim. “I would build a monument a thousand feet high on top of
-Telescope Peak and dedicate it to burros.”
-
-Such a monument would inadequately express the debt today’s world owes
-that little beast. Here are some of the things that link your life to
-the burro:
-
-The springs and the mattress in the bed you were born on. The talc that
-powdered you. The soap that bathed you. The ring you slipped on the
-finger of the girl you love. The paint on your house. The glass in your
-windows. The tile in your bathroom. The enamel ware in your kitchen. The
-prescription your druggist fills. The fillings the dentist puts into
-your teeth. The coin and the currency you spend. The auto you ride in
-and finally the casket in which you leave this world.
-
-Wars have been won or lost and the credit of nations stabilized because
-a burro carried a prospector’s grub into faraway hills.
-
-Ben’s burros strayed and he’d just returned with them after a two days’
-hunt. He was sitting on the bench mopping his brow when Louise Grantham,
-the girl with the mine in the Panamint, came up. She needed pack animals
-to get the ore down to the road. She’d tried before, to trade her Ford
-pickup for Ben’s burros, but he’d never shown a flicker of interest. In
-a voice pitched for Ben’s ears, she said to Ernie Huhn: “If Ben didn’t
-waste so much time hunting those jacks, he might find a mine.”
-
-Ben cocked an ear, but made no comment.
-
-“Now take that Quail Springs hole,” Louise went on. “If he had my pickup
-he could take off a wheel, put on a belt and haul up the muck in one
-tenth the time, and instead of hoofing it in the sun he could ride in a
-cool cab and haul his supplies in.”
-
-There comes a weak moment in everyone’s life and this was Ben’s. He
-traded the burros for the Ford and one of the best prospectors on the
-desert was ruined forever.
-
-Ben had a mortal fear of women and nothing could convince him that any
-unattached woman wasn’t always lying in wait for any loose man.
-
-Ben went into the Johnnie country to prospect and passing through I
-looked him up. He was living in a tin shack in the canyon leading to the
-old Johnnie Mine. I asked Ben about his luck.
-
-“Last prospecting I did was right out there.” He pointed to the slope in
-front of his house. “Good placer ground too.”
-
-“Why did you quit?”
-
-“Woman,” Ben grumbled. “Don’t know yet what come over me, but I took a
-woman for a partner.” He pointed to a boulder a few hundred yards away.
-“There’s where I wanted to start digging. It’s rich dirt. She wanted to
-start up there near her shack.”
-
-“Well, what difference did it make?” I asked.
-
-“I see you don’t know women. I hadn’t been working up there by her house
-no time before she called me to get her a bucket of water. Bucket was
-half full. Next day she wanted a board in the kitchen floor nailed down.
-Didn’t need any nail. ‘There’s some fresh apple pie on the table,’ she
-says. I told her I didn’t like pie. I’m crazy about pie but I knew her
-game. She calculated if I ate with her two—three times I’d be a dead
-pigeon. So I told her she could have the claim and walked off.”
-
-Ben struck a happier note when he informed me that he didn’t need to
-work any more and at last had attained the one ambition of his life.
-“Come inside and I’ll show you.” Beaming as only a man can when he sits
-on top of the world, he approached a table and it flashed over me that I
-would see a certified check for a fortune.
-
-There was a cloth over the table and he carefully wiped his big hands
-before touching it. He wet his big, broad thumb and forefinger and gave
-them an extra wipe on the sides of his shirt, a wide smile on his face
-and I had a vicarious thrill that a man who could barely read and write
-had at last achieved that which he most wanted in life. He started to
-remove the cloth, but paused. “Always said if I ever struck it rich,
-first money I spent would be for one of these dinkuses.”
-
-He flipped the cloth aside. I stared incredulous. It was a portable
-typewriter.
-
-He replaced the cover with the gentle care of a mother putting her baby
-to bed and I left him, sure that God was in his heaven with an eye on
-Ben.
-
-
-Contemporary with Ben was Joe Volmer, who lived in a dugout in Dublin
-Gulch. I had seen royalty from afar and once I had dined with a sultan
-on horsemeat and fried bananas, but no king ever attained the majesty of
-Joe. He was tall, erect, wore a white sailor’s hat and carried a cane.
-His mustache was always waxed to a needle point, after the manner of
-Kaiser Wilhelm. Though he increased his small pension by selling home
-brew, he always managed to give the impression that he was descending to
-your level when he accepted the two bits you left on his table.
-
-He was neat as he was lordly and forever scrubbing his pots and pans. He
-kept the dugout immaculate and when I first saw him standing on the
-ledge in front of his door, calmly surveying the valley below, he posed
-like an Alexander the Great, with the world conquered and trussed at his
-feet.
-
-I had never seen him until one day a tourist came into the store and
-asked Charlie for a stop-watch. Charlie told him he didn’t carry
-stop-watches. Shortly after the tourist had gone, Joe came in for a
-stop-watch. “Don’t keep ’em,” Charlie said. “Helluva store,” Joe barked
-and strode out.
-
-“A curious coincidence,” I said. “Two calls for a stop-watch in the same
-day away out here.”
-
-“It’s no coincidence,” Charlie said. “Just Joe Volmer. He’s in every day
-asking for something he knows I haven’t got.”
-
-After Joe left, Jack Crowley came for his mail. Brown was in the cage
-set apart for the post office. He had just received several sheets of
-six-cent stamps—twice as many as he needed. “Jack,” he said, “when you
-see Joe tell him I’m out of six-cent stamps.” Within an hour Joe shoved
-a five dollar bill through the window. “Give me five dollars’ worth of
-six-cent stamps,” he ordered. Brown picked up the bill, filled the order
-and never again did Joe ask for merchandise not in stock.
-
-Joe sold a claim and decided he needed a refrigerator to keep the beer
-cold. So he picked up a Monkey Ward catalogue and ordered a big white
-enamel number large enough for a hotel. Joe thought a refrigerator was
-just a refrigerator and he strutted around telling everybody. He had to
-widen the dugout door and waiting customers were more than eager to help
-him get the machine in place. He loaded the shelves and told them to
-come back in a couple of hours and cool their innards.
-
-They came with their tongues hanging out. Joe set out the glasses and
-passed the bottles. Herman Jones picked one up and shook it. The cork
-hit the ceiling. “Hotter’n hell,” Herman said. “What sort of cooler is
-that?” He went over and looked. “Gas. You dam’ fool. Nearest gas is
-Barstow.”
-
-Until Joe’s death he used the refrigerator to store pots and pans.
-
-Discovered in his dugout in a serious condition, Joe was rushed to Death
-Valley Junction 28 miles away, where the Pacific Coast Borax Company
-maintained a hospital which was in charge of Dr. Shrum, who was rather
-realistic and somewhat cold blooded.
-
-Just as they had gotten Joe in the doctor’s office, another patient was
-brought in. Dr. Shrum looked at the new comer and then at Joe. “Take Joe
-out,” he ordered. “He’s going to die anyway.”
-
-Joe was wheeled outside and a moment later was dead.
-
-
-George Williams, a Spanish American war veteran, retired to Shoshone on
-a pension of $50. Since food was cheap, George had more money than he
-knew what to do with. He kept five burros. He never prospected, but
-roamed the country and thought nothing of taking a 300 mile trip across
-the roughest terrain in the region. After spending his summers in the
-high country, he would return to Shoshone in winter. There he had a five
-acre ranch fenced in and a neat cabin.
-
-Every day George would come to the store and buy a pound of chocolates.
-“I’ve got a sweet tooth,” he would explain.
-
-Charlie, sure that no one could eat as much chocolate as George bought,
-was a bit curious as to what George did with it and trailed him one day
-through the mesquite to find George feeding the candy to his burros.
-
-George was not a drinker, but on one occasion he joined a party and went
-on a bender. He awoke next morning with a horrible hangover and was so
-humiliated that he left Shoshone and never returned. He went over to
-Sandy and died in the ’30s.
-
-One day George started to tell me a story as we sat on the bench. His
-burros were grazing in the nearby salt grass. Every time he reached the
-climax of his yarn, he would jump up to go after a straying burro. When
-he retrieved that one, another would wander off and George would leave
-me again.
-
-For one entire summer I listened to the beginning of that yarn and every
-morning would remind him of it.
-
-“Where was I?” he’d say. “Oh, yes, I was telling you about the girl
-climbing out of the fellow’s window just before daylight. Well, she
-went—”
-
-Then George would jump up and start for a burro, and I never learned
-what happened to the torrid romance after the girl crawled out of her
-lover’s window.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXI
- Roads. Cracker Box Signs
-
-
-Any resemblance that a Death Valley highway bore to a road was a
-coincidence prior to 1926, and few tourists traveled over them unless
-two cars were along. “Just follow the wheel tracks and keep your eyes
-peeled for the cracker box signs along the road,” was the usual advice
-to the novice who didn’t know that tracks left by Mormons’ wagons nearly
-a century before may be seen today.
-
-One of these led me to the bank of a mile-wide gash made by cloudbursts.
-To locate the missing link I climbed the nearest mountain and on a
-lonely mesa came at last upon a piece of shook nailed to a stake and
-stuck into the ground. But it had nothing to do with roads. A crude
-inscription read:
-
-
- Montana Jim
- July 1888
- A dam good pal
-
-
-Reverently I stepped aside. Never again would I see a finer tribute to
-man. A few rocks bleached white in the sun outlined a sunken grave.
-Crossed upon it were Jim’s pick and shovel. It was not difficult to
-recreate what had happened there. Jim and his friend looking for gold.
-Jim’s faltering and the sun beating him down. Jim’s partner knowing that
-Jim’s moniker would identify him better than a surname to anyone who
-passed that way interested in Jim. Out in the desert 100 miles from
-human habitation he couldn’t call an undertaker, so he dug a hole,
-wrapped Jim in his canvas, rolled him in and hoped that God would reach
-down for Jim.
-
-At that period it was not an uncommon experience for the early tourist
-to lose his way by doing the natural thing at a crossroads and take the
-one which showed the sign of most travel. Often he would find later that
-he had followed a trail to a mine miles away. Often too, it led to
-disaster.
-
-
-The story of roads begins at Shoshone with Brown. In his trips in and
-around the valley, he erected signs to prevent the traveler from losing
-his way and his life. “I would like to see Death Valley country,” people
-would say to him, “but everyone tells me to stay out.”
-
-Inyo county had little revenue and that was used in the more populous
-Owens Valley 150 miles west. The east side (the Shoshone area) was
-totally neglected. Letters and petitions protesting the unfair
-distribution of county funds were tossed into the waste basket. “Roads
-in that cauldron? Who would use ’em? Nobody ever goes there but a few
-old prospectors.”
-
-This was true but it was also true that on Owens Valley’s west side the
-lakes and forests of the High Sierras were attracting a paying crop of
-vacationists and the supervisors knew it would be political suicide to
-divert this traffic from its towns and resorts. The county-wide opinion
-as to chance for relief was expressed in the slang of the day by a
-loafer on the bench at Shoshone: “About as much as a wax mouse would
-have against an asbestos cat in a race through hell. They have the votes
-and elect the supervisors.”
-
-The east side had never had a member on the board. In the Shoshone
-precinct were less than 40 voters. In Death Valley a few prospectors who
-would have battered down the gates of hell if they thought gold lay
-beyond, poked around in its canyons. A few Indians. A few workmen for
-the Borax Company. In 1924 Brown put his suitcase in his car, filled the
-tank and said to those about: “Fellows, I’m running for Supervisor.”
-“You’ll be the mouse,” quipped a friend.
-
-“I’ll let ’em know somebody lives over here anyway....”
-
-Skirting the urban strongholds of the gentlemen in office Brown knocked
-at every door in the district. He berated none nor claimed he had all
-the answers to an obviously difficult problem. “... Roads built there
-will lead here. Everybody will gain....” Then to the next cabin and the
-next canyon until he’d seen every voter.
-
-Before the opposition knew he had been around, he was back in Shoshone
-selling bacon and beans.
-
-When the votes were counted the overlords of the west side gasped. “Who
-the hell’s this Brown? Didn’t even know he was running....”
-
-Taking office January 1, 1925, he found that the beaten incumbent had
-spent all the money allocated for road maintenance in his own bailiwick
-before retiring. Nevertheless, Brown convinced the new board his
-election proved that the people of the entire county agreed with him
-that the Death Valley area could no longer be neglected and managed to
-get a niggardly appropriation which would not have built a mile of
-decent mountain road, and his district had three challenging mountain
-ranges to cross.
-
-With this appropriation he was expected to care for a mileage four times
-greater than that of the west side and was thus responsible for not only
-eastern approaches but maintenance of 150 miles of road from Darwin, all
-roads in the valley and those which furnished the north and south
-approaches. He managed to get $5000 after two years. With this he
-procured road machinery on a rental basis and succeeded in making a fair
-desert road. Then he began a one-man crusade to exploit Death Valley as
-a tourist attraction. “We need only roads a tourist can travel.”
-
-He worked just as diligently for all of Inyo’s roads. “We have one of
-the world’s best vacation lands,” he told the west-siders. “You have an
-abundance of beautiful lakes and streams in a setting of mountains
-impressive as any in the world. On our side we offer the appeal of the
-Panamint, the Funeral Range, and spectacular Death Valley. Tourists will
-come to both of us if we give them a chance and they will be our best
-crop.”
-
-By 1926 his crusade for roads had spread beyond Inyo county lines. San
-Bernardino county, through which passes Highway 66, a main
-transcontinental artery, joins Inyo on the south. Its board of
-supervisors was in session one day when Brown strode in. Most of them he
-knew. He wanted their advice, he told them. “Your county and mine need
-more roads to bring more people. The easiest way into Death Valley is
-through your county from Baker. The distance from Baker to the Inyo
-county line is 45 miles. If you will build the road to the Inyo line, I
-will build it from that point to Furnace Creek, 71 miles. Such a road
-would open Death Valley to the public and the tourists who will travel
-will spend enough money in your towns to pay your share of the cost.”
-
-San Bernardino supervisors agreed to consider it but were not
-enthusiastic. One of America’s largest counties, San Bernardino had also
-one of its largest road problems.
-
-Brown kept plugging, arranging meetings, convincing residents that the
-county’s portion of the road would be over flat country and over roads
-already passable, and its construction inexpensive.
-
-Finally San Bernardino county supervisors agreed and by April, 1929, he
-had 71 miles of passable road. The result was that Death Valley was no
-longer remote as the Congo and tourists began to come.
-
-To Shoshone it meant a few more windshields to wipe; a few more cars to
-crawl under. Another soft answer to frame for the sightseer cursing the
-desolation. Another shed for the store that started on the kitchen
-table.
-
-In 1932 Brown went before the State Highway Commission and urged that
-all the roads he had built in Death Valley be taken over by the state.
-The law was passed.
-
-Death Valley became a National Monument February 11, 1933, by order of
-President Franklin Roosevelt. At that time America was groping its way
-through depression, worrying about its dinner and its debts as a result
-of the stock market crash of 1929.
-
-In the nation’s hobo jungles the seasoned “bindle stiff” made room for
-the newcomer who had always lived on the right side of the tracks.
-Freight trains carried a new kind of bum when the adolescent female
-crawled into a car alongside an adolescent male, vainly seeking work
-anywhere at anything.
-
-To save them and others like them C.C.C. camps were organized and one of
-these recruited largely from New York City’s Bowery, was sent to Death
-Valley with headquarters at Cow Creek, a few miles north of Furnace
-Creek Inn.
-
-The new park was under the supervision of Col. John R. White, later
-superintendent of the entire National Park System and to Ray Goodwin,
-assistant superintendent was assigned the task of building additional
-roads and trails to points of interest to connect with the State System
-which Brown had built.
-
-Then began in earnest the flow of tourist traffic to the “God-forsaken
-hole” for which Brown had worked for 14 long and difficult years. But he
-soon found that to the problems of a small desert community he had added
-those of a whole county. They were the aftermath of what has since been
-called in a marvelous understatement by Morrow Mayo, historian of Los
-Angeles, “The Rape of Owens Valley.”
-
-In the early part of the century, the city of Los Angeles had secretly
-acquired nearly all sources of water in Inyo and Mono counties. An
-amazed world applauded the engineering feat by which water was siphoned
-over mountain ranges to flow through ditches and tunnels, a distance of
-259 miles.
-
-The enterprise was announced by its promoters as the answer to the
-desperate need for water. It is now known that this need was only a mask
-to hide a scheme to make Los Angeles pay the cost of bringing water to
-108,000 acres of waterless land in San Fernando valley so that the
-owners could make a profit of a hundred million dollars through its
-subdivision and sale. This they did.
-
-The shameful story glorifies by comparison the cattle wars of the early
-West when one side hired its Billy the Kids to kill off the other—the
-only difference being that in the Owens Valley feud the Billy the Kids
-were the Big Names of Los Angeles who used unscrupulous politicians and
-laws cunningly passed instead of six-guns.
-
-As a consequence, Los Angeles owns the towns, ranches, and cattle ranges
-so that merchants, householders, ranchers, and renters have no title
-except in a relatively few instances, to the land upon which they live
-or to the house or store they occupy. Los Angeles could sell or lease or
-refuse to sell or lease land to cattlemen, homes to residents or stores
-to merchants and sell or refuse to sell water to those who had lived all
-their lives and would die on the devastated land.
-
-As a result, the relations between the city and the Displaced Persons of
-the two counties were those of victor and vanquished.
-
-In 1935 the city succeeded in getting an act passed by the legislature
-which prevented any town from becoming incorporated without the consent
-of 60 per cent of the property owners. The purpose of the act seemed
-fair enough when it was announced that it was designed to save the towns
-from both political demagogues and crackpots running amuck in California
-and it became a law.
-
-But there was more than the eye could see. Its real object had been to
-strengthen the strangle hold of the Los Angeles Water and Power board
-upon Owens Valley. Since it owned the towns it could now prevent their
-incorporation. There had been some feeling of security under a
-resolution of the Water and Power Board which had declared that
-merchants, cattlemen, and residents—all of them lessees, would be given
-preference in new leases and renewals of old ones.
-
-In 1942 the resolution became a scrap of paper, and ranchers, cattle men
-and householders were advised that their leases would hereafter be
-renewed by a method of secret bidding.
-
-Thus the residents of Owens Valley learned that the labor of years had
-brought no security. As one beaten old timer told me, “We’ve been kicked
-around so much I’m used to it. I helped blow those ditches two-three
-times, to turn that water loose on the desert. I know when I’m licked.”
-
-Resentment in Mono county, which provided more of the water taken by Los
-Angeles than Inyo, was even more aroused and smoldering hatreds were
-ready again to blow up a ditch. The two counties constitute the 28th
-Senatorial district.
-
-Brown’s success in the Assembly had not gone unnoticed in the
-neighboring county of Mono. “We need that fellow Brown,” a prominent
-citizen said, and others repeated it.
-
-Again Charlie put his suitcase in his car, filled the tank. “We’ve never
-had anybody from this side at Sacramento,” he told a friend standing by.
-“I’m running for the Senate.”
-
-“Know anybody up there?”
-
-“I’m going and get acquainted,” he said and headed across the valley.
-
-Most of Mono county is isolated by the High Sierras. Again the door to
-door technique. No torches. No brass bands. Just the old
-eye-to-eye-talk-it-over system. As always he let the voter do the
-talking and he listened, but when he slid into his car the voter was
-ready to tell his neighbor: “I like that fellow. Doesn’t claim to know
-it all.” He told his banker, his grocer, his butcher, baker, and barber.
-
-Result? I was in the Senate Chamber at Sacramento later, when I heard
-one of a group of men huddled nearby say, “This is an important bill
-that concerns everybody on the east side of the Sierras. We’d better see
-Charlie.” I nudged the man reading a document at my side. “Those fellows
-want to see you, Senator.”
-
-He had received the nomination of both the Democratic and Republican
-parties and had secured the passage of an act which denies a
-municipality holding more than 50 per cent of the property of another
-subdivision of the state, proprietary power over the security and
-stability of such subdivision. Moreover he was on the all-powerful Rules
-Committee, the Fish and Game, Local Government, Natural Resources,
-Social Welfare, and Election Committees, friend and frequent adviser of
-Governor Warren.
-
-Honeymooning Secretary Ickes was combining business with pleasure when
-he reached California and wanting to see how his Park System was
-functioning, he took his bride to see Death Valley. Besides, he had some
-plans affecting the Inyo area.
-
-The fight was having tough sledding in the legislature despite President
-Roosevelt’s approval. Then he talked to people less biased. “You’d
-better see Charlie....”
-
-“Who the hell’s Charlie?” asked Harold.
-
-“Senator from Death Valley....”
-
-With Ray Goodwin, Superintendent of the Death Valley Monument to guide
-him, he was taken to all the show places. “Now,” said Mr. Ickes, “I want
-to see Brown.”
-
-At Shoshone Charlie’s toggery is strictly for work which includes
-tending the gas pump, stove repairing, plumbing, and what-have-you. He
-was flat on his back under the dripping oil of a balky car when Mr.
-Goodwin stepped from the limousine.
-
-“Charlie,” Mr. Goodwin called, “Mr. Ickes is here to see you.” Receiving
-no answer, he walked over to the car and added that Mr. Ickes was in a
-hurry. Still, no answer. “It’s Secretary Ickes, Department of the
-Interior. This is important.”
-
-“So’s this,” Brown grunted. When he’d finished, he crawled out and
-wiping the grime from his hands, joined Goodwin at the waiting car.
-After being introduced to the bride and the self-styled “Old Curmudgeon”
-the latter explained his plan to add certain lands in Charlie’s
-district, to the Forest Reserve. “... You’re opposing me. You’re a
-Democrat, aren’t you?”
-
-“I came from Georgia,” Charlie drawled.
-
-“You’re for Roosevelt, aren’t you?”
-
-“Within reason,” Charlie answered.
-
-Then Mr. Ickes, with the assurance of the perfectionist began to sell
-his idea.
-
-“Do you know of any reason why the area designated as Forest Reserve
-should not be protected as any other of our natural resources?” he
-concluded.
-
-“Just one,” Charlie said.
-
-“What’s that?” Ickes snapped.
-
-“Your forest is nearly all brush land without a tree on it big enough to
-shade a lizard.”
-
-Charlie was similarly dressed when a well tailored and impatient tourist
-with a carload of friends whom he was evidently trying to impress, drove
-up for gas.
-
-Always unhurried, Charlie came to the pumps, slowly reached for the hose
-and as lazily checked the oil.
-
-“Say, fellow—” the tourist barked. “Senator Brown is a friend of mine.
-Get a move on or you’ll be looking for a job.”
-
-Without the flicker of an eyelid, Charlie quickened, jumped for a
-cleaning rag and briskly polished the windshield. When he brought the
-tourist’s change he apologized for his slowness and begged him not to
-report it to Senator Brown. “Jobs are hard to get and I have a wife and
-ten children to support.”
-
-Touched with remorse, the tourist looked at the change. “Just give it to
-the kids and forget it.”
-
-When the Pacific Coast Borax Company built its swanky Furnace Creek Inn
-on the western slope of the Funeral Range overlooking Death Valley, it
-began to look about for places that would give the most spectacular and
-comprehensive view of the Big Sink as a means of entertaining guests,
-and far enough away to keep them from boredom.
-
-All the old timers who had wandered over the ranges were called in. Each
-suggested the place that had impressed him more than others. Each of
-these places was visited and after weeks of deliberation a spot on
-Chloride Cliff toward the northern end of Death Valley was chosen and
-the bigwigs started back to Los Angeles.
-
-When they stopped at Shoshone for gas and water, Clarence Rasor, an
-engineer of the company was still thinking of the chosen site and asked
-Brown, long his friend, if he knew of any view of the valley better than
-the one at Chloride Cliff.
-
-“I don’t pay much attention to scenery,” he told Rasor. “To me it’s all
-just desert or mountain. But I know one view that made me stop and look.
-Kinda got me. The chances are most folks would rave over it.”
-
-“Could you find it?”
-
-“Sure could....”
-
-Rasor called the others, repeated Charlie’s story and added: “You’re in
-a hurry, but knowing Charlie as I do, I believe we’d better turn around
-and go back if he’ll guide us.”
-
-Charlie agreed. It was a long, tortuous climb, even to the base of the
-peak. There Charlie went ahead and then beckoned them. Holding to bushes
-they walked or crawled to stand beside him; took one look and caught
-their breath. A mile below them lay the awesome Sink. White salt beds
-spread like a shroud over its silent desolation. Billowed dunes, gold
-against the dark of lava rock. Here a pastelled hill. There a brooding
-canyon. Beyond, the colorful Panamint under the golden glow of the sun.
-
-“This is the place,” they said.
-
-“... You can tell ’em too,” said Charlie pointing, “that right down
-there is Copper Canyon. If such stuff interests them, they can see the
-footprints of the camels and elephants and a lot of historic junk like
-that.”
-
-So you who thrill at Dante’s View may thank Charles Brown of Shoshone.
-
-When first elected to the senate, his colleagues were quick to see the
-qualities that had appealed to voters when they elected him supervisor.
-He had frequently been before that body in his fight for roads and tax
-reforms. They knew too that better schools for all rural areas either
-wholly or largely were the result of his efforts, and soon he was on the
-Rules Committee—a place usually assigned to those who come from the more
-populous districts of the state, because its five members through its
-power to appoint all standing and special committees, largely decide
-what legislation reaches the governor.
-
-In 1950 Brown announced his candidacy for reelection under the state law
-that enables a candidate to seek the nomination of two parties.
-
-The slot machine had been outlawed in California by the previous
-legislature and Brown had been largely instrumental in securing the
-passage of the law. Since the slot machine is a three billion dollar
-business in the nation, the gamblers opposed him as part of a general
-plan to secure repeal of the law and reinstate the one-arm bandits.
-
-Since Mono county adjoins Nevada, gambling interests of that state
-contributed without stint, to retire Brown to private life. He had been
-in office for 25 years and opposed by this powerful group, guided by
-both brains and cunning, the odds apparently were against him. While the
-opposition boasted that he was through, Brown was calling at cabins in
-the hills and gulches, meeting friends on busy village streets and again
-when the vote was counted, it was discovered that voters have memories.
-He had won the nomination of both the Democratic and Republican parties
-by almost two to one and under the law, was re-elected.
-
-Due to his priority standing and the retirement of older senators, the
-big fellow who walked 150 miles to get a job at Greenwater in order to
-save the fare to eat on, automatically shares with two men the power to
-control the legislation of the state.
-
-
-Hell, like gold, is where you find it—either in people or places. A lady
-of wealth and aristocratic background in route to Furnace Creek’s luxury
-inn, stopped at Shoshone for gas. Worn out by the long drive over the
-corduroy road, she looked about her and then at Charlie in greasy
-overalls. “How on earth,” she asked in genuine distress, “do you make a
-living in this God-forsaken-hole?”
-
-“It’s hard ma’am,” Charlie said gloomily. “But we get a few pennies from
-tourists, a little flour from mesquite beans, and stay alive one way or
-another, hoping to get out.”
-
-The gracious lady opened her purse, thrust a five dollar bill into
-Charlie’s hand and went her way.
-
-“It really made her happy,” Charlie chuckled, “and I just didn’t have
-the heart to give it back.”
-
-What is it that man wants of these “God-forsaken-holes” on the desert? I
-sought the answer one day when Shoshone was having a holiday. George
-Ishmael, as native as an Indian, was chosen to barbecue the steer. A
-well-to-do tourist begged the job of digging the big pit. “Want to flex
-my muscles....” Another cut the wood. At a depth of four feet, water was
-struck and rose a foot over the bottom. “That’s all right” George said.
-He tossed a dozen railroad ties into the hole, floated them into
-position, covered them with dirt, built the fire, lowered the carcass of
-the steer, covered it with green leaves and filled the hole. “An
-unforgettable feast,” agreed the scores who had come from places 100
-miles away.
-
-Sitting beside me was a prominent Los Angeles attorney, eminent in the
-councils of the Democratic party in both state and nation. “Why,” he
-asked, “will a man wear himself out in the city when he can really live
-in a little place like this?”
-
-“I thought of suicide at first,” said Patsy, young matron with three
-healthy little stairsteps. “My husband said ‘for heaven’s sake, go out
-for a month and have a good time.’ I went. Back in a week.”
-
-A Vermont girl said she had come to escape a straightlaced code that
-constantly reminded her sin was everywhere. “Here I’ve got an even break
-with the devil....”
-
-All had found something that clicked with something inside of them which
-challenged something in civilization. Maybe it was expressed in the
-dogma of the Tennessee judge reared in the hill country of the
-Cumberland river. As he stepped from his plane on his annual vacation he
-was cornered by a reporter: “Judge, you’re 94 years old. What do you
-think of this modern world?”
-
-“Best one I know about.”
-
-“No criticism?”
-
-“None whatever. Maybe a few minor changes. Just now we are being
-educated out of common sense into ignorance; lawed out of patriotism;
-taxed into poverty; doctored to death and preached to hell....”
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXII
- Lost Mines. The Breyfogle and Others
-
-
-The most famous lost mine in the Death Valley area is the Lost
-Breyfogle. There are many versions of the legend, but all agree that
-somewhere in the bowels of those rugged mountains is a colossal mass of
-gold, which Jacob Breyfogle found and lost.
-
-Jacob Breyfogle was a prospector who roamed the country around Pioche
-and Austin, Nevada, with infrequent excursions into the Death valley
-area. He traveled alone.
-
-Indian George, Hungry Bill, and Panamint Tom saw Breyfogle several times
-in the country around Stovepipe Wells, but they could never trace him to
-his claim. When followed, George said, Breyfogle would step off the
-trail and completely disappear. Once George told me about trailing him
-into the Funeral Range. He pointed to the bare mountain. “Him there, me
-see. Pretty quick—” He paused, puckered his lips. “Whoop—no see.”
-
-Breyfogle left a crude map of his course. All lost mines must have a
-map. Conspicuous on this map are the Death Valley Buttes which are
-landmarks. Because he was seen so much here, it was assumed that his
-operations were in the low foothills. I have seen a rough copy of this
-map made from the original in possession of “Wildrose” Frank Kennedy’s
-squaw, Lizzie.
-
-Breyfogle presumably coming from his mine, was accosted near Stovepipe
-Wells by Panamint Tom, Hungry Bill, and a young buck related to them,
-known as Johnny. Hungry Bill, from habit, begged for food. Breyfogle
-refused, explaining that he had but a morsel and several hard days’
-journey before him. On his burro he had a small sack of ore. When
-Breyfogle left, Hungry Bill said, “Him no good.”
-
-Incited by Hungry Bill and possible loot, the Indians followed Breyfogle
-for three or four days across the range. Hungry Bill stopped en route,
-sent the younger Indians ahead. At Stump Springs east of Shoshone,
-Breyfogle was eating his dinner when the Indians sneaked out of the
-brush and scalped him, took what they wished of his possessions and left
-him for dead.
-
-Ash Meadows Charlie, a chief of the Indians in that area confided to
-Herman Jones that he had witnessed this assault. This happened on the
-Yundt Ranch, or as it is better known, the Manse Ranch. Yundt and Aaron
-Winters accidentally came upon Breyfogle unconscious on the ground. The
-scalp wound was fly-blown. They had a mule team and light wagon and
-hurried to San Bernardino with the wounded man. The ore, a chocolate
-quartz, was thrown into the wagon.
-
-“I saw some of it at Phi Lee’s home, the Resting Spring Ranch,” Shorty
-Harris said. “It was the richest ore I ever saw. Fifty pounds yielded
-nearly $6000.”
-
-Breyfogle recovered, but thereafter was regarded as slightly “off.” He
-returned to Austin, Nevada, and the story followed.
-
-Wildrose (Frank) Kennedy, an experienced mining man obtained a copy of
-Breyfogle’s map and combed the country around the buttes in an effort to
-locate the mine. Kennedy had the aid of the Indians and was able to
-obtain, through his squaw Lizzie, such information as Indians had about
-the going and coming of the elusive Breyfogle.
-
-“Some believe the ore came from around Daylight Springs,” Shorty said,
-“but old Lizzie’s map had no mark to indicate Daylight Springs. But it
-does show the buttes and the only buttes in Death Valley are those above
-Stovepipe Wells.
-
-“Kennedy interested Henry E. Findley, an old time Colorado sheriff and
-Clarence Nyman, for years a prospector for Coleman and Smith (the
-Pacific Borax Company). They induced Mat Cullen, a rich Salt Lake mining
-man, to leave his business and come out. They made three trips into the
-valley, looking for that gold. It’s there somewhere.”
-
-At Austin, Breyfogle was outfitted several times to relocate the
-property, but when he reached the lower elevation of the valley, he
-seemed to suffer some aberration which would end the trip. His last
-grubstaker was not so considerate. He told Breyfogle that if he didn’t
-find the mine promptly he’d make a sieve of him and was about to do it
-when a companion named Atchison intervened and saved his life. Shortly
-afterward, Breyfogle died from the old wound.
-
-Indian George, repeating a story told him by Panamint Tom, once told me
-that Tom had traced Breyfogle to the mine and after Breyfogle’s death
-went back and secured some of the ore. Tom guarded his secret. He
-covered the opening with stone and leaving, walked backwards,
-obliterating his tracks with a greasewood brush. Later when Tom returned
-prepared to get the gold he found that a cloudburst had filled the
-canyon with boulders, gravel and silt, removing every landmark and
-Breyfogle’s mine was lost again.
-
-“Some day maybe,” George said, “big rain come and wash um out.”
-
-Among the freighters of the early days was John Delameter who believed
-the Breyfogle was in the lower Panamint. Delameter operated a 20 mule
-team freighting service between Daggett and points in both Death Valley
-and Panamint Valley. He told me that he found Breyfogle down in the road
-about twenty-eight miles south of Ballarat with a wound in his leg.
-Breyfogle had come into the Panamint from Pioche, Nevada, and said he
-had been attacked by Indians, his horses stolen, while working on his
-claim which he located merely with a gesture toward the mountains.
-
-Subsequently Delameter made several vain efforts to locate the property,
-but like most lost mines it continues to be lost. But for years it was
-good bait for a grubstake and served both the convincing liar and the
-honest prospector.
-
-Nearly all old timers had a version of the Lost Breyfogle differing in
-details but all agreeing on the chocolate quartz and its richness.
-
-That Breyfogle really lost a valuable mine there can be little doubt,
-but since he is authentically traced from the northern end of Death
-Valley to the southern, and since the chocolate quartz is found in many
-places of that area, one who cares to look for it must cover a large
-territory.
-
-
-One mine that had never been found turned up in a way as amazing as most
-of them are lost.
-
-At Pioche, Nevada, an assayer was suspected of giving greater values to
-samples than they merited. It is known as the “come on.”
-
-In order to trap the suspect, a prospector broke off a piece of old
-grindstone and ordered an assay. “If he gives that any value, it’s proof
-enough he’s a crook,” he told his friends.
-
-Proof of guilt came with the assayer’s report. The grindstone was
-incredibly rich in silver, it said.
-
-“We’ve got the goods on him now,” the outraged prospector announced and
-it was decided to give the assayer a coat of tar and feathers. Wiser
-counsel was accepted, however, and it was decided to give him no more
-business. The fellow was faced with the alternative of starving or
-leaving the country, when he learned the reason of the boycott.
-Conscious of no error in his work, he made another and more careful
-assay. This time the samples yielded even higher values.
-
-It was agreed by all mining engineers of that day that rock like the
-samples never carried silver or gold. But the assayer knew his furnace
-hadn’t lied and he couldn’t believe grindstone makers were mixing silver
-with sand to make the stones. So he traced the grindstone to the quarry
-it came from. The result was the Silver King, one of the richest silver
-mines.
-
-
-THE LOST GUNSIGHT. The first lost mine in Death Valley, preceding that
-of Breyfogle’s by four or five years, was the Gunsight.
-
-A survivor of the Jayhawkers or the Bennett-Arcane party of ’49 (it is
-not clear to which he belonged) after escaping death in the valley, saw
-a deer or antelope and on the point of starvation, took his gun from its
-strap to shoot the animal. Seeing that the sight had been lost, he
-picked up a thin piece of shale and wedged it in the sight slot. Later
-he took the weapon to a gunsmith who removed the makeshift sight and
-upon examination found it to be almost pure silver. “Where I picked it
-up,” said the owner, “there was a mountain of it.”
-
-So begins the history of the Lost Gunsight and the story spread as
-stories will, until ten years later it reached the ears of Dr. Darwin
-French of Oroville, previously mentioned. The doctor became excited and
-in the spring of 1860 organized a party to locate the fabulous mountain
-of silver. Though he searched bravely he failed to find it. However, he
-brought back the first authentic account of what others with a flair for
-lost mines could expect in the way of weather, topography, Indians,
-edible game, vegetation, and water. On this trip, however, he discovered
-silver in the Coso Range.
-
-The following year, 1861, Dr. S. G. George who had been with the French
-party, decided he could find the Lost Gunsight and organized an
-expedition which crossed Panamint Valley, explored Wild Rose Canyon and
-reached the highest spot in Death Valley. But Dr. George’s valiant
-efforts were no luckier than those of Dr. French.
-
-William Manly, author of “Death Valley in Forty-Nine” also tried but
-gained only another tragic experience and came nearer losing his life
-than he did with the Forty-Niners. Lost and without water and beaten to
-his knees, he was deserted by companions and escaped death by a miracle.
-How many have lost their lives trying to find the Gunsight no one knows.
-There are scores of sunken mounds on lonely mesas which an old timer
-will explain tersely: “He was looking for the Gunsight.”
-
-Dr. French, after his failure, pursued another and even more intriguing
-lost mine. With a ready ear for tales of treasure, he heard of a tribe
-of Indians in the Death Valley area who were making bullets for their
-rifles out of gold. Accordingly he organized another party to find the
-gold.
-
-For eleven months Dr. French and his hand-picked comrades combed the
-country. The gold they found would have loaded no gun, but you may add
-the Lost Bullet to your list of lost mines. A member of this party was
-John Searles, for whom Searles’ Lake is named.
-
-Because early prospectors searched for Breyfogle’s lost mine throughout
-the region where he was found scalped, an interesting digression is not
-amiss.
-
-A few miles east of Shoshone, there is a Gunsight mine named, of course,
-by the discoverer in the hope that he’d found the one so long lost. It
-adjoins the Noonday and was a valuable property which belonged to Dr. L.
-D. Godshall of Victorville.
-
-The Noonday produced five million dollars and was operated until silver
-and lead took a price dive. A 12 mile railroad was built from Tecopa to
-haul the ore. The steel rails were later hauled away and the ties went
-into construction of desert homes, sheds, fences, and firewood. For
-years the two properties could have been bought for what-have-you.
-
-Then came Pearl Harbor and a young Kentuckian, Buford Davis, looking
-around for lead or any essential ores that Uncle Sam could use, dropped
-off at Shoshone. Charles Brown told him of the Gunsight and the Noonday.
-Davis inspected the properties, bought them for a relatively small down
-payment. He chose to begin operations on the Noonday and sent Ernie
-Huhn, an experienced miner to deepen the shaft.
-
-“Honest to God,” Ernie told me, “I hadn’t dug a foot when I turned up
-the prettiest vein of lead I’d ever seen.”
-
-In the next six years the Noonday produced approximately a gross of nine
-million dollars and a net of probably six million dollars.
-
-These figures were given me by Don Kempfer, mining engineer and Shoshone
-resident, from estimates which he believed accurate.
-
-In 1947 with the rich rewards attained but as yet unenjoyed, Buford
-Davis made a hurried airplane trip to Salt Lake. Returning, he was only
-a few moments from a safe landing when the plane crashed and all aboard
-were killed.
-
-Today, (1950) the property belongs to Anaconda and is considered one of
-its most valuable mines.
-
-For those interested in lost mines I offer the list that follows. (The
-names are my own.)
-
-
-THE LOST CHINAMAN: When John Searles was struggling to make a living out
-of the ooze that is called Searles’ Lake he had a mule skinner known as
-Salty Bill Parkinson—a fearless, hard-bitten individual who was the Paul
-Bunyan of Death Valley teamsters.
-
-While loading a wagon with borax, Salty Bill and Searles noticed a man
-staggering down from the Slate Range. They decided he was supercharged
-with desert likker and paid scant attention as he wobbled across the
-flat from the base of the range. A moment later he fell at their feet.
-They saw then that he was a Chinaman; that his tongue was swollen, his
-eyes red and sunken; that he clutched at his throat in a vain effort to
-speak. He could make no intelligible sound and lapsed into
-unconsciousness. They thought he had died and was left on their hands
-for burial.
-
-Salty Bill afterwards stated that he’d said to Searles: “‘Fremont,
-Carson, or the Mormons old Bill Williams, for whom Bill Williams River,
-Bill Williams Mountain, and the town of Williams, Arizona, are named was
-at Resting Springs. He’ll spoil in an hour. I’ll go for a shovel while
-you choose a place to plant him.’ I’d actually turned to go when Searles
-called me back.” Searles had seen some sign of life and after removing a
-canvas bag strapped to his body they took him to a nearby shed, gave him
-a few spoonfuls of water and eventually he was restored to
-consciousness. He lay in a semi-stupor all the afternoon and was
-obsessed with the idea that he was going to die. His chief concern was
-to get to Mojave so that he could take a stage for a seaport and die in
-China or failing, arrange for the burial of his bones with those of his
-ancestors.
-
-He had been working at Old Harmony Borax Works, picking cotton-ball
-borax with other Chinese employed by the company, but tiring of abuse by
-a tough boss, he’d asked for his wages and walked out. Some Piutes told
-him of a short cut across the Panamint and this he took.
-
-En route he picked up a piece of rich float, stuck it into his bag.
-Farther on his journey he ran out of water and became hopelessly lost.
-He managed to reach the Slate Range, however, and from the summit saw
-Searles’ Lake. Though in no condition to stand the rough trip to Mojave
-he begged to be sent there and yielding finally, Salty Bill, ready to
-leave with his load, threw the Chinaman on his wagon and started on his
-trip.
-
-Before reaching Mojave, the Chinaman’s condition became worse and Salty
-Bill stopped the team in answer to his yells. The canvas sack lay
-alongside the stricken Chinaman and reaching for it, he brought out a
-lump of ore.
-
-“Never in my life,” said Salty Bill, “have I seen ore like that.”
-
-The Chinaman gave the ore to Salty, thanked him for his friendly
-treatment, told him that at a place in the Panamint where “the Big
-Timber pitches down into a steep canyon,” he had found the float. Again
-he expressed his belief that he was going to die and exacted a promise
-from Salty that if death came before reaching Mojave, Salty would see
-that his remains be shipped to China, adding that any Chinaman in Mojave
-would provide money if needed. “You find the gold and keep it,” he told
-Salty. “For me—no good. No can....”
-
-The journey was completed and Salty learned that the Chinaman did die at
-Mojave and that a countryman there saw that the remains were sent to the
-Flowery Kingdom.
-
-Salty Bill showed the ore to John Searles and Searles, usually
-indifferent to yarns of hidden ledges, was even more excited than Salty.
-For four or five years the two men made trips in search of the place
-where Big Timber pitches into a canyon. After these, other tireless
-prospectors sought the elusive ledge but the Lost Chinaman is still
-lost.
-
-
-THE LOST WAGON. Jim Hurley went to Parker, Arizona. Broke, he wanted
-quick money and was looking for placer. The storekeeper was a friend of
-Jim and had previously staked him.
-
-“I’m looking for a place to wash out some gold, but I’ve no money and no
-grub....”
-
-Jim was told of a butte on the Colorado Desert. “It’s good placer ground
-and you ought to pan a few dollars without much trouble....” He provided
-Jim with bacon and beans and feed for his burros.
-
-Jim set out, found the butte, but no gold and decided to try a new
-location. On the way out he saw behind some bushes an old wagon that
-seemed to be half buried in blow sand. Thinking it would be a good
-feeding place for his burros, he went over. On the ground nearby he saw
-the bleached skeleton of a man. He threw aside a half-rotted tarpaulin
-in the wagon bed and discovered fifteen sacks of ore.
-
-It was obvious that the wagon had stood there for a long time. He
-examined the ore and saw that it was rich and of a peculiar color. He
-loaded the ore on his burros, returned to Parker and sent it to the
-smelter. He received in return, $1800. Losing no time, Jim returned to
-find the source of the ore and though for the next five years he looked
-at intervals for a quartz to match that found in the wagon, he could
-find nothing that even resembled it. Where it came from no prospector on
-the desert would even venture an opinion, but all declared they had seen
-no quartz of that peculiar color and all of them knew the country from
-Mexico to Nevada.
-
-But Jim added to his store an adventure and a memory and there is no
-treasure in this life richer than a memory.
-
-
-THE LOST GOLLER. This, I believe, is a lost mine that really exists and
-though the location has been prospected from the days of Dr. Darwin
-French in 1860, none have looked for it except the one who lost it in
-1850. He was John Goller, who came to California with the Jayhawkers.
-
-Goller was a blacksmith and wagon maker and was the first American to
-establish such a business in the pueblo of Los Angeles. After convincing
-the native Californian that his spoke-wheel wagon would function as
-effectively as the rounded slabs of wood, the only vehicles then used,
-he made a comfortable fortune and no one in the pueblo had a reputation
-for better character.
-
-Crossing the Panamint, Goller, though strong and husky, became separated
-from his companions and barely escaped with his life. Coming down a
-Panamint canyon he found some gold nuggets and filled his pockets with
-them. After crossing Panamint Valley and the Slate Range, he was found
-by Mexican vaqueros of Don Ignacio del Valle, owner of the great Camulos
-Rancho. After his recovery he proceeded to Los Angeles. In showing the
-nuggets to friends he said, “I could have filled a wagon with them.”
-
-Goller, because of his means was soon able to take vacations which were
-devoted to looking for the lost location, and though he searched for
-years he found no more nuggets. Finally he found a canyon which he
-believed might have been the site, but no wagon load of nuggets.
-
-John Goller was a solid, clear-thinking man—not the type to chase the
-rainbow. Gold is known to exist in the canyon and some mines have been
-operated with varying success, but none have been outstanding. It is
-quite possible that cloudbursts for which the Panamint is noted washed
-Goller’s gold away or buried it under an avalanche of rock, dirt, and
-gravel. Manly, with his forgivable inclination to error refers to Goller
-as Galler and discounts the story.
-
-“Some day,” said Dr. Samuel Slocum, a man who made a fortune in gold,
-“somebody will find a fabulously rich mine in that canyon.” It is
-located about 12 miles south of Ballarat and is called Goler canyon—one
-of the l’s in Goller’s name having been dropped.
-
-
-THE LOST SPOOK. A spiritualist with tuberculosis came to Ballarat and
-employed an Indian known as Joe Button as packer and guide. He told Joe
-to lead him to the driest spot in the country. Joe took him into the
-Cottonwood Range and left him. The invalid remained for several weeks,
-returned to Ballarat en route to San Bernardino, presumably for
-supplies. He was reticent as to his luck but he had several small sacks
-filled with ore and in his haste to catch the stage, dropped a piece of
-quartz from a loosely tied sack. It was almost solid gold and weighed
-eight ounces.
-
-While in San Bernardino he died. His relatives sold the remaining ore,
-which yielded $7200. They tried to find the claim but failed.
-
-Shorty Harris heard of it months afterward and looked up Joe Button.
-With his own burros, Joe’s pack horses, and an Indian known as Ignacio,
-he set out. Cloudbursts had washed out the previous trails, filled
-gulches, levelled hills and so transformed the country that the Indian
-was unable to find any trace of his previous course; gave up the hunt
-and turned back.
-
-Shorty cached his supplies and with the meager description Joe could
-give him, searched for weeks. At last he came upon a camp where he
-discovered a collection of pamphlets dealing with the occult, but no
-trails. It was apparent that these had been destroyed by floods and for
-two months Shorty searched for the diggings. A brush pile aroused his
-suspicions and removing it, he found the hole. “The ore had Uncle Sam’s
-eagle all over it,” Shorty said, “and the world was mine.”
-
-“I returned to my camp, started spending the money. A million dollars
-for a rest home for old worn-out prospectors. Fifty thousand a year for
-all my pals....”
-
-Shorty ate his supper, spread his blankets and went to sleep with his
-dream. In the middle of the night he awoke. Something was running over
-his blanket. He raised up and in the moonlight recognized the only thing
-on earth he was afraid of—the “hydrophobic skunk.”
-
-“I started packing right now,” Shorty said, “and walked out. There’s a
-mine there and whoever wants it can have it. I don’t.”
-
-
-THE LOST CANYON has some evidence of reality. Jack Allen, a miner and
-prospector of almost superhuman endurance, got drunk at Skidoo and
-filled with remorse and shame the morning after, decided to leave and
-seek a job at the Keane Wonder Mine, about 40 miles northeast across
-Death Valley. To save distance, Allen took a short cut over Sheep
-Mountain and in going through a canyon he picked up a piece of quartz
-and seeing a fleck of color, he broke it. Excited by its apparent
-richness he filled his pockets, noted his bearings and went on his way.
-When he reached the Keane Wonder he took the ore to Joe McGilliland, the
-company’s assayer, who became more excited than the finder. “I’ll put it
-in the button for half,” Joe said.
-
-Allen agreed. The assay showed values as high as $20,000 to the ton. He
-closed his office and ran out to find Jack working in the mine. “Chuck
-this job,” he cried. “Go back to that claim quick as you can. Get your
-monuments up and record the notices.”
-
-Jack Allen bought a burro, loaded his supplies and went back only to
-discover that a cloudburst had destroyed all his landmarks.
-
-Both Shorty Harris and “Bob” Eichbaum, who established Stove Pipe Wells
-resort, considered this the best chance among all the legends of lost
-mines. It is wild, rough, and largely virgin country and because of that
-the hardiest prospectors always passed it by.
-
-
-THE LOST JOHNNIE. An Indian known as Johnnie used to come into York’s
-store at Ballarat about once a month with gold in bullion form. He would
-sell it to York or trade it for supplies. Frequently he had credits
-amounting to a thousand or more dollars.
-
-Other Indians soon learned of Johnnie’s mine and would trail him when he
-left town, but none were able to outsmart him. That it was near Arastre
-Spring was generally believed. Upon one occasion Johnnie was seen
-leaving the old arastre and disappear in the canyon. Immediately
-evidence that the arastre had been used within the hour was discovered.
-For years no prospector worked in that region without keeping his eyes
-peeled for Johnnie’s bonanza.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXIII
- Panamint City. Genial Crooks
-
-
-The first search for gold in Death Valley country was in Panamint
-Valley.
-
-From the summit of the Slate Range on the road from Trona, one comes
-suddenly upon an enchanting and unforgettable view of the Panamint. If
-you are one who thrills at breath taking scenery you will not speak. You
-will stand and look and think. Your thoughts will be of dead worlds; of
-the silence spread like a shroud over all that you see.
-
-Below, a yellow road twists in and out of hidden dry washes, around
-jutting hills to end in the green mesquite that hides the ghost town of
-Ballarat. There the Panamint lifts two miles—its gored sides a riot of
-pastelled colors.
-
-If you have coached yourself with trivia of history it will require
-imagination’s aid to accept the fact that from this wasteland came
-fortunes and industries of world-wide fame. From New York to San
-Francisco on envied social thrones, sit the children and grandchildren
-of those who with pick and shovel, here dug the family fortune in ragged
-overalls.
-
-Only recently a descendant of one of these, living in a city far
-removed, informed me her mansion was for sale, “because the neighborhood
-is being ruined....” A sheep herder newly rich on war profits, was
-moving in.
-
-Eleven miles north of Ballarat, Surprise Canyon, which leads to Panamint
-City, opens on a broad, alluvial fan that tilts sharply to the valley
-floor.
-
-In April, 1873, W. T. Henderson, whose first trip into Death Valley
-country was made to find the Lost Gunsight, came again with R. B.
-Stewart and R. C. Jacobs. In Surprise Canyon they discovered silver
-which ran as high as $4000 a ton and filed more than 80 location
-notices.
-
-Henderson was an adventurer of uncertain character who had roamed
-western deserts like a nomad. During the Indian war that threatened
-extermination of the white settlers in Inyo county, Thieving Charlie, a
-Piute, was induced by outnumbered whites to approach his warring
-tribesmen under a flag of truce and succeeded in getting eleven of them
-to return with him to Camp Independence for a peace talk. Henderson,
-with two companions waylaid and murdered them.
-
-He had been a member of the posse organized by Harry Love to shoot on
-sight California’s most famous bandit—Joaquin Murietta and boasted that
-he fired the bullet which killed the glamorous Joaquin. It was he who
-cut off and pickled the bandit’s head as evidence to get the reward. At
-the same time he pickled the hand of Three Fingered Jack Garcia,
-Joaquin’s chief lieutenant, and the bloodiest monster the West ever saw.
-Garcia had an odd habit of cutting off the ears of his victims and
-stringing them for a saddle ornament. The slaying of Joaquin was not a
-pretty adventure and as the details came out, Henderson renounced the
-honor.
-
-The grewsome vouchers which obtained the reward became the attraction
-for the morbid on a San Francisco street and there above the din of
-traffic one heard a spieler chant the thrills it gave “for only two
-measly bits....” The exhibit was destroyed in the San Francisco fire and
-earthquake of 1906.
-
-In his book, “On the Old West Coast” Major Horace Bell states that
-Henderson confided to him there was never a day nor night that Joaquin
-Murietta did not come to him and though headless, would demand the
-return of his head; that Henderson was never frightened by the
-apparition, which would vanish after Henderson explained why he couldn’t
-return the head and his excuse for cutting it off.
-
-Bell quotes Henderson: “I would never have cut Joaquin’s head off except
-for the excitement of the chase and the orders of Harry Love.”
-
-To give credence to the ghost story he says of Henderson, “He was for
-several years my neighbor and a more genial and generous fellow I never
-met....” Major Bell, it is known, was not always strictly factual.
-
-Following the Surprise Canyon strike, Panamint City was quickly built
-and quickly filled with thugs who lived by their guns; gamblers and
-painted girls who lived by their wits.
-
-An engaging sidewalk promoter known as E. P. Raines, who possessed a
-good front and gall in abundance, but no money, assured the owners of
-the Panamint claims that he could raise the capital necessary for
-development. He set out for the city, registered at the leading hotel,
-attached the title of Colonel to his name; exchanged a worthless check
-for $25 and made for the barroom. It was no mere coincidence that Mr.
-Raines before ordering his drink, parked himself alongside a group of
-the town’s richest citizens and began to toy with an incredibly rich
-sample of ore. It was natural that members of the group should notice
-it. Particularly the multimillionaire, Senator John P. Jones, Nevada
-silver king.
-
-Soon the charming crook was the life of the party. His $25 spent, he
-actually borrowed $1000 from Jones. Having drunk his guests under the
-table, Mr. Raines went forth for further celebration and landed broke in
-the hoosegow. Hearing of his misadventure, his new friends promptly went
-to his rescue. “... Outrage ... biggest night this town ever had....”
-
-To make amends for the city’s inhospitable blunder, Raines was taken to
-his hostelry, given a champagne bracer and made the honor guest at
-breakfast. “Where’s the Senator?” he asked. Informed that Senator Jones
-had taken a train for Washington, Raines quickened “Why, he was
-expecting me to go with him....” He jumped up, fumbled through his
-pockets in a pretended search for money. “Heavens—my purse is gone!”
-Instantly a half dozen hands reached for the hip and Mr. Raines was on
-his way.
-
-It required but a few moments to get $15,000 from the Senator and his
-partner, Senator William R. Stewart, for the Panamint claims. He also
-sold Jones the idea of a railroad from a seaport at Los Angeles to his
-mines and this was partially built. The project ended in Cajon Pass. The
-scars of the tunnel started may still be seen.
-
-Jones and Stewart organized the Panamint Mining Company with a capital
-of $2,000,000. Other claims were bought but immediate development was
-delayed by difficulties in obtaining title because many of the owners
-were outlaws, difficult to find. A few were located in the penitentiary
-and there received payment. For some of the claims the promoters paid
-$350,000.
-
-On June 29, 1875, the first mill began to crush ore from the Jacobs
-Wonder mine. Panamint City became one of the toughest and most colorful
-camps of the West. It was strung for a mile up and down narrow Surprise
-Canyon. It was believed that here was a mass of silver greater than that
-on the Comstock and shares were active on the markets.
-
-The most pretentious saloon in the town was that of Dave Nagle, who
-later as the bodyguard of U. S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen J. Field,
-killed Judge David Terry, distinguished jurist, but stormy petrel of
-California Vigilante days. Judge Terry had represented, then married his
-client, the Rose of Sharon—Sarah Althea Hill—in her suit to determine
-whether she was wife or mistress of Senator Sharon, Comstock
-millionaire. Feuding had resulted with Field, the trial judge. Meeting
-in a railroad dining room, Judge Terry slapped Justice Field’s face and
-Nagle promptly killed Terry.
-
-Poker at Panamint City was never a piker’s game. Bets of $10,000 on two
-pair attracted but little comment. Gunning was regarded as a minor
-nuisance, but funerals worried the town’s butcher. He had the only wagon
-that had survived the steep canyon road into the camp. “I bought it,” he
-complained, “to haul fresh meat, but since there’s no hearse I never
-know when I’ll have to unload a quarter of beef to haul a stiff to
-Sourdough Canyon.”
-
-Panamint City attained an estimated population of 3,000. Harris and
-Rhine, merchants, having the only safe in the town permitted patrons to
-deposit money for safe keeping and often had large sums. On one occasion
-they had the $10,000 payroll of the Hemlock mine.
-
-A clerk arriving early at the store, suddenly faced two gentlemen who
-directed him to open the safe and pass out the money. “Just as well
-count it as you fork it over,” one ordered. The clerk had counted $4000
-when he was told to stop. “This’ll do for the present,” the spokesman
-said. “We’ll come back and get the rest.”
-
-“Yeh,” added his partner. “Too damned many thugs in this town.”
-
-They sallied forth on a spending spree. The down-and-out along the
-mile-long street received generous portions of the loot and a widow
-whose husband had been killed in a mine explosion, received $500.
-
-These bandits, Small and McDonald, thereafter became incredibly popular
-and the legend follows that what they stole from those who had, they
-shared with those who hadn’t.
-
-Wells-Fargo and Company offered a reward of $1000 for their capture, but
-their arrest was never accomplished. Invariably they were apprised of
-the approach of pursuers and simply retired to some convenient canyon.
-The bandits further endeared themselves to the citizenry when Stewart
-and Jones arranged for the importation of a hundred Chinese laborers.
-
-This aroused the ire of the white miners and a meeting was called to
-protest. “This is a white man’s town,” was the cry of labor.
-
-Small and McDonald agreed. “Just leave it to us,” they told the leaders.
-“No use in a lotta fellows getting hurt.” They stationed themselves at
-the mouth of the canyon and when the coolies arrived, a sudden volley
-from the bandits’ six-guns brought the caravan to a halt. The frightened
-Chinamen leaped from the hacks and fled in panic across the desert and
-Panamint remained a white man’s town.
-
-Engaged at work around their hideout, Hungry Bill stopped to beg for
-food. They told the Indian to wait until they finished their task. His
-sullen impatience angered Small who booted him down the trail. Hungry
-Bill left cursing and told a prospector whom he met that he would return
-shortly with his tribesmen and assassinate the entire population.
-
-Panamint City was warned but Small and McDonald declared that since they
-had started the trouble, they alone should end it. Accordingly, they set
-out for Hungry Bill’s ranch to stop the attack before it started. But
-near Hungry Bill’s stone corral they were ambushed by the Indians. The
-bandits shot their way into the corral and barricading themselves,
-killed and wounded about half of the renegades, after which the
-remainder fled.
-
-Panamint City harbored a hoard of unsung assassins who merely lay in
-wait, shot the unwary victim down, took his poke, rolled the body into a
-ravine, went up town to spend the money.
-
-One killer who came decided to dominate the field and with that in view
-he set forth to establish himself quickly as a gunman not to be trifled
-with. He chose to display his prowess upon an inoffensive, quiet faro
-dealer known as Jimmy Bruce, who, it was easy to see, “was just a
-chicken-livered punk.” The publicity of a well-done murder in such a
-setting would give prestige.
-
-Armed with two guns, the bully contrived to start an argument with
-Bruce. The indoor white of the gambler seemed to grow whiter as the rage
-of his towering tormenter reached the climax. The players moved out of
-range. The bartenders ducked under the counter. Patrons helpless to
-intervene, fled from the kill.
-
-A shot rang out. Cautiously, the bartenders lifted their heads. On the
-floor lay the bad man. Mr. Bruce was calmly lighting a cigar.
-
-There was consternation among the killers. They swore vengeance. After
-five of them had fallen before Bruce’s gun, he was let alone.
-
-The silent faro dealer, it was learned too late, was surpassingly quick
-on the trigger.
-
-A spot somewhat distant from the regular cemetery was chosen for the
-burial place and it became known as Jim Bruce’s private graveyard.
-
-Remi Nadeau, a French Canadian, was the first to haul freight into
-Panamint City. Nadeau was a genius of transportation. There was no
-country too rough, too remote, too wild for him. He came to Los Angeles
-in 1861 from Utah and teamed as far east as Montana.
-
-The Cerro Gordo mine, on the eastern side of Owens Lake in Inyo County
-began to ship ore in 1869 and Nadeau obtained a contract to haul the ore
-to Wilmington where it was shipped by boat to San Francisco. He soon had
-to increase his equipment to 32 teams, using more than 500 animals. For
-his return trip he bought such commodities as he could peddle or leave
-for sale at stations he built along the route.
-
-In 1872, the contract having expired, Judson and Belshaw, owners of the
-mine, received a lower bid and Nadeau was left with 500 horses on his
-hands and heavily in debt. He wanted to dispose of his outfit for the
-benefit of his creditors but they had confidence in him and persuaded
-him to “carry on.” Borax discovered in Nevada saved him. Meanwhile the
-lower bidder on the Cerro Gordo job proved unsatisfactory and Judson and
-Belshaw asked Nadeau to take the old job back. But now Nadeau informed
-them they would have to buy a half interest in his outfit and advance
-$150,000 to construct relay stations at Mud Springs, Mojave, Lang’s
-Springs, Red Rock, Little Lake, Cartago, and other points. They gladly
-agreed.
-
-Shortly after Nadeau began hauling across the desert, he picked up a man
-suffering from gunshot and crazed from thirst. Taking the victim to his
-nearest station, he left instructions that he be cared for.
-
-Sometime afterward, one of Nadeau’s competitors whose trains had been
-held up several times by outlaws, wondered why none of Nadeau’s teams or
-stations had been molested. At the time, Nadeau himself didn’t know that
-the fellow whom he’d picked up on the desert was Tiburcio Vasquez, the
-bandit terror.
-
-Vasquez naively condoned his banditry. It disgusted him at dances he
-said, to see the senoritas of his race favor the interloping Americans.
-He had a singular power over women. When Sheriff William Rowland
-effected his capture, women of Los Angeles filled his cell with flowers.
-He was hanged at San Jose.
-
-Nadeau was now hauling ore from the Minnietta and the Modoc mines in the
-Argus Range on the west side of Panamint Valley. The Modoc was the
-property of George Hearst, the father of the publisher, William Randolph
-Hearst. These mines were directly across the valley from Panamint City
-and because of Nadeau’s record for building roads in places no other
-dared to go, Jones and Stewart engaged him to haul out of Surprise
-Canyon, which was barely wide enough in places for a burro with a pack.
-
-On a hill, locally known as “Seventeen”—that being the per cent of
-grade, located on the old highway between Ballarat and Trona, one may
-see the dim outline of a road pitching down precipitously to the valley
-floor. This road was built by Nadeau and one marvels that anything short
-of steam power could move a load from bottom to top.
-
-Acquiring a fortune, Nadeau built the first three-story building in Los
-Angeles and the Nadeau Hotel, long the city’s finest, retained favor
-among many wealthy pioneer patrons long after the more glamorous Angelus
-and Alexandria were built in the early 1900’s.
-
-The first ore from the Panamint mines was shipped to England and because
-of its richness showed a profit, but difficulties arose in recovery
-processes which they did not know how to overcome. The mines would have
-paid fabulously under present day processes.
-
-Finis was written to the story of Panamint after two hectic years and in
-1877 Jones and Stewart had lost $2,000,000 and quit. It would be more
-factual to state that since they had received from the public $2,000,000
-to put into it, who lost what is a guess.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXIV
- Indian George. Legend of the Panamint
-
-
-The previous chapter records accepted history of the silver discovery at
-Panamint City. Indian George Hansen had another version which he told me
-at his ranch 11 miles north of Ballarat. It fits the period and the
-people then in the country.
-
-George, when a youngster lived in the Coso Range. East of the Coso there
-was no white man for 100 miles and renegades fleeing from their crimes
-and deserters from the Union army sought hideouts in the Panamint. Thus
-George was employed as a guide by three outlaws to lead them to safe
-refuge.
-
-George, a Shoshone, had both friends and relatives among the Shoshones
-and the Piutes and took the bandits into Surprise Canyon where a camp
-for the night was chosen. While staking out his pack animals, George
-discovered a ledge of silver ore. Breaking off a chunk, he stuck it into
-his pocket, saying nothing about it until they were out of the locality.
-Then he showed the specimen and to promote a deal, gave one of them a
-sample. They wanted to see the ledge but George refused to disclose it.
-Then George said the three fellows stepped aside and after talking in
-whispers told him they didn’t like the country and returning with him to
-the Coso Range, went on their way. Two or three months later they were
-back to bargain.
-
-George had traded with the white man before. They had always given him a
-few dollars and a rosy promise. “Now me pretty foxy. So I say, ‘no want
-money. Maybe lose.’ Him say, ‘what hell you want?’
-
-“‘Heap good job all time I live.’
-
-“‘Okay,’ him say. ‘We give you job.’
-
-“I show claim.” George paused, a look of smoldering hate in his dark
-eyes, then added: “I get job. Two weeks. Him say, ‘you fired.’ I get
-$50.”
-
-All Indians and many of the old timers believe that the ledge George
-found was that for which Jones and Stewart paid $2,000,000.
-
-George made another deal worthy of mention. The town of Trona on
-Searles’ Lake needed the water owned by George’s relative, Mabel, who
-herded 500 goats and sold them to butchers at Skidoo, Goldfield, and
-Rhyolite where they became veal steak or lamb chops. Trona offered $30 a
-month for the use of the water. Mabel consulted George as head man of
-the Shoshones and advised Trona that the sum would not be considered. It
-must pay $27.50 or do without. A superstition regarding numbers
-accounted for the price George fixed for the water.
-
-My acquaintance with Indian George began on my first trip to Ballarat
-with Shorty Harris and was the result of a stomach ache Shorty had. I
-suggested a trip to a doctor at Trona instead.
-
-“No, sir. I’ll see old Indian George. If these doctors knew as much as
-these old Indians, there wouldn’t be any cemeteries.”
-
-I asked what evidence he had of George’s skill.
-
-“Plenty. You know Sparkplug (Michael Sherlock)? He was in a bad way.
-Fred Gray put a mattress in his pickup, laid Sparkplug on it and hauled
-him over to Trona. Nurses took him inside. Doctor looked him over and
-came out and asked Fred if he knew where old Sparkplug wanted to be
-buried. ‘Why, Ballarat, I reckon,’ Fred said.
-
-“Well, you take him back quick. He’ll be dead when you get there. Better
-hurry. He’ll spoil on you this hot weather.’
-
-“Fred raced back, taking curves on Seventeen with two wheels hanging
-over the gorge, but he made it; stopped in front of Sparkplug’s shack,
-jumped out and called to me to bring a pick and shovel. Then he ran over
-to Bob Warnack’s shack for help to make a coffin. Indian George happened
-to ride by the pickup and saw Sparkplug’s feet sticking out. He crawled
-off his cayuse, took a look, lifted Sparkplug’s eyelids and leaving his
-horse ground-hitched, he went out in the brush and yanked up some roots
-here and there. Then he went up to Hungry Hattie’s and came back with a
-handful of chicken guts and rabbit pellets; brewed ’em in a tomato can
-and when he got through he funneled it down Sparkplug’s throat and in no
-time at all Sparkplug was up and packing his flivver to go prospecting.
-If you don’t believe me, there’s Sparkplug right over there tinkering
-with his car.”
-
-George’s age has been a favorite topic of writers of Death Valley
-history for the last 30 years.
-
-I stopped for water once at the little stream flumed out of Hall’s
-Canyon to supply the ranch. He was irrigating his alfalfa in a
-temperature of 122 degrees. I had brought him three or four dozen
-oranges and suggested that Mabel would like some of the fruit.
-
-“Heavy work for a man of your age,” I said.
-
-He bit into an orange, eating both peeling and pulp. “Me papoose. Me
-only 107 years old.”
-
-There were less than a dozen oranges left when I began to cast about for
-a tactful way to preserve a few for Mabel. Seeing her chopping wood in
-the scorching sun I said, “I’ll bet Mabel would like an orange just now.
-Shall I call her?”
-
-“No—no—” George grunted. “Oranges heap bad for squaw,” and speeding up
-his eating, he removed the last menace to Mabel.
-
-Once George told me of watching the sufferings of the Jayhawkers and
-Bennett-Arcane party:
-
-“Me little boy, first time I see white man. Whiskers make me think him
-devil. I run. I see some of Bennett party die. When all dead, we go
-down. First time Indians ever see flour. Squaws think it what make white
-men white and put it on their faces.”
-
-I asked George why he didn’t go down and aid the whites. “Why?” he
-asked, “to get shot?”
-
-“How many Shoshones are left?” I asked George.
-
-He counted them on his fingers. “Nineteen. Soon, none.”
-
-George died in 1944 and it is safe I believe, to say that for 110 years
-he had baffled every agency of death on America’s worst desert. Because
-his ranch was a landmark and the water that came from the mountains was
-good, it was a natural stopping place and he was known to thousands.
-Following a curious custom of Indians George adopted the Swedish name
-Hansen because it had euphony he liked.
-
-
-The Panamint is the locale of the legend of Swamper Ike, first told I
-believe by Old Ranger over a nation-wide hookup, while he was M.C. of
-the program “Death Valley Days.”
-
-A daring, but foolhardy youngster, with wife and baby, undertook to
-cross the range. Unacquainted with the country and scornful of its
-perils, he reached the crest, but there ran out of water. He left his
-wife and the baby on the trail, comfortably protected in the shade of a
-bluff and started down the Death Valley side of the range to find water.
-
-After a thorough search of the canyons about, he climbed to a higher
-level, scanned the floor of the valley. Seeing a lake that reflected the
-peaks of the Funeral Range he made for it under a withering sun. He
-learned too late that it was a mirage and exhausted, started back only
-to be beaten down and die.
-
-After waiting through a night of terror, the young mother prepared a
-comfortable place for her baby and went in search of her husband. She
-too saw the blue lake and made for it, saw it vanish as he had. Then she
-discovered his tracks and undertook to follow him, but she also was
-beaten down and fell dead within a few feet of his lifeless body.
-
-A band of wandering Cocopah Indians crossing the range, found the baby.
-They took the child to their own habitation on the Colorado river and
-named him Joe Salsuepuedes, which is Indian for “Get-out-if-you-can.”
-
-Joe grew up as Indian, burned dark by the desert sun. But he had an idea
-he wasn’t Indian. Learning that he was a foundling, picked up in the
-Panamint, he set out for Death Valley, possessed of a singular faith
-that somehow he would discover evidence that he was a white man.
-
-He obtained a job as swamper for the Borax Company. When he gave his
-name the boss said, “Too many Joe’s working here. We’ll call you Ike.”
-
-Early Indians, as you may see in Dead Man’s Canyon, the Valley of Fire,
-and numerous canyons in the western desert had a habit of scratching
-stories of adventure or signs to inform other Indians of unusual
-features of a locality on the canyon walls—often coloring the tracing
-with dyes from herbs or roots. Knowing this, Swamper Ike was always
-alert for these hieroglyphs on any boulder he passed or in any canyon he
-entered.
-
-One day Swamper Ike went out to look for a piece of onyx that he could
-polish and give to the girl he loved. While seeking the onyx he noticed
-a flat slab of travertine and on it the picture story of
-“Get-out-if-you-can.”
-
-Swamper Ike had justified his faith.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXV
- Ballarat. Ghost Town
-
-
-In the early 1890’s gold discovered on the west side of the Panamint in
-Pleasant Canyon caused the rush responsible for Ballarat. For more than
-20 years the district had been combed by prospectors holed in at Post
-Office Spring, about one half mile south of the site upon which Ballarat
-was subsequently built. Here the government had a small army post and
-here soldiers, outlaws, and adventurers received their mail from a box
-wired in the crotch of a mesquite tree.
-
-The Radcliffe, which was the discovery mine was a profitable producer.
-The timbers and machinery were hauled from Randsburg over the Slate
-Range and across Panamint Valley, to the mouth of the canyon. There,
-under the direction of Oscar Rogers, it was packed on burros and taken
-up the steep grade to the mine site.
-
-Copperstain Joe, a noted half-breed Indian made the next strike. With a
-specimen, he went to Mojave where he showed it to Jim Cooper. For five
-dollars and a gallon of whiskey he led Cooper to the site.
-
-But his deal with Cooper interested me less than the cunning of his
-burro, Slick. Copperstain strode into a hardware store and asked for a
-lock. “It’s for Slick’s chain. Picks a lock soon as I turn my back—dam’
-him.”
-
-The merchant showed him a lock of intricate mechanism, “He won’t pick
-this. Costs more, but worth it.”
-
-“I don’t care what it costs,” Copperstain said and bought it. Later he
-looped the chain around the burro’s feet, fastened the links with the
-lock and tethered Slick to a stake. “That’ll hold you—” he said
-defiantly.
-
-The next morning he was back in the store, belligerent. “Helluva lock
-you sold me. Slick picked it in no time.”
-
-“Impossible.”
-
-“The burro’s gone, ain’t he?” Copperstain bristled, and reaching into
-his pocket, produced the lock. “See that nail in the keyhole? I didn’t
-put it there. Slick just found a nail—that’s all.”
-
-The future of Pleasant Canyon seemed assured and it was decided to move
-the two saloons and grocery to the flats below, where a town would have
-room to grow.
-
-When citizens met to choose a name, George Riggins, a young Australian
-suggested the new town be given a name identified with gold the world
-over. Ballarat in his native country met the requirement and its name
-was adopted.
-
-Shorty Harris discovered The Star, The Elephant, the World Beater, The
-St. Patrick. In Tuba, Jail, Surprise, and Goler Canyons more strikes
-were made. It is curious that none were made in Happy Canyon.
-
-The production figures of early mines are rarely dependable and the
-yield is often confused with that obtained by swindlers from outright
-sale or stock promotion. My friend, Oscar Rogers, superintendent, told
-me the Radcliffe produced a net profit of approximately $500,000. Less
-authentic are figures attributed to the following:
-
-The O. B. Joyful in Tuba Canyon, $250,000; The Gem in Jail Canyon,
-$150,000; and Shorty Harris’ World Beater, $200,000.
-
-Among the noted of Ballarat residents was John LeMoyne, a Frenchman. He
-discovered a silver mine in Death Valley but the best service he gave
-the desert was a recipe for coffee. He walked into Ballarat one day and
-had lunch. The lady who owned the cafe asked if everything suited. “All
-but the coffee,” John said.
-
-“How do you make your coffee?” she asked.
-
-“Madame, there’s no trick about making good coffee. Plenty coffee. Dam’
-little water.”
-
-From one end of Death Valley country to the other, coffee is judged by
-John LeMoyne’s standard. You may not always get it, but mention it and
-the waiter will know.
-
-For years LeMoyne held his silver claim in spite of offers far beyond
-its value, which he believed was $5,000,000. But once when the urge to
-return to his beloved France was strong and Goldfield, Tonopah, and
-Rhyolite excited the nation, he weakened and decided to accept an offer
-said to have been $200,000. “But,” he told the buyers, “it must be
-cash.”
-
-After a huddle, John’s demand was met and a check offered. John brushed
-it aside. “But this eez not cash,” he complained. No, he wouldn’t go to
-town to get the cash. He had work to do. “You get eet.”
-
-Disgusted, the buyers left and John LeMoyne continued to wear his rags,
-eat his beans, and dream of La Belle France.
-
-A young Shoshone Indian came into Keeler excited as an Indian ever gets,
-looked up Shorty Harris and said: “Short Man, your friend go out. No
-come back. Maybe him sick.” It was midsummer, but LeMoyne had undertaken
-to reach his claim.
-
-In the bottom of the valley, Shorty identified LeMoyne’s tracks by a
-peculiar hobnail which LeMoyne used in his shoes. He followed the tracks
-to Cottonwood Spring and there found an old French pistol which he knew
-had belonged to LeMoyne. Convinced he was on the right trail, he went on
-and after a mile or two met Death Valley Scotty.
-
-“I know why you’re here,” Scotty said. “I’ve just found his body.”
-
-LeMoyne was partially eaten by coyotes and nearby were his dead burros.
-Though tethered to the mesquite with slender cotton cords which they
-could easily have broken, the patient asses had elected to die beside
-him.
-
-And there ended the dream of the glory trail back to the France he
-loved. Those who believe in the jinx will find something to sustain
-their faith in the record of John LeMoyne’s mine.
-
-After LeMoyne’s death, Wild Bill Corcoran who had made and lost fortunes
-in the lush days of Rhyolite, set out from Owens Valley to relocate it.
-Never a ranting prohibitionist, Bill believed that the best remedy for
-snake bite was likker in the blood when the snake bit. When he reached
-Darwin he was not feeling well and stopped long enough for a nip with
-friends and to get a youngster to drive his car and help at the camp.
-
-It was midsummer, with record temperature but Bill wanted John LeMoyne’s
-mine. Becoming worse in the valley he stopped in Emigrant Canyon and
-sent the boy back for a doctor. Bill crawled into an old shack under the
-hill. When the boy and the doctor came, they found Bill Corcoran on the
-floor, his hand stretched toward a bottle of bootleg liquor. His soul
-had gone over the hill.
-
-One after another, five others followed Bill to file on LeMoyne’s claim
-and each in turn joined Bill over the hill.
-
-LeMoyne’s Christian name was Jean. His surname has been spelled both
-Lemoigne and Lemoine. The claim from which Indians had formerly taken
-lead was filed upon by LeMoyne in 1882.
-
-Joe Gorsline, a graduate of Columbia, with a background of wealth, came
-to Ballarat during the rush, looked over the town. “Wouldn’t spend
-another day in this dump for all the gold in the mint,” he announced. He
-had a few drinks, heard a few yarns, eyed a few girls in the honkies. It
-was all new to Joe, but something about the informalities of life
-appealed to him and in a little while he was renamed Joe Goose.
-
-Then the town’s constable shot its Judge and Ballarat chose him to
-succeed the deceased. Not liking the laws of the code, he made a batch
-of his own, which were never questioned. While watching the flow of time
-and liquor, he “went desert” and put aside the things that might have
-been for the more alluring things-as-they-are.
-
-When Ballarat became a ghost town, Joe Gorsline took his body to the
-city, but his soul remained and years afterward when he died, a hearse
-came down the mountain and in it was Joe Gorsline, home again. He is
-buried in a little cemetery out on the flat and in the spring the golden
-sun cups, grow all around and you walk on them to get to his grave.
-
-Adding a cultural touch to Ballarat was an English nobleman who “going
-desert” tossed his title out of the window, donned overalls and brogans
-and promptly earned the approving verdict, “An all right guy.” Soon he
-was drinking with the toper and dancing with the demimonde. Like others,
-he did his own cooking and washing. He lived in a ’dobe cabin which,
-because it was on the main street, had its window shades always down.
-
-But there was one little custom of his British routine he never
-abandoned and this was discovered by accident. He stopped in John
-Lambert’s saloon one evening before going to his cabin for dinner. He
-left his watch on the bar and had gone before Lambert noticed it. An
-hour later Lambert, having an opportunity to get away, took the watch to
-the cabin. John thus reported what he saw: “He was eating his dinner and
-bigod—he had on a white shirt, wing collar, and swallow tail.”
-
-Ballarat chuckled but no one suggested a lynching party. They knew how
-deep grow the roots in the soil one loves. “Maybe,” said Lambert,
-“that’s why John Bull always wins the last battle. They give up
-nothing.”
-
-A familiar figure throughout Death Valley country was
-Johnny-Behind-the-Gun—small and wiry and as much a part of the land as
-the lizard. His moniker was acquired from his habit of settling disputes
-without cluttering up the courts. Johnny, whose name was Cyte, accounted
-for three or four sizable fortunes. Having sold a claim for $35,000 he
-once bought a saloon and gambling hall in Rhyolite, forswearing
-prospecting forever.
-
-Johnny advertised his whiskey by drinking it and the squareness of his
-game, by sitting in it. One night the gentleman opposite was overwhelmed
-with luck and his pockets bulged with $30,000 of Johnny’s money. Having
-lost his last chip, Johnny said, “I’ll put up dis place. Ve play vun
-hand and quit.”
-
-Johnny lost. He got up, reached for his hat. “Vell, my lucky friend,
-I’ll take a last drink mit you.” He tossed the liquor, lighted a cigar.
-“Goodnight, chentlemen,” he said. “I go find me anudder mine.”
-
-Johnny had several claims near the Keane Wonder in the Funeral
-Mountains, held by a sufferance not uncommon among old timers, who
-respected a notice regardless of legal formalities.
-
-Senator William M. Stewart, Nevada mining magnate, had employed Kyle
-Smith, a young mining engineer to go into the locality and see what he
-could find. Smith, a capable and likable chap, in working over the
-districts, located several claims open for filing by reason of Johnny’s
-failure to do his assessment work.
-
-It is not altogether clear what happened between Johnny and Smith, but
-Smith’s body was found after it had lain in the desert sun all day.
-There being no witnesses the only fact produced by sheriff and coroner
-was that Smith was dead. Johnny went free. Other escapades with
-Johnny-Behind-the-Gun occurred with such frequency that he was finally
-removed from the desert for awhile as the guest of the state.
-
-In a deal with Tom Kelly, Johnny was hesitant about signing some papers
-according to an understanding. His trigger quickness was explained to
-Kelly who was not impressed. He went to Johnny and asked him to sign up.
-Johnny refused. Kelly said calmly, “Johnny, do you see that telephone
-pole?”
-
-“Yes, I see. Vot about?”
-
-“If you don’t sign, you’re going to climb it.” Johnny signed. He put his
-gun away when he acquired a lodging house at Beatty, where he died in
-1944.
-
-Reminiscing one day in the old saloon he had owned, Chris Wichts slapped
-the bar: “I’ve taken as much as $65,000 over this old bar in one month.”
-He had none of it now but in a little cabin in Surprise Canyon with a
-stream running by his door, and a memory that retained only the laughs
-of his life, he didn’t need $65,000.
-
-“A city fellow came into the cafe one day. Snooty sort. I told him we
-had some nice tender burro steaks. He flew off the handle. Said he
-wanted porterhouse or nothing. I served him. When he finished he
-apologized for being rude and said his porterhouse was good as he ever
-ate. I went into the kitchen and came back with a burro shank, shoved it
-in his face and said, ‘Mister, you ate the meat off this burro leg.’ I
-thought he’d murder me.”
-
-One day when Ballarat travel was heavy, a dapper passenger dropped off
-the stage, entered the saloon, bought a drink and paid for it with a $20
-gold piece, getting $19.50 in change. When he’d gone, Shorty Harris
-standing by said: “Chris, that money doesn’t sound right.”
-
-Chris examined it. The gold piece had been split, hollowed out and
-filled with alloy. Chris worried awhile, then brightened when he noticed
-his place was full of loafers playing solitaire; pulling at soggy pipes;
-waiting for a “live one.” “Boys,” said Chris, “old Whiskers ain’t
-getting much play. Let’s go down and see him.”
-
-Whiskers was his competitor down the street.
-
-A few moments later the bat-wing doors of Whiskers’ place flew open and
-Chris and his bums swarmed in. Chris laid an arm on the bar. “What’ll it
-be fellows?” Then he turned to the loafers along the walk “Line up, you
-guys and have a drink.”
-
-They did and when the drinks were downed, Chris laid the phony gold
-piece on the bar, received his change and with his crowd returned to his
-bar. An hour later he was still laughing to himself over the trick he’d
-played on Whiskers when his own sawed-off doors flapped open and
-Whiskers barged in, followed by his own mob of moochers. Whiskers
-ordered for the house and laid down the $20. Chris gulped and gave the
-change.
-
-That coin circulated in every store and saloon in Ballarat for more than
-a year. Everybody knew it was phony, but accepted it without question
-and came to regard it with something akin to affection. Then one day a
-gentleman in spats came along and the $20 gold piece left forever.
-
-Billy Heider, a slim, genial fellow who had been a hat salesman in a
-smart toggery shop in Los Angeles came not for gold but to escape
-alimony. His easy smile masked a stubbornness that nothing could
-conquer. “... she got a smart lawyer and dated the Judge,” Billy said.
-
-He hung his bench-made suit on a peg, slipped into overalls, cut off one
-sleeve of his tuxedo to cover a canteen, spread the rest on the floor
-beside his bed to step on in the morning and so—transition. Eventually
-he began to prospect, kept at it for 20 years; found nothing, but he
-beat alimony.
-
-Usually mines were “salted” in shaft or tunnel to separate the sucker
-from his money, but it remained for a Ballarat woman to find a simpler
-way.
-
-Michael Sherlock, known as Sparkplug, because of continual trouble with
-that feature of his automobile, gave me her formula: “She owned a claim
-in Pleasant Canyon that had a showing of gold. She wanted $10,000 for
-it. A rich auto dealer came along to look at it. He was worth at least
-$5,000,000. She told him to take his mining engineer and get his own
-samples and when he got back she’d have a chicken dinner waiting.
-
-“They got the samples, came down, parked the car in front of her house,
-got their bellies full of chicken and went back to the city. A couple of
-days later the millionaire was back. Couldn’t get his money into her
-hands quick enough. Word went out there would be work enough for all
-comers and we figured on boom times. But he couldn’t find ore to match
-her samples.”
-
-“What happened?” I asked.
-
-“While he was eating chicken dinner that night, her Indian hired man
-went out to his auto and switched samples.”
-
-I asked Sparkplug why he didn’t sue her.
-
-“If you had $5,000,000 would you want the whole dam’ state laughing at
-you?”
-
-
-Randsburg, which boomed in the early Eighties as a result of gold
-strikes in the Yellow Aster, the King Solomon, and later the Kelly
-silver mine, soon became one of the principal eastern gateways to the
-Panamint and to Death Valley by way of Granite Wells and Wingate Pass.
-
-A curious story of a man haunted by his conscience is that of William
-Dooley and told to me by Dr. Samuel Slocum, who had come to Randsburg
-from Arizona after making a fortune in gold.
-
-A howling blizzard had driven everyone from the streets and the campers
-in Fiddlers’ Gulch into Billy Hevron’s saloon. Dr. Slocum, lost in the
-blinding snow and stumbling along the street, felt with his hands for
-walls he couldn’t see, while a barroom noise guided him to the door.
-
-At the bar he saw William Paddock, mining engineer. “Bill, you’re the
-man I’m looking for. I can’t find anyone who can tell me how to get to
-Goler Canyon in Panamint Valley. You’ve been there and I want you to
-draw me a map.”
-
-Paddock, finishing a drink ordered one for Slocum and introduced him to
-a man at his side: “This is Mr. Dooley,” Paddock said, and the doctor
-saw a great hulk of a man with black whiskers, small eyes, and an uneasy
-look. Before a word was spoken Slocum sensed Dooley’s instant dislike of
-him.
-
-Slocum ordered a round of drinks. Dooley refused and walked to the
-farther end of the bar.
-
-Paddock followed Dooley after a moment, talked with him and returned to
-his drink. He said to Slocum: “I’m in a curious situation. I don’t know
-much about Dooley, but down in Mexico he saved my life. Now it’s my turn
-to save his. He just killed a man in Arizona and came here to hide out.
-I’m taking him to Goler Canyon soon as this blizzard is over. He thinks
-you are a deputy U. S. Marshal and claims that he has seen you before
-and that you are no doctor.”
-
-“He may have seen me in Arizona at Gold Hill,” Slocum said.
-
-“The best way I can help you,” Paddock continued, “is to sign the road
-as I go and after a day or two you can follow us.”
-
-On the day following Paddock’s departure Doctor Slocum set out. The next
-day he came upon a newly-made grave, outlined with stone. On a redwood
-board used for the marker was carved this inscription:
-
- _“Here lies Bill Dooley who died by giving Wm. Paddock the dam’ lie.”_
-
-With no reason to shed tears, the Doctor following Paddock’s signs,
-reached Goler Canyon, made camp and knowing that Paddock intended to
-occupy a stone cabin farther up the gulch, he started up the trail. He’d
-gone only a short distance when he saw Paddock approaching, waving his
-arms in a signal for Slocum to go back. The Doctor stopped.
-
-When Paddock came down he said, “For God’s sake, Doc, get back to your
-camp. Dooley is behind that big boulder above us with a Winchester
-trained on you.”
-
-“Why, I thought he was dead....”
-
-“No,” Paddock smiled grimly. “He worked all night digging that grave.
-Said it would throw you off his trail. I can’t get it out of his head
-you’re a marshal.”
-
-Slocum had made a gruelling trip to free and open country and he had no
-intention of being driven out. “I’ll go up and talk to him,” he said.
-Paddock warned him that it would be useless and might be fatal, but
-Slocum insisted and they went up the trail, Paddock going in front to
-shield him.
-
-Dooley was outside the cabin with a rifle in the crook of his arm, his
-finger on the trigger.
-
-Slocum was unarmed. He calmly assured Dooley he was not an officer; that
-he had no intention of disclosing Dooley’s whereabouts, “But this is
-free country and I intend to stay.”
-
-Dooley’s reaction was a noncommittal grunt. However, violence was
-avoided. When the Doctor returned to his camp, Paddock decided it would
-be best to accompany him as a measure of safety. Explaining to Dooley
-that he would remain with the Doctor to inspect a claim, he remained as
-a body-guard for three days. On the fourth he went up to the stone cabin
-and discovered Dooley had loaded his wagon with all the camp equipment
-and supplies, including a green water keg and left for parts unknown.
-
-Just across the range was Hungry Bill’s country. A year or so afterward
-Doctor Slocum, crossing the mountains into Death Valley, stopped at
-Hungry Bill’s Six Spring Canyon Ranch and noticed a green cask. Hungry
-Bill said that he had found the keg floating on the ooze near Badwater.
-“Somewhere under that ooze,” Doctor Slocum said, “lies Bill Dooley, his
-team, his wagon, and its load.”
-
-
-An interesting character of this area was Toppy Johnson, who scouted for
-Senator George Hearst and later had charge of copper claims belonging to
-William Randolph Hearst, near Granite Wells.
-
-While there, Toppy employed Aunt Liza, a negro cook. Aunt Liza came from
-Randsburg with an enormous trunk. She was a good cook, but an awful
-thief and nearly everything Toppy owned except the furniture disappeared
-piece by piece. When his razor vanished he looked through the trunk and
-found the loot. He didn’t want to lose Aunt Liza, so he removed a few of
-the more needed things, leaving the rest to be recovered by instalments.
-Thereafter it was a game of losing and retrieving.
-
-As strange a coincidence as I’ve ever heard attended the end of Toppy
-Johnson. Sent to Mexico when Pancho Villa was overrunning the country,
-he fled to Mazatlan when Pancho announced he would shoot on sight both
-native and foreigners who were not in sympathy with his marauding.
-
-All boats were crowded with refugees, both native and alien, but Toppy
-was permitted to join the hundreds willing to sleep on deck. Toppy
-unwittingly chose a spot over the saloon where drunken celebrants soon
-began shooting at the ceiling.
-
-A shot penetrated the flooring of the craft’s deck and Toppy’s abdomen.
-An American physician sleeping alongside was awakened by Toppy’s groans,
-attended him, but saw there was no hope. The physician asked his name,
-the object being to notify the victim’s relatives.
-
-“If my doctor were only here,” Toppy moaned, “he could save me.”
-
-“Who is your doctor?”
-
-“Dr. Samuel Slocum, of Pasadena,” Toppy said, and died.
-
-The physician was Dr. Slocum’s nephew.
-
-Thirty-four miles south of Ballarat at the end of a narrow canyon
-leading from Wingate Pass road into Death Valley, one comes upon a
-breath-taking riot of color. Pink hills. Blue hills. Hills of dazzling
-white, mottled with black and green. Yellow hills. Maroon and jade
-hills.
-
-A gentleman of fine fancy and fluent tongue passed that way, learned
-that under the hills was a deposit of epsom salts. Then he went to
-Hollywood where salts met money. He talked convincingly of nature’s drug
-store. “Just sink a shovel into the ground and up comes two dollars’
-worth of medicine recommended by every doctor in the country. No
-educating the public. Everybody knows epsom salts.”
-
-There was no flaw in that argument and Hollywood dipped into its
-pockets. A mono rail was strung from Searles’ Lake over the Slate Range
-through Wingate Pass and up the slopes to the pink hills. There rose
-Epsom City. For awhile the balanced cars scooted along that gleaming
-rail, bearing salts to market—dreams of wealth to Hollywood.
-
-But the world had enough salts, Epsom City failed. Nothing is left to
-remind one of the incredible folly but a few boards and a pile of bones.
-The bones are those of wild burros slaughtered by vandals who in a
-project as inhuman as ever excited lust for money, went through the
-country and killed the helpless animals, to be sold to manufacturers of
-chicken and dog food.
-
-A singular character known as Dad Smith, who had come to California with
-John C. Fremont was one of the earliest settlers at Post Office Springs.
-Smith had been a scout with Kit Carson in the Apache wars in Arizona and
-returned to the lower Panamint in 1860, to hunt gold in Butte Valley,
-where, nearing 90 he dug a tunnel 100 feet in length. Found there
-delirious, with pneumonia, by Dr. Samuel Slocum, he was removed to the
-Doctor’s camp where Mrs. Slocum nursed him through his convalescence.
-When he recovered he decided to give Mrs. Slocum a token of his
-gratitude.
-
-At the time, Barstow and Daggett were the most convenient stations for
-prospectors in the southerly area. At Daggett they likkered at Mother
-Featherlegs’. At Barstow they bought at Judge Gooding’s store or at Aunt
-Hannah’s, and drank at Sloan and Hart’s saloon. Dad’s money, as was that
-of others, was left with them for safe keeping. So he walked every mile
-of a ten days’ round trip to get a box of chocolates for Mrs. Slocum. A
-little chore like that made no difference to Dad. He encountered a
-desert rain and arrived at the Slocum cabin drenched. They persuaded him
-to remain overnight and led him to a tent.
-
-Seeing that water dripped from Dad’s blankets, Dr. Slocum went for dry
-bedding. When he returned, Dad had his own bedding spread on the ground.
-“Here, Dad—take this dry bedding....”
-
-“Not on your life,” Dad said as he crawled into his own. “I’d catch
-cold, sure as hell.”
-
-Two noted athletes of the period went into the Panamint for a vacation.
-When they asked for a guide, they were told to get Dad, but after
-looking him over they decided he lacked stamina, but engaged him when
-they could find no one else. The route was over the Panamint into Death
-Valley and back through Redlands Canyon—a trip to test the hardiest.
-
-On the third day Dad returned alone. Asked about his companions, he
-grumbled: “They’re down and out. Now I’ve got to haul ’em in.”
-
-He took his burros, lashed the victims securely on the beasts and
-brought them in.
-
-Remembered by oldsters, was Archie McDermot, a big fellow of
-unbelievable strength who was an all-purpose employee of Dr. Slocum.
-
-While they were camped at Barstow one night, Archie went up town to pass
-a cheerful hour and during the course of the evening a brawl started and
-Archie suddenly found himself the object of a mass attack by five burly
-miners. Archie knocked them down as they came, threw them out and
-returned to his drinking. The constable went in to take Archie. Archie
-tossed him through the door. The officer didn’t want to kill him, and
-collecting a posse of four brawny helpers, tried again. Archie pitched
-them out.
-
-Being a friend of Slocum, the constable now went to see the Doctor.
-“Doc, can’t you come down and do something about Archie? Knowing how you
-need him, I don’t want to kill him....”
-
-Doctor Slocum went, discovered that Archie, after throwing everybody out
-of the place, had seized the long heavy bar, turned it on its side and
-was sitting on the edge with a bottle in each hand. Doctor Slocum
-regarded the wreckage and then Archie. “Good Lord, Archie, what have you
-done?”
-
-“Nothing, Doc,” Archie said. “Just having a nip. Take one on the
-house....”
-
-“What about this fight?”
-
-“Fight?” repeated Archie. “Oh, that—some fellows tried to start a little
-ruckus but I didn’t pay much attention to it.”
-
-But if Archie had no fear of a dozen live men, he was terrorized by a
-dead one.
-
-Doctor and Mrs. Slocum, with Archie, were leaving their camp in the
-Panamint. The thermometer under the canopy of the vehicle registered 135
-degrees—hot for an April day, even in Death Valley country. As they
-drove along, the Doctor noticed some clothing on a bush. “Seems
-strange,” he said. “Let’s look around.”
-
-Archie skirmished through the bushes. Presently he returned, his face
-white, horror in his eyes. He grabbed the wagon wheel, his quivering
-bulk shaking the heavily loaded vehicle. “For God’s sake, Doc. Go and
-look!”
-
-The Doctor saw a sight as pitiable as it is ever man’s lot to see—a
-young fellow dying from thirst on the desert. His protruding tongue
-split in the middle. Unable to speak, though retaining a spark of life.
-The fingers of both hands worn to stubs.
-
-Kneeling, Doctor Slocum asked the victim where he came from; where he
-wished to go. No sign came from the staring eyes. Finally the Doctor
-said, “We want to help you. We have water. We’re going to take you
-home.” At the mention of home, a feeble smile came, and two tears, the
-last two drops in that wasted body, rolled down his cheeks and dried in
-the desert sun and then he died. There was nothing to do but bury the
-body.
-
-“You’ll have to help me, Archie,” the Doctor said.
-
-A look of terror came into Archie’s eyes. “Doc,” he pleaded, “ask me
-anything but that....”
-
-The man who’d cleaned up Barstow, quailed in superstitious fear at the
-thought of touching the dead.
-
-They looked around for a place to dig a grave. But the country was
-covered with malpai and lava rock and they couldn’t dig in it. The
-Doctor wrapped the body in a piece of canvas and Mrs. Slocum aided in
-lifting it into the wagon. She drove the team while the Doctor and
-Archie walked along, looking for loose earth and finally found a spot.
-Archie dug the grave. The Doctor lowered the body and Archie with shut
-eyes, filled the grave.
-
-A press story of the finding brought a flood of letters from all parts
-of the country. Such stories always do. From mothers, wives,
-sweethearts—but none from men. It’s always the woman who cares.
-
-Such deaths are due to inexperience. This boy had no canteen. Just
-around the corner of a jutting hill was Lone Willow Spring.
-
-Though scarcely a vestige remains, there was once a town at Lone Willow.
-Saloons and an enormous dance hall lured the Bad Boys and there the
-trail ended for scores reported as missing men.
-
-Cyclone Wilson, a nephew of Shady Myrick who built a sizable export
-trade in gem stones, and for whom Myrick Springs is named, was taking a
-wagon load of Chinese coolies to work at Old Harmony. All Chinamen
-looked alike to Cyclone and he didn’t know that these were newcomers. It
-was his custom to discharge his passengers at the foot of a steep hill
-near Lone Willow and require them to walk to the top.
-
-As usual, upon reaching this grade he set his brakes and waited for the
-coolies to get out. None moved, then he ordered them out. The Chinamen
-sat in stony silence. He repeated the order with no result other than
-jabber among themselves. Angered, Cyclone reached for his long
-blacksnake whip. It had a “cracker” on the end of which was a buckshot.
-With unerring accuracy he aimed the whip at the nearest coolie and
-overboard he went. The others leaped out and drawing knives from their
-big loose sleeves, massed for assault.
-
-Cyclone reached for a pistol—always carried on the wagon seat, and
-started shooting. His toll was five Chinamen.
-
-The cause of the murders, it was later learned, was due entirely to the
-fact that none of the Chinamen had understood a word Cyclone had spoken.
-
-A Chinaman at Lone Willow, who spoke English made his countrymen bury
-the dead.
-
-
-Today Ballarat is a ghost town and soon every trace of it will be gone.
-Roofless walls lift like prayerful arms to gods that are deaf.
-
-In the late afternoon when the shadows of the Argus Range have crept
-across the valley, a few old timers come out of leaning dobes and stand
-bareheaded to look about. The afterglow of a sun is upon the peaks and
-the afterglow of dreams in their hearts. They people the empty streets
-with men long dead, some in unmarked graves in the little cemetery on
-the flat just beyond the town. Some on the trails, God only knows where.
-These dead they see pass in and out of the old saloons. These dead they
-hear again. Glasses tinkle, slippered feet dance again.
-
-Tomorrow? Their pale eyes lift to the canyons and though dimmed a
-little, they see one hundred billion dollars.
-
-
-What of Shoshone? It remains with changes of course. The shanties hauled
-from Greenwater have been hauled somewhere else. No longer do I step
-from my car as I have so often and call to those on the bench. “Move
-over, fellows” and hear their familiar greeting: “Where the hell _you_
-been?”
-
-Instead, I drive to an air conditioned cabin and stroll back to the
-former site of the bench, so long the social center. There I see a sign
-over a door which reads, “Crowbar” and I enter a dreamy cavern with
-dimmed, rosy lights, hear the music of ice against glass and refuse to
-believe the startling sight of an honest-to-goodness old timer tending
-bar in a clean white shirt.
-
-Likewise I balk at the white lines I walk between as I cross the asphalt
-road to the store.
-
-But above Shoshone the same blue skies stretch without end over a world
-apart, and under them are the same uncrowded trails; the same far
-horizons for the vagabond’s foot and the peace “which passeth all
-understanding.”
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
- A
- Amargosa River, 96
- American Potash and Chemical Co., 33
- Archilette Spring, 95
- Augerreberry, Pete, 58
-
-
- B
- Ballarat, 175
- Ballarat Mines, production figures, 176
- Beatty, Monte, 53, 77
- Benson, Myra, 68, 133-134-135
- Benson, Jack, 133-134-135
- Bennett, Bellerin’ Teck, 23
- Bennett, Charles, freighter, 31
- Bennett’s Well, 21
- Black Mountain, story of, 20, 60-61
- Bodie, toughest of the Gold Towns, 74
- Borax, discovery of, 26
- Bradbury Well, 76
- Bowers, Sandy, gets a fortune for a board bill, 74
- Brannan, Sam, Mormon leader, 95
- Brandt, “Arkansas” Ben, 71, 83, 138
- Breyfogle, Jacob; stories of, 154
- Brown, Charles, Deputy Sheriff at Greenwater; store at Shoshone;
- road builder, supervisor, superintendent of Lila C. Mine
- at Dale; elected to senate; Chap. XV, 102
- Brown (nee Fairbanks) Stella, 69, 71, 104-105, 107, 116, 135
- Brougher Wils, at Tonopah, 49
- Bruce, Jimmy, private graveyard, 168
- Bullfrog Mine, discovered, 53-54-55
- Butler, James, discoverer of Tonopah silver, 48-49-50, 59
- Bulette, Julia, famed madam of Virginia City, 74
-
-
- C
- Cahill, Washington, Borax Co. official, 35-36
- Calico Mountains, 15
- Calico, stories of, 15, 16
- Carrillo, Jose Antonio, 97
- Carson, Kit, guide and scout in Shoshone country, 20, 93-94-95
- Casey, John “Cranky,” noted desert character, 136, 137-138
- Cave Spring, 134
- Cazaurang, Jean, wealthy miser, death of, 100-101
- China Ranch, stories of, 80, 94
- Clark, W. A., 60
- Clark, “Patsy,” 60
- Coleman, W. T., 27-28, 30
- Comstock, “Pancake,” famous lode named for; buys a woman; suicide,
- 48, 74
- Corcoran, “Wild Bill,” famous prospector; death of, 58, 177
- Counterfeit gold piece, 179-180
- Cross, Ed, partner and co-discoverer of Bullfrog Mine, 53
-
-
- D
- Dayton, James, superintendent Furnace Creek Ranch, death of,
- 35-36, 122
- Dante’s View, 151
- Davis, Buford, buys Noonday Mine; death of, 158
- Death Valley, cause of; history of, geology, temperatures; first
- settlers, 19
- Decker, Judge, convivial Ballarat Justice of Peace, murdered, 62
- Delameter, John, early freighter, 156
- Diamond Tooth Lil, glamorous madam, 62-63
- Dooley, William, bad man, 181-182-183
- Driscoll, Dan, partner of Shorty Harris, 91, 120
- Dublin Gulch, 69
- Dumont, Eleanor, (Madame Moustache), charmer of the Forty Niners,
- 74
-
-
- E
- Eichbaum, Bob, toll road, 21
- Egbert, Adrian, at Cave Spring, 134
- Epsom City, salts deposit; mono rail, 184
-
-
- F
- Fairbanks, Ralph Jacobus, at Ash Meadows; at Greenwater; at
- Shoshone, stories of; death; Ch. XVI, 104-105, 108,
- 110-111
- Fairbanks, Celestia Abigail, 105
- Fennimore, James, “Old Virginny”; named Virginia City; swapped
- Ophir Mine for blind pony, 74
- Flake, Sam, old timer, poker student, death, 68, 78
- Fremont, John C., 93
- French, Dr. Darwin, seeks Lost Gunsight, names Darwin Falls and
- town of, 21
- Funston, General Frederick, identifies and names Death Valley
- flora, 24
-
-
- G
- Gayhart, W. C., assayer, part owner of Tonopah Discovery Mine,
- 49-50
- George, “Rocky Mountain,” 76
- Godey, Alex, Fremont scout, fights Indians at Resting Springs, 94
- Goldfield, named, 50
- Goodwin, Ray, park official, 147, 149
- Gorsline, Joe, Ballarat Judge, 177-178
- Gower, Harry, Borax Co. official, mgr. Furnace Creek Ranch, 41
- Grandpa Springs, hole-in for old time prospectors, 50
- Grantham, Louise, girl prospector, 139
- Gray, Fred, Ballarat prospector, 116
- Gray, W. B., 77
- Greenwater, copper strike, stories of, 60, 63
- Gunsight Mine, 21-22, 157-158
-
-
- H
- “Happy Bandits” (Small and McDonald), 164-165, 167-168
- Harris, Frank “Shorty,” Ch. XVII, 113
- Harrisburg, scene of gold strike, 57, 114
- Harmon, Pete, misses millions, 117
- Hellgate Pass, 64
- Heider, Billy, flees alimony, 180
- Heinze, August, Copper King, 60
- Henderson, W. T., names Telescope Peak, kills Joaquin Murietta,
- famous bandit, and pickles head; sees victim’s ghost,
- 164-165
- Hilton, Frank, finds body of James Dayton, 36
- Hoagland George, burial of, 72-73
- Holmes, Helen, story of thriller, “Perils of Pauline,” 127
- Hungry Hattie, Ballarat character, 119
- Huhn, Ernest (Siberian Red), diligent prospector, 68
- Hungry Bill, Panamint chief, 87
- Hunt, Capt. Jefferson, Mormon guide; prominent in California
- culture, 21
-
-
- I
- Ickes, Harold, visits Shoshone, 149-150
- Indians of the desert, conflicting opinions of, Ch. VII, 43
- Indian George Hansen, owner of Indian Ranch, discovered silver at
- Panamint City, 154, 155, 171-172-173
- Ishmael, George, 152
-
-
- J
- Johnnie Mine, 90
- Johnson, Albert, owner and builder of Scotty’s Castle, 133
- Johnson, Bob, tamps friend’s grave, 72-73
- Johnson, Toppy, supt. of desert mine of W. R. Hearst, 183
- Jones, Herman, discovered Red Wing Mine, road builder, 72, 142
- Jones, J. P., Nev. silver king at Panamint city, 23, 166, 170
- Johnny-Behind-the-Gun, 178-179
-
-
- K
- Kellogg, Lois, owner of Manse Ranch, 101
- Kempfer, Don, mining engineer, official of Sierra Talc. Co., 158
-
-
- L
- Lee, Philander, owner of Resting Springs Ranch, 97
- Lee, Cub, built first house at Shoshone, slays wife and son, 98
- Lee, John D., established Lee’s Ferry; executed for massacre of
- emigrants at Mountain Meadows, 90
- Lee, “Shoemaker,” 98
- Legend of Swamper Ike, 173-174
- Le Moyne, Jean, recipe for coffee, story of mine, death, 176-177
- Lone Willow, murders at, 186
- Longstreet, Jack, Ash Meadows bad man, 90
- Lost Mines, all of Ch. XXII, 154-163
-
-
- M
- Main, Eddie, 69, 78
- McDermot, Archie, Strong Man, 185
- McGarn, “Whitey Bill,” 70, 78, 138
- Manly, William Lewis, 23, 157, 161
- Manse Ranch, 155
- Metbury Spring, first name of Shoshone, 72
- Myers, Al, discoverer of Gold Field, 50
- Modine, Dan, deputy sheriff, early owner of China Ranch, 63, 68,
- 84
- Montgomery, Bob, owner of Montgomery Shoshone Mine, buys Skidoo
- discovery claim on sight, 54-56
- Murray, Billy, saves John S. Cook Bank and Goldfield from “run,”
- 51
- Murietta, Joaquin, 95
- Myrick, Shady, exports gem stones, 186
-
-
- N
- Nadeau, Remi, genius of transportation, 169
- Nagle, Dave, 166
- Naylor, George, sheriff, treasurer, supervisor of Inyo Co., 102
- Nels, Dobe Charlie, at Bodie; at Shoshone, 74-75
- Noble, Levi, geologist, 39-40-41
-
-
- O
- Oakes, Sir Harry; in Alaska; at Greenwater; at Shoshone; makes
- strike in Canada; builds palace at Niagara Falls; knighted
- by King George V; slain by son-in-law, it is said—a
- renegade French count, in Bahamas, 105, 111-112
- Oddie, Tasker, mining tycoon, 49-50, 60
- Owens Valley, rape of, 147-148
-
-
- P
- Pacific Coast Borax Co., organized, 28-29
- Pahrump Ranch, 23
- Panamint City, 166-167-168
- Panamint Tom, story of, 23, 109
- Perry, J. W. S., supt. Borax Co., designer of 20 mule team wagons,
- 31
- Pietsch, Henry, shot Ballarat judge, 62
- Plato, Joe, on the Comstock Lode, 76
- Post Office Spring, early army post, 175
-
-
- R
- Radcliffe Mine, 175
- Raines, E. P., genial crook, 165-166
- Randsburg, gold discovered at, 181
- Rasor, Clarence, Borax Co. official, 151
- Resting Springs, named by Mormons, 96
- Rich, Charles, Mormon pioneer, 96
- Rickard, sports promoter, 51
- “Rocky Mountain” George, prospector, 76, 77
- Rogers, John, Bennett-Arcane party, 21
- Rosie, squaw, love life of, 88
- Ryan, Joe, desert philosopher, 70-71, 73, 82
- Rhyolite, discovery of gold, 54-55
-
-
- S
- Saratoga Springs, 93
- Schwab, Charles M., at Rhyolite; at Greenwater, 55, 60
- Scott, Bob, discoverer of Confidence Mine, 91
- Scott, Mary, squaw, 90
- Scott, Walter, “Death Valley Scotty,” 69, Ch. XIX, 130
- Scrugham, James, Governor and U.S. Senator of Nevada, 77
- Searles, John, 32-33, 159
- Sherlock, Michael, “Sparkplug,” 180
- Skidoo, gold strike, 55-56
- Slim, Death Valley, bad man, 102-103
- Slim, Jackass, Ch. II, 20; Ch. XI, 64-65
- Slocum, Dr. Samuel, 181-186
- Smith, Francis M. (“Borax Smith”), 29-33, 38
- Smith, “Dad,” Old Man of the Mountains; came with Kit Carson, 184
- Smith, Pegleg, 97-98-99
- Snake House, 78
- Sorrells, Maury, 138
- Stewart, Wm. R., Nevada Senator, mines at Panamint City, 23, 170
- Stiles, Ed, first driver of 20 mule team, 31, 35, 37
- Stump Springs, 23
- Stovepipe Wells, 21
-
-
- T
- Teck, Bellowin’, 23
- Tecopa Cap, Indian Chief, 78, 79
- Tecopa Hot Spring, 79
- Tecopa, John, discoverer of Johnnie Mine, 90
- Telescope Peak, 22, 93, 139
- Temperature in Death Valley, 41, 42
- Tonopah, discovery of silver, 50, 51
- Towne’s Pass, named, 21
- Trona, 33
- Twenty-mule team, first driver, design of, 31
- Tule Hole, story of, 35, 36-37
-
-
- V
- Vasquez, Tiburcio, bandit terror, 169
- Volmer, Joe, 141
-
-
- W
- Wagons, 20 mule team, design of, 31
- Wamack, Bob, at Confidence Mine, 91
- Weed, Tom, noted Indian, death of, 89-90
- Wichts, Chris, noted Ballarat character, story of, 61, 179
- Williams, George, 142
- Williams, Bill, preacher and plunderer, 96-97
- Wilson, Cyclone, massacre of Chinamen at Lone Willow, 186, 187
- Wingfield, George, famous gambler, luck of, 51
- Winters, Aaron and Rosie, discovered borax in Death Valley, 26
- Wolfskill, 92
-
-
- Y
- Younger, Tillie, member of Jesse James guerrillas, dies at
- Shoshone, 73
- Yundt, John, Lee and Sam, owners of Manse Ranch, 99-100
-
-
-
-
- _The Author_
-
-
-Nearly every newspaperman looks forward to the time when he can get away
-from the pressure of his journalistic job and retire to a little cottage
-by the sea, or a cabin in the mountains, and write a book.
-
-The only difference between William Caruthers—Bill, to his friends—and a
-majority of the others is that he did write his book on the spot,
-preserved it and after retiring to his orange grove near Ontario,
-California he got around to the job of revision, which resulted in these
-pages.
-
-Born on the banks of the Cumberland River in Tennessee, Caruthers’
-career as a journalist began when he became editor of the local weekly
-paper at the age of 16. He took the job, he explains, because no one
-else wanted it.
-
-His family wanted him to be a lawyer, and in compliance with their
-wishes he returned to school and was admitted to the bar in Tennessee
-when he was 19. But he wanted to be a newspaperman, and vowed that when
-he won his first $2,000 fee he would quit law. Successful as a young
-lawyer, the time soon came when he won a tough case against a big
-insurance company—and that was his chance. He closed his law office
-forever.
-
-For a time he was editor of Illustrated Youth and Age, the largest
-monthly in the South. He wrote feature articles for the Nashville
-American, Nashville Banner, the old New York World, the Christian
-Science Monitor, fiction for Collier’s Weekly and other important
-magazines. His writings have appeared in most Western magazines.
-
-After coming to California he first went to work on the Los Angeles
-Examiner, quitting that job to become a publisher and his little
-magazine, _The Bystander_ gained nationwide circulation. While editing
-this magazine he became editor of Los Angeles’ first theatrical
-magazine, _The Rounder_, which was a “must” on the list of early movie
-stars and soon discovered that the most lucrative field for a journalist
-was in ghost writing. As a “ghost” he addressed big political
-conventions, assemblies of governors and mayors and in one instance, a
-jury as the prosecutor. One eastern industrialist paid him a fabulous
-fee when the address Caruthers wrote for him brought a great ovation.
-
-Finally his physician warned him to slow down. It was then—in 1926—that
-he came to the desert, and, during the intervening 25 years, has spent
-much of his time in the Death Valley region. He has witnessed the
-transition of Death Valley from a prospector’s hunting ground to a mecca
-for winter tourists. This is a book of the old days in Death Valley.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
-—Corrected a few palpable typos.
-
-—Added page numbers to plates (in roman numerals).
-
-—Included a transcription of the text within some images.
-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Loafing Along Death Valley Trails, by
-William Caruthers
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOAFING ALONG DEATH VALLEY TRAILS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 51899-0.txt or 51899-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/1/8/9/51899/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/51899-0.zip b/old/51899-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 00e972d..0000000
--- a/old/51899-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-8.txt b/old/51899-8.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index c455bd8..0000000
--- a/old/51899-8.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9323 +0,0 @@
-Project Gutenberg's Loafing Along Death Valley Trails, by William Caruthers
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Loafing Along Death Valley Trails
- A Personal Narrative of People and Places
-
-Author: William Caruthers
-
-Release Date: April 30, 2016 [EBook #51899]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOAFING ALONG DEATH VALLEY TRAILS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- LOAFING ALONG
- DEATH VALLEY TRAILS
-
-
- By WILLIAM CARUTHERS
-
- A Personal Narrative of People and Places
-
- COPYRIGHT 1951 BY WILLIAM CARUTHERS
-
- Printed in the U.S.A. by P-B Press, Inc., Pomona, Calif.
- Published by Death Valley Publishing Co.
- Ontario, California
-
-
-
-
- DEDICATION
-
-
-To one who, without complaint or previous experience with desert
-hardships, shared with me the difficult and often dangerous adventures
-in part recorded in this book, which but for her persistent urging,
-would never have reached the printed page. She is, of course, my
-wife--with me in a sense far broader than the words imply:
-_always--always_.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- Dedication 5
- This Book 9
- I A Foretaste of Things to Come 11
- II What Caused Death Valley 19
- III Aaron and Rosie Winters 25
- IV John Searles and His Lake of Ooze 30
- V But Where Was God? 35
- VI Death Valley Geology 39
- VII Indians of the Area 43
- VIII Desert Gold. Too Many Fractions 48
- IX Romance Strikes the Parson 53
- X Greenwater--Last of the Boom Towns 60
- XI The Amargosa Country 64
- XII A Hovel That Ought To Be a Shrine 82
- XIII Sex in Death Valley Country 87
- XIV Shoshone Country. Resting Springs 92
- XV The Story of Charles Brown 102
- XVI Long Man, Short Man 109
- XVII Shorty Frank Harris 113
- XVIII A Million Dollar Poker Game 125
- XIX Death Valley Scotty 130
- XX Odd But Interesting Characters 136
- XXI Roads. Cracker Box Signs 144
- XXII Lost Mines. The Breyfogle and Others 154
- XXIII Panamint City. Genial Crooks 164
- XXIV Indian George. Legend of the Panamint 171
- XXV Ballarat. Ghost Town 175
- Index 189
-
-
-
-
- THIS BOOK
-
-
-This book is a personal narrative of people and places in Panamint
-Valley, the Amargosa Desert, and the Big Sink at the bottom of America.
-Most of the places which excited a gold-crazed world in the early part
-of the century are now no more, or are going back to sage. Of the actors
-who made the history of the period, few remain.
-
-It was the writer's good fortune that many of these men were his
-friends. Some were or would become tycoons of mining or industry. Some
-would lucklessly follow jackasses all their lives, to find no gold but
-perhaps a finer treasure--a rainbow in the sky that would never fade.
-
-It is the romance, the comedy, the often stark tragedy these men left
-along the trail which you will find in the pages that follow.
-
-Necessarily the history of the region, often dull, is given first
-because it gives a clearer picture of the background and second, because
-that history is little known, being buried in the generally unread
-diaries of John C. Fremont, Kit Carson, Lt. Brewerton, Jedediah Smith,
-and the stories of early Mormon explorers.
-
-It is interesting to note that a map popular with adventurers of
-Fremont's time could list only six states west of the Mississippi River.
-These were Texas, Indian Territory, Missouri, Oregon, and Mexico's two
-possessions--New Mexico and Upper California. There was no Idaho, Utah,
-Nevada, Arizona, Washington, or either of the Dakotas. No Kansas. No
-Nebraska.
-
-Sources of material are given in the text and though careful research
-was made, it should be understood that the history of Death Valley
-country is argumentative and bold indeed is one who says, "Here are the
-facts."
-
-With something more than mere formality, the writer wishes to thank
-those mentioned below:
-
-My longtime friend, Senator Charles Brown of Shoshone who has often
-given valuable time to make available research material which otherwise
-would have been almost impossible to obtain. Of more value, have been
-his personal recollections of Greenwater, Goldfield, and Tonopah, in all
-of which places he had lived in their hectic days.
-
-Mrs. Charles Brown, daughter of the noted pioneer, Ralph Jacobus (Dad)
-Fairbanks and her sister, Mrs. Bettie Lisle, of Baker, California. The
-voluminous scrapbooks of both, including one of their mother, Celestia
-Abigail Fairbanks, all containing information of priceless value were
-always at my disposal while preparing the manuscript.
-
-Dad Fairbanks, innumerable times my host, was a walking encyclopedia of
-men and events.
-
-One depository of source material deserves special mention. Nailed to
-the wall of Shorty Harris' Ballarat cabin was a box two feet wide, four
-feet long, with four shelves. The box served as a cupboard and its
-calico curtains operated on a drawstring. On the top shelf, Shorty would
-toss any letter, clipping, record of mine production, map, or bulletin
-that the mails had brought, visitors had given, or friends had sent. And
-there they gathered the dust of years.
-
-Wishing to locate the address of Peter B. Kyne, author of The Parson of
-Panamint, whose host Shorty had been, I removed these documents and
-discovered that the catch-all shelf was a veritable treasure of
-little-known facts about the Panamint of earlier days.
-
-There were maps, reports of geologic surveys, and bulletins now out of
-print; newspapers of the early years and scores of letters with valuable
-material bearing the names of men internationally known.
-
-It is with a sense of futility that I attempt to express my indebtedness
-to my wife, who with a patience I cannot comprehend, kept me searching
-for the facts whenever and wherever the facts were to be found; typing
-and re-typing the manuscript in its entirety many times to make it, if
-possible, a worthwhile book.
-
- Ontario, California, December 22, 1950
-
-
-
-
- Chapter I
- A Foretaste of Things to Come
-
-
-In the newspaper office where the writer worked, was a constant parade
-of adventurers. Talented press agents; promoters; moguls of mining and
-prospectors who, having struck it rich, now lived grandly in palatial
-homes, luxurious hotels or impressive clubs. In their wake, of course,
-was an engaging breed of liars, and an occasional adventuress who by
-luck or love had left a boom town crib to live thereafter "in marble
-halls with vassals" at her command. All brought arresting yarns of Death
-Valley.
-
-For 76 years this Big Sink at the bottom of America had been a land of
-mystery and romantic legend, but there had been little travel through it
-since the white man's first crossing. "I would have starved to death on
-tourists' trade," said the pioneer Ralph (Dad) Fairbanks.
-
-More than 3,000,000 people lived within a day's journey in 1925, but
-excepting a few, who lived in bordering villages and settlements, those
-who had actually been in Death Valley could be counted on one's fingers
-and toes. The reasons were practical. It was the hottest region in
-America, with few water holes and these far apart. There were no
-roads--only makeshift trails left by the wagons that had hauled borax in
-the Eighties. Now they were little more than twisting scars through
-brush, over dry washes and dunes, though listed on the maps as roads.
-For the novice it was a foolhardy gamble with death. "There are easier
-ways of committing suicide," a seasoned desert man advised.
-
-I had been up and down the world more perhaps than the average person
-and this seemed to be a challenge to one with a vagabond's foot and a
-passion for remote places. So one day I set out for Death Valley.
-
-At the last outpost of civilization, a two-cabin resort, the sign over a
-sand-blasted, false-fronted building stressed: "Free Information.
-Cabins. Eats. Gas. Oil. Refreshments."
-
-Needing all these items, I parked my car and walked into a foretaste of
-things-to-come. The owner, a big, genial fellow, was behind the counter
-using his teeth to remove the cork from a bottle labeled "Bourbon"--a
-task he deftly accomplished by twisting on the bottle instead of the
-cork. "I want a cabin for the night," I told him, "and when you have
-time, all the free information I can get."
-
-"You've come to headquarters," he beamed as he set the bottle on the
-table, glanced at me, then at the liquor and added: "Don't know your
-drinking sentiments but if you'd like to wet your whistle, take one on
-the house."
-
-While he was getting glasses from a cabinet behind the counter, a
-slender, wiry man with baked skin, coal-black eyes and hair came through
-a rear door, removed a knapsack strapped across his shoulders and set it
-in the farthest corner of the room. Two or three books rolled out and
-were replaced only after he had wiped them carefully with a red bandana
-kerchief. A sweat-stained khaki shirt and faded blue overalls did not
-affect an impression he gave of some outstanding quality. It may have
-been the air of self assurance, the calm of his keen eyes or the majesty
-of his stride as he crossed the floor.
-
-My host glanced at the newcomer and set another glass on the table,
-"You're in luck," he said to me. "Here comes a man who can tell you
-anything you want to know about this country." A moment later the
-newcomer was introduced as "Blackie."
-
-"Whatever Blackie tells you is gospel. Knows every trail man or beast
-ever made in that hell-hole, from one end to the other. Ain't that
-right, Blackie?"
-
-Without answering, Blackie focused an eye on the bottle, picked it up,
-shook it, watched the beads a moment. "Bourbon hell ... just plain
-tongue oil."
-
-After the drink my host showed me to one of the cabins--a small, boxlike
-structure. Opening the door he waved me in. "One fellow said he couldn't
-whip a cat in this cabin, but you haven't got a cat." He set my suitcase
-on a sagging bed, brought in a bucket of water, put a clean towel on the
-roller and wiped the dust from a water glass with two big fingers. "When
-you get settled come down and loaf with us. Just call me Bill. Calico
-Bill, I'm known as. Came up here from the Calico Mountains."
-
-"Just one question," I said. "Don't you get lonesome in all this
-desolation?"
-
-"Lonesome? Mister, there's something going on every minute. You'd be
-surprised. Like what happened this morning. Did you meet a truck on your
-way up, with a husky young driver and a girl in a skimpy dress?"
-
-"Yes," I said. "At a gas station a hundred miles back, and the girl was
-a breath-taker."
-
-"You can say that again," Bill grinned. "Prettiest gal I ever saw--bar
-none. She's just turned eighteen. Married to a fellow fifty-five if he's
-a day. He owns a truck and hauls for a mine near here at so much a load.
-Jealous sort. Won't let her out of his sight. You can't blame a young
-fellow for looking at a pretty girl. But this brute is so crazy jealous
-he took to locking her up in his cabin while he was at work. Fact is,
-she's a nice clean kid and if I'd known about it, I'd have chased him
-off. I reckon she was too ashamed to tell anybody.
-
-"Of course the young fellows found it out and just to worry him, two or
-three of 'em came over here to play a prank on him and a hell of a prank
-it was. They made a lot of tracks around his cabin doors and windows. He
-saw the tracks and figured she'd been stepping out on him. So instead of
-locking her in as usual, he began to take her to work with him so he
-could keep his eyes on her.
-
-"Yesterday it happened. His truck broke down and this morning he left
-early to get parts, but he was smart enough to take her shoes with him.
-Then he nailed the doors and windows from the outside. Soon as he was
-out of hearing, somehow she busted out and came down to my store
-barefooted and asked me if I knew of any way she could get a ride out.
-'I'm leaving, if I have to walk,' she says. Then she told me her story.
-He'd bought her back in Oklahoma for $500. She is one of ten children.
-Her folks didn't have enough to feed 'em all. This old guy, who lived in
-their neighborhood and had money, talked her parents into the deal. 'I
-just couldn't see my little sisters go hungry,' she said, and like a
-fool she married him.
-
-"I reckon the Lord was with her. We see about three outside trucks a
-year around here, but I'd no sooner fixed her up with a pair of shoes
-before one pulls up for gas. I asked the driver if he'd give her a ride
-to Barstow. He took just one look. 'I sure will,' he says and off they
-went.
-
-"You see what I mean," Bill said, concluding his story. "Things like
-that. Of course we don't watch no parades but we also don't get pushed
-around and run over and tromped on."
-
-In the last twelve words Bill expressed what hundreds have failed to
-explain in pages of flowered phrase--the appeal of the desert.
-
-Soon I was back at the store. Bill and Blackie, over a new bottle were
-swapping memories of noted desert characters who had highlighted the
-towns and camps from Tonopah to the last hell-roarer. The great, the
-humble, the odd and eccentric. Through their conversation ran such names
-as Fireball Fan; Mike Lane; Mother Featherlegs; Shorty Harris; Tiger
-Lil; Hungry Hattie; Cranky Casey; Johnny-Behind-the-Gun; Dad Fairbanks;
-Fraction Jack Stewart; the Indian, Hungry Bill; and innumerable Slims
-and Shortys featured in yarns of the wasteland.
-
-Blackie's chief interest in life, Bill told me was books. "About all he
-does is read. Doesn't have to work. Of course, like everybody in this
-country, he's always going to find $2,000,000,000 this week or next."
-
-Though only incidental, history was brought into their conversation when
-Bill, giving me "free information" as his sign announced, told me I
-would be able to see the place where Manly crossed the Panamint.
-
-"Manly never knew where he crossed," Blackie said. "He tried to tell
-about it 40 years afterward and all he did was to start an argument
-that's going on yet. That's why I say you can write the known facts
-about Death Valley history on a postage stamp with the end of your
-thumb."
-
-The tongue oil loosened Calico Bill's story of Indian George and his
-trained mountain sheep. "George had the right idea about gold. Find it,
-then take it out as needed. One time an artist came to George's ranch
-and made a picture of the ram. When he had finished it he stepped behind
-his easel and was watching George eat a raw gopher snake when the goat
-came up. Rams are jealous and mistaking the picture for a rival, he
-charged like a thunderbolt.
-
-"It didn't hurt the picture, but knocked the painter and George through
-both walls of George's shanty. George picked himself up. 'Heap good
-picture. Me want.' The fellow gave it to him and for months George would
-tease that goat with the picture. One day he left it on a boulder while
-he went for his horse. When he got back, the boulder was split wide open
-and the picture was on top of a tree 50 feet away.
-
-"Somebody told George about a steer in the Chicago packing house which
-led other steers to the slaughter pen and it gave George an idea. One
-day I found him and his goat in a Panamint canyon and asked why he
-brought the goat along. 'Me broke. Need gold.' Since he didn't have
-pick, shovel, or dynamite, I asked how he expected to get gold.
-
-"'Pick, shovel heap work,' George said. 'Dynamite maybe kill. Sheep
-better. Me show you.' He told me to move to a safe place and after
-scattering some grain around for the goat, George scaled the boulder. It
-was big as a house. A moment later I saw him unroll the picture and with
-strings attached, let it rest on one corner of the big rock. Then
-holding the strings, he disappeared into his blind higher up. Suddenly
-he made a hissing noise. The Big Horn stiffened, saw the picture,
-lowered his head and never in my life have I seen such a crash. Dust
-filled the air and fragments fell for 10 minutes. When I went over
-George was gathering nuggets big as goose eggs. 'White man heap dam'
-fool,' he grunted. 'Wants too much gold all same time. Maybe lose. Maybe
-somebody steal. No can steal boulder.'"
-
-The "tongue oil" had been disposed of when Blackie suggested that we
-step over to his place, a short distance around the point of a hill.
-"Plenty more there."
-
-Bill had told me that as a penniless youngster Blackie had walked up
-Odessa Canyon one afternoon. Within three days he was rated as a
-millionaire. Within three months he was broke again. Later Blackie told
-me, "That's somebody's dream. I got about $200,000 and decided I
-belonged up in the Big Banker group. They welcomed me and skinned me out
-of my money in no time."
-
-It was Blackie who proved to my satisfaction that money has only a minor
-relation to happiness. His house was part dobe, part white tufa blocks.
-On his table was a student's lamp, a pipe, and can of tobacco. A book
-held open by a hand axe. Other books were shelved along the wall. He had
-an incongruous walnut cabinet with leaded glass doors. Inside, a
-well-filled decanter and a dozen whiskey glasses and a pleasant aroma of
-bourbon came from a keg covered with a gunny sack and set on a stool in
-the corner.
-
-"This country's hard on the throat," he explained.
-
-Blackie's kingdom seemed to have extended from the morning star to the
-setting sun. He had been in the Yukon, in New Zealand, South Africa, and
-the Argentine. Gold, hemp, sugar, and ships had tossed fortunes at him
-which were promptly lost or spent.
-
-For a man who had found compensation for such luck, there is no defeat.
-Certainly his philosophy seemed to meet his needs and that is the
-function of philosophy.
-
-It was cool in the late evening and he made a fire, chucked one end of
-an eight-foot log into the stove and put a chair under the protruding
-end. Bill asked why he didn't cut the log. "Listen," Blackie said,
-"you're one of 100 million reasons why this country is misgoverned. Why
-should I sweat over that log when a fire will do the job?... That book?
-Just some fellow's plan for a perfect world. I hope I'll not be around
-when they have it.
-
-"The town of Calico? It was a live one. When John McBryde and Lowery
-Silver discovered the white metal there, a lot of us desert rats got in
-the big money. In the first seven years of the Eighties it was bonanza
-and in the eighth the town was dead."
-
-But the stories of fortunes made in Mule and Odessa Canyons were of less
-importance to him than a habit of the town judge. "Chewed tobacco all
-the time and swallowed the juice, 'If a fellow's guts can't stand it,'
-he would say, 'he ought to quit,' and he'd clap a fine on anybody who
-spat in his court.
-
-"Never knew Jack Dent, did you? Englishman. Now there was a drinking
-man. Said his only ambition was to die drunk. One pay day he got so
-cockeyed he couldn't stand, so his pals laid him on a pool table and
-went on with their drinking. Every time they ordered, Jack hollered for
-his and somebody would take it over and pour it down him. 'Keep 'em
-comin',' he says. 'If I doze off, just pry my jaws open and pour it
-down.'
-
-"The boys took him at his word. Every time they drank, they took a drink
-to Jack. When the last round came they took Jack a big one. They tried
-to pry his lips open but the lips didn't give. Jack Dent's funeral was
-the biggest ever held in the town.
-
-"Bill was telling you I made a million there, and every now and then I
-hear of somebody telling somebody else I made a million in Africa. And
-another in the Yukon. The truth is, what little I've got came out of a
-hole in a whiskey barrel instead of a mine shaft.
-
-"A few years back a strike was made down in the Avawatz that started a
-baby gold rush. I joined it. A fellow named Gypsum came in with a barrel
-of whiskey, thinking there'd be a town, but it didn't turn out that way.
-Gypsum had no trouble disposing of his liquor and stayed around to do a
-little prospecting. One day when I was starting for Johannesburg, he
-asked me to deliver a message to a bartender there. Gypsum had a meat
-cleaver in his hand and was sharpening it on a butcher's steel to cut up
-a mountain sheep he'd killed.
-
-"'Just ask for Klondike and tell him to send my stuff. He'll understand.
-Tell him if he doesn't send it, I'm coming after it.'
-
-"I didn't know at the time that Gypsum had killed three men in honest
-combat and that one of them had been dispatched with a meat cleaver.
-
-"I delivered the message verbatim. Klondike looked a bit worried.
-'What's Gypsum doing?' he asked. 'When I left,' I said, 'he was
-sharpening a meat cleaver.' Klondike turned white. 'I'll have it ready
-before you go.'
-
-"When I called later, he told me he'd put Gypsum's stuff in the back of
-my car. When I got back to camp and Gypsum came to my tent to ask about
-it, I told him to get it out of the car, which was parked a few feet
-away. Gypsum went for it and in a moment I heard him cussing. I looked
-out and he was trying to shoulder a heavy sack. Before I could get out
-to help him, the sack got away from him and burst at his feet. The
-ground was covered with nickles, dimes, quarters, halves. 'There's
-another sack.' Gypsum said. 'The son of a bitch has sent me $2500 in
-chicken feed. Just for spite.'
-
-"Because it was a nuisance, Gypsum loaned it to the fellows about, all
-of whom were his friends. They didn't want it but took it just to
-accommodate Gypsum. There was nothing to spend it for. Somebody started
-a poker game and I let 'em use my tent because it was the largest. I
-rigged up a table by sawing Gypsum's whiskey barrel in two and nailing
-planks over the open end. Every night after supper they started playing.
-I furnished light and likker and usually I set out grub. It didn't cost
-much but somebody suggested that in order to reimburse me, two bits
-should be taken out of every jackpot. A hole was slit in the top. It was
-a fast game and the stakes high. It ran for weeks every evening and the
-Saturday night session ended Monday morning.
-
-"Of course some were soon broke and they began to borrow from one
-another. Finally everybody was broke and all the money was in my kitty.
-I took the top off the barrel and loaned it to the players, taking
-I.O.U.'s, I had to take the top off a dozen times and when it was
-finally decided there was no pay dirt in the Avawatz, I had a sack full
-of I.O.U.'s.
-
-"Once I tried to figure out how many times that $2500 was loaned, but I
-gave up. I learned though, why these bankers pick up a pencil and start
-figuring the minute you start talking. They are on the right end of the
-pencil."
-
-Early the next morning while Bill was servicing my car for the trip
-ahead, with some tactful mention of handy gadgets he had for sale, we
-noticed Blackie coming with a man who ran largely to whiskers. "That's
-old Cloudburst Pete," Bill told me. "Another old timer who has shuffled
-all over this country."
-
-"How did he get that moniker?" I asked.
-
-"One time Pete came in here and was telling us fellows about a narrow
-escape he had from a cloudburst over in the Panamint. Pete said the
-cloud was just above him and about to burst and would have filled the
-canyon with a wall of water 90 feet high. A city fellow who had stopped
-for gas, asked Pete how come he didn't get drowned. Pete took a notion
-the fellow was trying to razz him. 'Well, Mister, if you must know, I
-lassoed the cloud, ground-hitched it and let it bust....'"
-
-After greeting Pete, Bill asked if he'd been walking all night.
-
-"Naw," Pete said. "Started around 11 o'clock, I reckon. Not so bad
-before sunup. Be hell going back. But I didn't come here to growl about
-the weather. I want some powder so I can get started. Found color
-yesterday. Looks like I'm in the big money."
-
-"Fine," Bill said. "I heard you've been laid up."
-
-"Oh, I broke a leg awhile back. Fell in a mine shaft. Didn't amount to
-much."
-
-"I know about that, but didn't you get hurt in a blast since then?"
-
-"Oh that--yeh. Got blowed out of a 20-foot hole. Three-four ribs busted,
-the doc said. Come to think of it, believe he mentioned a fractured
-collar bone. Wasn't half as bad as last week."
-
-"Good Lord ... what happened last week?"
-
-"That crazy Cyclone Thompson. You know him ... he pulled a stope gate
-and let five-six tons of muck down on me. Nobody knew it--not even
-Cyclone. Wore my fingers to the bone scratching out. Look at these
-hands...."
-
-Pete held up his mutilated hands. "They'll heal but bigod--that pair of
-brand new double-stitched overalls won't."
-
-"Well," Bill chuckled, "you know where the powder is. Go in and get it."
-
-Bill and Blackie remained to see me off, each with a friendly word of
-advice. "Just follow the wheel tracks," Bill said, as I climbed into my
-car and Blackie added: "Keep your eyes peeled for the cracker box signs
-along the edge of the road. You'll see 'em nailed to a stake and stuck
-in the ground."
-
-A moment later I was headed into a silence broken only by the whip of
-sage against the car. Ahead was the glimmer of a dry lake and in the
-distance a great mass of jumbled mountains that notched the pale skies.
-Beyond--what?
-
-I never dreamed then that for twenty-five years I would be poking around
-in those deceiving hills.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter II
- What Caused Death Valley?
-
-
-When you travel through the desolation of Death Valley along the Funeral
-Range, you may find it difficult to believe that several thousand feet
-above the top of your car was once a cool, inviting land with rivers and
-forests and lakes, and that hundreds of feet below you are the dry beds
-of seas that washed its shores.
-
-Scientists assert that all life--both animal and vegetable began in
-these buried seas--probably two and one-half billion years ago.
-
-It is certain that no life could have existed on the thin crust of earth
-covered as it was with deadly gases. Therefore, your remotest ancestors
-must have been sea creatures until they crawled out or were washed
-ashore in one of Nature's convulsions to become land dwellers.
-
-Since sea water contains more gold than has ever been found on the
-earth, it may be said that man on his way up from the lowest form of
-life was born in a solution of gold.
-
-That he survived, is due to two urges--the sex urge and the urge for
-food. Without either all life would cease.
-
-Note. The author's book, _Life's Grand Stairway_ soon to be published,
-contains a fast moving, factual story of man and his eternal quest for
-gold from the beginning of recorded time.
-
-Camping one night at Mesquite Spring, I heard a prospector cursing his
-burro. It wasn't a casual cursing, but a classic revelation of one who
-knew burros--the soul of them, from inquisitive eyes to deadly heels. A
-moment later he was feeding lumps of sugar to the beast and the feud
-ended on a pleasant note.
-
-We were sitting around the camp fire later when the prospector showed me
-a piece of quartz that glittered at twenty feet.
-
-"Do you have much?" I asked.
-
-"I've got more than Carter had oats, and I'm pulling out at daylight. Me
-and Thieving Jack."
-
-"I suppose," I said aimlessly, "you'll retire to a life of luxury; have
-a palace, a housekeeper, and a French chef."
-
-"Nope. Chinaman cook. Friend of mine struck it rich. He had a female
-cook. After that he couldn't call his soul his own. Me? First money I
-spend goes for pie. Never had my fill of pie. Next--" He paused and
-looked affectionately at Thieving Jack. "I'm going to buy a ranch over
-at Lone Pine with a stream running smack through the middle. Snow water.
-I aim to build a fence head high all around it and pension that burro
-off. As for me--no mansion. Just a cottage with a screen porch all
-around. I'm sick of horseflies and mosquitoes."
-
-He was off at sunrise and my thought was that God went with him and
-Thieving Jack.
-
-If you encounter scorching heat you will find little comfort in the fact
-that icebergs once floated in those ancient seas. It is almost certain
-that you will be curious about the disorderly jumble of gutted hills;
-the colorful canyons and strange formations and ask yourself what caused
-it.
-
-The answer is found on Black Mountain in the Funeral Range. Here
-occurred a convulsion of nature without any known parallel and the tops
-of nearby mountains became the bottom of America--an upheaval so violent
-that the oldest rocks were squeezed under pressure from the nethermost
-stratum of the earth to lie alongside the youngest on the surface.
-
-The seas and the fish vanished. The forests were buried. The prehistoric
-animals, the dinosaurs and elephants were trapped.
-
-The result, after undetermined ages, is today's Death Valley. A shorter
-explanation was that of my companion on my first trip to Black
-Mountain--a noted desert character--Jackass Slim. There we found a
-scientist who wished to enlighten us. To his conversation sprinkled with
-such words as Paleozoic and pre-Cambrian Slim listened raptly for an
-hour. Then the learned man asked Slim if he had made it plain.
-
-"Sure," Slim said. "You've been trying to say hell broke loose."
-
-The Indians, who saw Death Valley first, called it "Tomesha," which
-means Ground Afire, and warned adventurers, explorers, and trappers that
-it was a vast sunken region, intolerant of life.
-
-The first white Americans known to have seen it, belonged to the party
-of explorers led by John C. Fremont and guided by Kit Carson.
-
-Death Valley ends on the south in the narrow opening between the
-terminus of the Panamint Range and that of the Black Mountains. Through
-this opening, though unaware of it, Fremont saw the dry stream bed of
-the Amargosa River, on April 27, 1844, flowing north and in the distance
-"a high, snowy mountain." This mountain was Telescope Peak, 11,045 feet
-high.
-
-Nearly six years later, impatient Forty Niners enroute to California
-gold fields, having heard that the shortest way was through this
-forbidden sink, demanded that their guide take them across it.
-
-"I will go to hell with you, but not through Death Valley," said the
-wise Mormon guide, Captain Jefferson Hunt.
-
-Scoffing Hunt's warning, the Bennett-Arcane party deserted and with the
-Jayhawkers became the first white Americans to cross Death Valley. The
-suffering of the deserters, widely advertised, gave the region an evil
-reputation that kept it practically untraveled, unexplored, and accursed
-for the next 75 years, or until Charles Brown of Shoshone succeeded in
-having wheel tracks replaced with roads.
-
-With the opening of the Eichbaum toll road from Lone Pine to Stovepipe
-Wells in 1926-7 a trickle of tourists began, but actually as late as
-1932, Death Valley had fewer visitors than the Congo. A few prospectors,
-a few daring adventurers and a few ranchers had found in the areas
-adjoining, something in the great Wide Open that answered man's inherent
-craving for freedom and peace. "The hills that shut this valley in,"
-explained the old timer, "also shut out the mess we left behind."
-
-Tales of treasure came in the wake of the Forty Niners but it was not
-until 1860 that the first prospecting party was organized by Dr. Darwin
-French at Oroville, California. In the fall of that year he set out to
-find the Lost Gunsight mine, the story of which is told in another
-chapter.
-
-On this trip Dr. French discovered and gave his name to Darwin Falls and
-Darwin Wash in the Panamint range. He named Bennett's Well on the floor
-of Death Valley to honor Asa (or Asabel) Bennett, a member of the
-Bennett-Arcane party. He gave the name of another member of that party
-to Towne's Pass, now a thrilling route into Death Valley but then a
-breath-taking challenge to death.
-
-He named Furnace Creek after finding there a crude furnace for reducing
-ore. He also named Panamint Valley and Panamint Range, but neither the
-origin of the word Panamint nor its significance is known. Indians found
-there said their tribe was called Panamint, but those around there are
-Shoshones and Piutes. (See note at end of this chapter.)
-
-Also in 1860 William Lewis Manly who with John Rogers, a brave and husky
-Tennessean had rescued the survivors of the Bennett-Arcane party,
-returned to the valley he had named, to search for the Gunsight. Manly
-found nothing and reported later he was deserted by his companions and
-escaped death only when rescued by a wandering Indian.
-
-In 1861 Lt. Ives on a surveying mission explored a part of the valley in
-connection with the California Boundary Commission. He used for pack
-animals some of the camels which had been provided by Jefferson Davis,
-Secretary of War, for transporting supplies across the western deserts.
-
-In 1861 Dr. S. G. George, who had been a member of French's party,
-organized one of his own and for the same reason--to find the Lost
-Gunsight. He made several locations of silver and gold, explored a
-portion of the Panamint Range. The first man ever to scale Telescope
-Peak was a member of the George party. He was W. T. Henderson, who had
-also been with Dr. French. Henderson named the mountain "because," he
-said, "I could see for 200 miles in all directions as clearly as through
-a telescope."
-
-The most enduring accomplishment of the party was to bring back a name
-for the mountain range east of what is now known as Owens Valley, named
-for one of Fremont's party of explorers. From an Indian chief they
-learned this range was called Inyo and meant "the home of a Great
-Spirit." Ultimately the name was given to the county in the southeast
-corner of which is Death Valley.
-
-Tragedy dogged all the early expeditions. July 21, 1871 the Wheeler
-expedition left Independence to explore Death Valley. This party of 60
-included geologists, botanists, naturalists, and soldiers. One
-detachment was under command of Lt. George Wheeler. Lt. Lyle led the
-other. Lyle's detachment was guided by C. F. R. Hahn and the third day
-out Hahn was sent ahead to locate water. John Koehler, a naturalist of
-the party is alleged to have said that he would kill Hahn if he didn't
-find water. Failing to return Hahn was abandoned to his fate and he was
-never seen again.
-
-William Eagan, guide of Wheeler's party was sent to Rose Springs for
-water. He also failed to return. What became of him is not known and the
-army officers were justly denounced for callous indifference. On the
-desert, inexcusable desertion of a companion brands the deserter as an
-outcast and has often resulted in his lynching.
-
-It is interesting to note that apart from a Government Land Survey in
-1856, which proved to be utterly worthless, there is no authentic record
-of the white man in Death Valley between 1849 and 1860. However, during
-this decade the canyons on the west side of the Panamint harbored
-numerous renegades who had held up a Wells-Fargo stage or slit a miner's
-throat for his poke of gold. Some were absorbed into the life of the
-wasteland when the discovery of silver in Surprise Canyon brought a
-hectic mob of adventurers to create hell-roaring Panamint City.
-
-When, in the middle Seventies Nevada silver kings, John P. Jones and Wm.
-R. Stewart, who were Fortune's children on the Comstock, decided
-$2,000,000 was enough to lose at Panamint City, many of the outlaws
-wandered over the mountain and down the canyon to cross Death Valley and
-settle wherever they thought they could survive on the eastern
-approaches.
-
-Soon Ash Meadows, Furnace Creek Ranch, Stump Springs, the Manse Ranch,
-Resting Springs, and Pahrump Ranch became landmarks.
-
-The first white man known to have settled in Death Valley was a person
-of some cunning and no conscience, known as Bellerin' Teck, Bellowing
-Tex Bennett, and Bellowin' Teck. He settled at Furnace Creek in 1870 and
-erected a shanty alongside the water where the Bennett-Arcane party had
-camped when driven from Ash Meadows by Indians whose gardens they had
-raided and whose squaws they had abused, according to a legend of the
-Indians and referred to with scant attention to details, by Manly.
-(Panamint Tom, famed Indian of the region, in speaking of this raid by
-the whites, told me that the head man of his tribe sent runners to Ash
-Meadows for reinforcements and that the recruits were marched in circles
-around boulders and in and out of ravines to give the impression of
-superior strength. This strategy deceived the whites, who then went on
-their way.)
-
-Teck claimed title to all the country in sight. Little is known of his
-past, but whites later understood that he chose the forbidding region to
-outsmart a sheriff. He brought water through an open ditch from its
-source in the nearby foothills and grew alfalfa and grain. He named his
-place Greenland Ranch and it was the beginning of the present Furnace
-Creek Ranch.
-
-There is a tradition that Teck supplemented his meager earnings from the
-ranch by selling half interests to wayfarers, subsequently driving them
-off.
-
-There remains a record of one such victim--a Mormon adventurer named
-Jackson. In part payment Teck took a pair of oxen, Jackson's money and
-his only weapon, a rifle. Shortly Teck began to show signs of
-dissatisfaction. His temper flared more frequently and Jackson became
-increasingly alarmed. When finally Teck came bellowing from his cabin,
-brandishing his gun, Jackson did the right thing at the right moment. He
-fled, glad to escape with his life.
-
-This became the pattern for the next wayfarer and the next. Teck always
-craftily demanded their weapons in the trade, but knowing that sooner or
-later some would take their troubles to a sheriff or return for revenge,
-Teck sold the ranch, left the country and no trace of his destiny
-remains.
-
-Before Aaron and Rosie Winters or Borax Smith ever saw Death Valley, one
-who was to attain fame greater than either listed more than 2000
-different plants that grew in the area.
-
-Notwithstanding this important contribution to knowledge of the valley's
-flora, only one or two historians have mentioned his name, and these in
-books or periodicals long out of print.
-
-Two decades later he was to become famous as Brigadier General Frederick
-Funston of the Spanish-American War--the only major war in America's
-history fought by an army which was composed entirely of volunteers
-without a single draftee.
-
-Of interest to this writer is the fact that he was my brigade commander
-and a soldier from the boots up. Not five feet tall, he was every inch a
-fighting man. I served with him while he captured Emilio Aguinaldo,
-famous _Filipino Insurrecto_.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter III
- Aaron and Rosie Winters
-
-
-While Bellerin' Teck was selling half interests in the spectacular hills
-to the unwary, he actually walked over a treasure of more millions than
-his wildest dreams had conjured.
-
-Teck's nearest neighbor lived at Ash Meadows about 60 miles east of the
-valley.
-
-Ash Meadows is a flat desert area in Nevada along the California border.
-With several water holes, subterranean streams, and abundant wild grass
-it was a resting place for early emigrants and a hole-in for
-prospectors. It was also an ideal refuge for gentlemen who liked its
-distance from sheriffs and the ease with which approaching horsemen
-could be seen from nearby hills.
-
-Lacking was woman. The male needed the female but there wasn't a white
-woman in the country. So he took what the market afforded--a squaw and
-not infrequently two or three. "He's my son all right," a patriarch once
-informed me, "but it's been so long I don't exactly recollect which of
-them squaws was his mother."
-
-Usually the wife was bought. Sometimes for a trinket. Often a horse.
-Among the trappers who first blazed the trails to the West, 30 beaver
-skins were considered a fair price for an able bodied squaw. She was
-capable in rendering domestic service and loyal in love. Too often the
-consort's fidelity was transient.
-
-"For 20 years," said the noted trapper, Killbuck, "I packed a squaw
-along--not one, but a many. First I had a Blackfoot--the darndest slut
-as ever cried for fo-farrow. I lodge-poled her on Coulter's Creek ... as
-good as four packs of beaver I gave for old Bull-tail's daughter. He was
-the head chief of the Ricaree. Thar wan't enough scarlet cloth nor beads
-... in Sublette's packs for her ... I sold her to Cross-Eagle for one of
-Jake Hawkins' guns.... Then I tried the Sioux, the Shian (Cheyenne) and
-a Digger from the other side, who made the best moccasins as ever I
-wore."
-
-So Aaron Winters chose his mate from the available supply and with
-Rosie, part Mexican and Indian, part Spanish, he settled in Ash Meadows
-in a dugout. In front and adjoining had been added a shack, part wood,
-part stone. The floors were dirt. Rosie dragged in posts, poles, and
-brush and made a shed. Aaron found time between hunting and trapping to
-add a room of unmortared stone. At times there was no money, but pion
-nuts grew in the mountains, desert tea and squaw cabbage were handy and
-the beans of mesquite could be ground into flour.
-
-Rosie, to whom one must yield admiration, was not the first woman in
-Winters' life. "He liked his women," Ed Stiles recalled, "and changed
-'em often." But to Rosie, Aaron Winters was always devoted. Her material
-reward was little but all who knew her praised her beauty and her
-virtues.
-
-One day when dusk was gathering there was a rap on the sagging slab door
-and Rosie Winters opened it on an angel unawares. The Winters invited
-the stranger in, shared their meager meal. After supper they sat up
-later than usual, listening to the story of the stranger's travels. He
-was looking for borax, he told them. "It's a white stuff...." At this
-time, only two or three unimportant deposits of borax were known to
-exist in America and the average prospector knew nothing about it.
-
-The first borax was mined in Tibet. There in the form of tincal it was
-loaded on the backs of sheep, transported across the Himalayas and
-shipped to London. It was so rare that it was sold by the ounce. Later
-the more intelligent of the western prospectors began to learn that
-borax was something to keep in mind.
-
-To Aaron Winters it was just something bought in a drug store, but Rosie
-was interested in the "white stuff." She wanted to know how one could
-tell when the white stuff was borax. Patiently the guest explained how
-to make the tests: "Under the torch it will burn green...."
-
-Finally Rosie made a bed for the wayfarer in the lean-to and long after
-he blew out his candle Rosie Winters lay awake, wondering about some
-white stuff she'd seen scattered over a flat down in the hellish heat of
-Death Valley. She remembered that it whitened the crust of a big area,
-stuck to her shoes and clothes and got in her hair when the wind lifted
-the silt.
-
-The next morning Rosie and Aaron bade the guest good luck and goodbye
-and he went into the horizon without even leaving his name. Then Rosie
-turned to Aaron: "Maybe," she said ... "maybe that white stuff we see
-that time below Furnace Creek--maybe that is borax."
-
-"Might be," Aaron answered.
-
-"Why don't we go see?" Rosie asked. "Maybe some Big Horn sheep--" Rosie
-knew her man and Aaron Winters got his rifle and Rosie packed the
-sow-belly and beans.
-
-It was a long, gruelling trip down into the valley under a Death Valley
-sun but hope sustained them. They made their camp at Furnace Creek, then
-Rosie led Aaron over the flats she remembered. She scooped up some of
-the white stuff that looked like cotton balls while Aaron prepared for
-the test. Then the brief, uncertain moment when the white stuff touched
-the flame. Tensely they watched, Aaron grimly curious rather than
-hopeful; Rosie with pounding heart and lips whispering a prayer.
-
-Then, miracle of miracles--the green flame. They looked excitedly into
-each other's eyes, each unable to believe. In that moment, Rosie, always
-devout, lifted her eyes to heaven and thanked her God. Neither had any
-idea of the worth of their find. Vaguely they knew it meant spending
-money. A new what-not for Rosie's mantel. Perhaps pine boards to cover
-the hovel's dirt floor; maybe a few pieces of golden oak furniture; a
-rifle with greater range than Aaron's old one; silk or satin to make a
-dress for Rosie.
-
-"Writers have had to draw on their imagination for what happened," a
-descendant of the Winters once told me. "They say Uncle Aaron exclaimed,
-'Rosie, she burns green!' or 'Rosie, we're rich!' but Aunt Rosie said
-they were so excited they couldn't remember, but she knew what they did!
-They went over to the ditch that Bellerin' Teck had dug to water the
-ranch and in its warm water soaked their bunioned feet."
-
-Returning to Ash Meadows they faced the problem of what to do with the
-"white stuff." Unlike gold, it couldn't be sold on sight, because it was
-a new industry, and little was known about its handling. Finally Aaron
-learned that a rich merchant in San Francisco, named Coleman was
-interested in borax in a small way and lost no time in sending samples
-to Coleman.
-
-W. T. Coleman was a Kentucky aristocrat who had come to California
-during the gold rush and attained both fortune and the affection of the
-people of the state. He had been chosen leader of the famed Vigilantes,
-who had rescued San Francisco from a gang of the lawless as tough as the
-world ever saw.
-
-Actually Coleman's interest in borax was a minor incident in the
-handling of his large fortune and his passionate devotion to the
-development of his adopted state. For that reason alone, Coleman had
-become interested in the small deposits of borax discovered by Francis
-Smith, first at Columbus Marsh.
-
-Smith had been a prospector before coming to California, wandering all
-over western country, looking for gold and silver. He was one of those
-who had heard that borax was worth keeping in mind.
-
-Reaching Nevada and needing a grubstake, he began to cut wood to supply
-mines around Columbus, Aurora, and Candelaria. On Teel's Marsh he found
-a large growth of mesquite, built a shack and claimed all the wood and
-the site as his own. Upon a portion of it, some Mexicans had cut and
-corded some of the wood and Smith refused to let them haul it off. They
-left grudgingly and with threats to return. The Mexicans, of course, had
-as much right to the wood as Smith.
-
-Sensing trouble and having no weapons at his camp, he went twelve miles
-to borrow a rifle. But there were no cartridges and he had to ride sixty
-miles over the mountains to Aurora where he found only four. Returning
-to his shack, he found the Mexicans had also returned with
-reinforcements. Twenty-four were now at work and their mood was
-murderous. Smith had a companion whose courage he didn't trust and
-ordered him to go out in the brush and keep out of the way.
-
-The Mexicans told Smith they were going to take the wood. Smith warned
-that he would kill the first man who touched the pile. With only four
-cartridges to kill 20 men, it was obviously a bluff. One of the Mexicans
-went to the pile and picked up a stick. Smith put his rifle to his
-shoulder and ordered the fellow to drop it. Unafraid and still holding
-the stick the Mexican said: "You may kill me, but my friends will kill
-you. Put your rifle down and we will talk it over."
-
-They had cut additional wood during his absence and demanded that they
-be permitted to take all the wood they had cut. Smith consented and when
-the Mexicans had gone he staked out the marsh as a mining claim--which
-led to the connection with Coleman.
-
-Upon receipt of Winters' letter, Coleman forwarded it to Smith and asked
-him to investigate the Winters claim. Smith's report was enthusiastic.
-Coleman then sent two capable men, William Robertson and Rudolph
-Neuenschwander to look over the Winters discovery, with credentials to
-buy. Again Rosie and Aaron Winters heard the flutter of angel wings at
-the hovel door. This time the angels left $20,000. Rarely in this world
-has buyer bought so much for so little, but to Aaron and Rosie Winters
-it was all the money in the world.
-
-Despite the troubles of operating in a place so remote from market and
-with problems of a product about which too little was known, borax was
-soon adding $100,000 a year to Coleman's already fabulous fortune.
-
-Francis M. (Borax) Smith was put in charge of operations under the firm
-name of Coleman and Smith.
-
-Freed from the sordid squalor of the Ash Meadows hovel, the Winters
-bought the Pahrump Ranch, a landmark of Pahrump Valley, and settled down
-to watch the world go by.
-
-Thus began the Pacific Coast Borax Company, one of the world's
-outstanding corporations. Later Smith was to become president of the
-Pacific Coast Borax Company and later still, he was to head a three
-hundred million dollar corporation for the development of the San
-Francisco and Oakland areas and then face bankruptcy and ruin.
-
-Overlooking the site where Rosie and Aaron made the discovery, now
-stands the magnificent Furnace Creek Inn.
-
-One day while sitting on the hotel terrace, I noticed a plane discharge
-a group of the Company's English owners and their guests. Meticulously
-dressed, they paid scant attention to the desolation about and hastened
-to the cooling refuge of their caravansary. At dinner they sat down to
-buttered mignon and as they talked casually of the races at Ascot and
-the ball at Buckingham Palace, I looked out over that whitehot slab of
-hell and thought of Rosie and Aaron Winters trudging with calloused feet
-behind a burro--their dinner, sow-belly and beans.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter IV
- John Searles and His Lake of Ooze
-
-
-Actually the first discovery of borax in Death Valley was made by
-Isadore Daunet in 1875, five years before Winters' discovery. Daunet had
-left Panamint City when it was apparent that town was through forever
-and with six of his friends was en route to new diggings in Arizona.
-
-He was a seasoned, hardy adventurer and risked a short cut across Death
-Valley in mid-summer. Running out of water, his party killed a burro,
-drank its blood; but the deadly heat beat them down. Indians came across
-one of the thirst-crazed men and learned that Daunet and others were
-somewhere about. They found Daunet and two companions. The others
-perished.
-
-When Daunet heard of the Winters sale five years later, like Rosie
-Winters he remembered the white stuff about the water, to which the
-Indians had taken him. He hurried back and in 1880 filed upon mining
-claims amounting to 260 acres. He started at once a refining plant which
-he called Eagle Borax Works and began operating one year before Old
-Harmony began to boil borax in 1881. Daunet's product however, was of
-inferior grade and unprofitable and work was soon abandoned. The
-unpredictable happened and dark days fell upon borax and William T.
-Coleman.
-
-In 1888 the advocates of free trade had a field day when the bill
-authored by Roger Q. Mills of Texas became the law of the land and borax
-went on the free list. The empire of Coleman tumbled in a financial
-scare--attributed by Coleman to a banker who had falsely undervalued
-Coleman's assets after a report by a borax expert who betrayed him. "My
-assets," wrote Coleman, "were $4,400,000. My debts $2,000,000." No
-person but Coleman lost a penny.
-
-But Borax Smith was never one to surrender without a fight and organized
-the Pacific Coast Borax Company to take over the property and the
-success of that company justifies the faith and the integrity of
-Coleman.
-
-Marketing the borax presented a problem in transportation even more
-difficult than it did in Tibet. At first it was scraped from the flat
-surface of the valley where it looked like alkali. It was later
-discovered in ledge form in the foothills of the Funeral Mountains. The
-sight of this discovery was called Monte Blanco--now almost a forgotten
-name.
-
-The borax was boiled in tanks and after crystallization was hauled by
-mule team across one hundred and sixty-five miles of mountainous desert
-at a pace of fifteen miles per day--if there were no accidents--or an
-average of twenty days for the round trip. The summer temperatures in
-the cooler hours of the night were 112 degrees; in the day, 120 to 134
-(the highest ever recorded). There were only four water holes on the
-route. Hence, water had to be hauled for the team.
-
-The borax was hauled to Daggett and Mojave and thence shipped to
-Alameda, California, to be refined. Charles Bennett, a rancher from
-Pahrump Valley, was among the first to contract the hauling of the raw
-product.
-
-In 1883 J. W. S. Perry, superintendent of the borax company, decided the
-company should own its freighting service and under his direction the
-famous 20 mule team borax wagons with the enormous wheels were designed.
-Orders were given for ten wagons. Each weighed 7800 pounds. Two of these
-wagons formed a train, the load being 40,000 pounds. To the second wagon
-was attached a smaller one with a tank holding 1200 gallons of water.
-
-"I'd leave around midnight," Ed Stiles said. "Generally 110 or 112
-degrees."
-
-The first hauls of these wagons were to Mojave, with overnight stations
-every sixteen miles. Thirty days were required for the round trip.
-
-In the Eighties a prospector in the then booming Calico Mountains,
-between Barstow and Yermo discovered an ore that puzzled him. He showed
-it to others and though the bustling town of Calico was filled with
-miners from all parts of the world, none could identify it. Under the
-blow torch the crystalline surface crumbled. Out of curiosity he had it
-assayed. It proved to be calcium borate and was the world's first
-knowledge of borax in that form. Previously it had been found in the
-form of "cotton ball." The Pacific Coast Borax Company acquired the
-deposits; named the ore Colemanite in honor of W. T. Coleman.
-
-Operations in Death Valley were suspended and transferred to the new
-deposit, which saved a ten to fifteen days' haul besides providing a
-superior product. The deposit was exhausted however, in the early part
-of the century when Colemanite was discovered in the Black Mountains and
-the first mine--the Lila C. began operations.
-
-It is a bit ironical that during the depression of the Thirties, two
-prospectors who neither knew nor cared anything about borax were poking
-around Kramer in relatively flat country in sight of the paved highway
-between Barstow and Mojave when they found what is believed to be the
-world's largest deposit of borax.
-
-It was a good time for bargain hunters and was acquired by the Pacific
-Coast Borax Company and there in a town named Boron, all its borax is
-now produced.
-
-Even before Aaron Winters or Isadore Daunet, John Searles was shipping
-borax out of Death Valley country. With his brother Dennis, member of
-the George party of 1861, Searles had returned and was developing gold
-and silver claims in the Slate Range overlooking a slimy marsh. They had
-a mill ready for operation when the Indians, then making war on the
-whites of Inyo county destroyed it with fire. A man of outstanding
-courage, Searles remained to recuperate his losses. He had read about
-the Trona deposits first found in the Nile Valley and was reminded of it
-when he put some of the water from the marsh in a vessel to boil and use
-for drinking. Later he noticed the formation of crystals and then
-suspecting borax he went to San Francisco with samples and sought
-backing. He found a promoter who after examining the samples, told him,
-"If the claims are what these samples indicate, I can get all the money
-you need...."
-
-An analysis was made showing borax.
-
-"But where is this stuff located?"
-
-Searles told him as definitely as he could. He was invited to remain in
-San Francisco while a company could be organized. "It will take but a
-few days...."
-
-Searles explained that he hadn't filed on the ground and preferred to go
-back and protect the claim.
-
-The suave promoter brushed his excuse aside. "Little chance of anybody's
-going into that God forsaken hole." He called an associate. "Take Mr.
-Searles in charge and show him San Francisco...."
-
-Not a rounder, Searles bored quickly with night life. His funds ran low.
-He asked the loan of $25.
-
-"Certainly...." His host stepped into an adjacent office, returning
-after a moment to say the cashier was out but that he had left
-instructions to give Searles whatever he wished.
-
-Searles made trip after trip to the cashier's office but never found him
-in and becoming suspicious, he pawned his watch and hurried home,
-arriving at midnight four days later.
-
-The next morning a stranger came and something about his attire, his
-equipment, and his explanation of his presence didn't ring true and
-Searles was wary even before the fellow, believing that Searles was
-still in San Francisco announced that he had been sent to find a man
-named Searles to look over some borax claims. "Do you know where they
-are?"
-
-Searles thought quickly. He had not as yet located his monuments nor
-filed a notice. He pointed down the valley. "They're about 20 miles
-ahead...."
-
-The fellow went on his way and before he was out of sight, Searles was
-staking out the marsh and with one of the most colorful of Death Valley
-characters, Salty Bill Parkinson, began operations in 1872. Incorporated
-under the name of San Bernardino Borax Company, the business grew and
-was later sold to Borax Smith's Pacific Coast Borax Company.
-
-Once while Searles was away hunting grizzlies, the Indians who had
-burned his mill, raided his ranch and drove his mules across the range.
-Suspecting the Piutes, he got his rifle and two pistols.
-
-"They'll kill you," he was warned.
-
-"I'm going to get those mules," Searles snapped and followed their
-tracks across the Slate Range and Panamint Valley. High in the
-overlooking mountains he came upon the Indians feasting upon one of the
-animals and was immediately attacked with bows and arrows. He killed
-seven bucks and the rest ran, but an Indian's arrow was buried in his
-eye. He jerked the arrow out, later losing the eye, pushed on and
-recovered the rest of his mules. Thereafter the Piutes avoided Searles
-and his marsh because, they said, he possessed the "evil eye."
-
-On the same lake where Searles began operations, the town of Trona was
-established to house the employees and processing plants of the American
-Potash and Chemical Company. It was British owned, though this ownership
-was successfully concealed in the intricate corporate structure of the
-Pacific Coast Borax Company, but later sold for twelve million dollars
-to Hollanders who left the management as they found it. During World War
-II Uncle Sam discovered that the Hollanders were stooges for German
-financiers' Potash Cartel.
-
-The Alien Property Custodian took over and ordered the sale of the stock
-to Americans. Today it is what its name implies--an American company.
-
-From the ooze where John Searles first camped to hunt grizzly bears, is
-being taken more than 100 commercial products and every day of your life
-you use one or more of them if you eat, bathe, or wear clothes, brush
-your teeth or deal with druggist, grocer, dentist or doctor.
-
-Fearing exhaustion of the visible supply (the ooze is 70 feet deep)
-tests were made in 1917 to determine what was below. Result, supply one
-century; value two billion dollars.
-
-Here are a few things containing the product of the ooze. Fertilizer for
-your flowers, orchards, and fields. Baking soda, dyes, lubricating oils,
-paper. Ethyl gasoline, porcelain, medicines, fumigants, leathers,
-solvents, cosmetics, textiles, ceramics, chemical and pharmaceutical
-preparations.
-
-About 1300 tons of these products are shipped out every day over a
-company-owned railroad and transshipped at Searles' Station over the
-Southern Pacific, to go finally in one form or another into every home
-in America and most of those in the entire world.
-
-The weird valley meanders southward from the lake through blown-up
-mountains gorgeously colored and grimly defiant--a trip to thrill the
-lover of the wild and rugged.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter V
- But Where Was God?
-
-
-For years, on the edge of the road near Tule Hole, a rough slab marked
-Jim Dayton's grave, on which were piled the bleached bones of Dayton's
-horses. On the board were these words: "Jas. Dayton. Died 1898."
-
-The accuracy of the date of Dayton's death as given on the bronze plaque
-on the monument and on the marker which it replaced, has been
-challenged. The author of this book wrote the epitaph for the monument
-and the date on it is the date which was on the original marker--an old
-ironing board that had belonged to Pauline Gower. In a snapshot made by
-the writer, the date 1898, burned into the board with a redhot poker
-shows clearly.
-
-The two men who know most about the matter, Wash Cahill and Frank
-Hilton, whom he sent to find Dayton or his body, both declared the date
-on the marker correct.
-
-The late Ed Stiles brought Dayton into Death Valley. Stiles was working
-for Jim McLaughlin (Stiles called him McGlothlin), who operated a
-freighting service with headquarters at Bishop. McLaughlin ordered
-Stiles to take a 12 mule team and report to the Eagle Borax Works in
-Death Valley. "I can't give you any directions. You'll just have to find
-the place." Stiles had never been in Death Valley nor could he find
-anyone who had. It was like telling a man to start across the ocean and
-find a ship named Sally.
-
-At Bishop Creek in Owens Valley Stiles decided he needed a helper. There
-he found but one person willing to go--a youngster barely out of his
-teens--Jim Dayton.
-
-Dayton remained in Death Valley and somewhat late in life, on one of his
-trips out, romance entered. After painting an intriguing picture of the
-lotus life a girl would find at Furnace Creek, he asked the lady to
-share it with him. She promptly accepted.
-
-A few months later, the bride suggested that a trip out would make her
-love the lotus life even more and so in the summer of 1898 she tearfully
-departed. Soon she wrote Jim in effect that it hadn't turned out as she
-had hoped. Instead, she had become reconciled to shade trees, green
-lawns, neighbors, and places to go and if he wanted to live with her
-again he would just have to abandon the Death Valley paradise.
-
-Dayton loaded his wagon with all his possessions, called his dog and
-started for Daggett.
-
-Wash Cahill, who was to become vice-president of the borax company, was
-then working at its Daggett office. Cahill received from Dayton a letter
-which he saw from the date inside and the postmark on the envelope, had
-been held somewhere for at least two weeks before it was mailed.
-
-The letter contained Dayton's resignation and explained why Dayton was
-leaving. He had left a reliable man in temporary charge and was bringing
-his household goods; also two horses which had been borrowed at Daggett.
-
-Knowing that Dayton should have arrived in Daggett at least a week
-before the actual arrival of the letter, Cahill was alarmed and
-dispatched Frank Hilton, a teamster and handy man, and Dolph Lavares to
-see what had happened.
-
-On the roadside at Tule Hole they found Dayton's body, his dog patiently
-guarding it. Apparently Dayton had become ill, stopped to rest. "Maybe
-the sun beat him down. Maybe his ticker jammed," said Shorty Harris,
-"but the horses were fouled in the harness and were standing up dead."
-
-There could be no flowers for Jim Dayton nor peal of organ. So they went
-to his wagon, loosened the shovel lashed to the coupling pole. They dug
-a hole beside the road, rolled Jim Dayton's body into it.
-
-The widow later settled in a comfortable house in town with neighbors
-close at hand. There she was trapped by fire. While the flames were
-consuming the building a man ran up. Someone said, "She's in that upper
-room." The brave and daring fellow tore his way through the crowd,
-leaped through the window into a room red with flames and dragged her
-out, her clothing still afire. He laid her down, beat out the flames,
-but she succumbed.
-
-A multitude applauded the hero. A little later over in Nevada another
-multitude lynched him. Between heroism and depravity--what?
-
-Although Tule Hole has long been a landmark of Death Valley, few know
-its story and this I believe to be its first publication.
-
-One day while resting his team, Stiles noticed a patch of tules growing
-a short distance off the road and taking a shovel he walked over,
-started digging a hole on what he thought was a million to one chance of
-finding water, and thus reduce the load that had to be hauled for use
-between springs. "I hadn't dug a foot," he told me "before I struck
-water. I dug a ditch to let it run off and after it cleared I drank
-some, found it good and enlarged the hole."
-
-He went on to Daggett with his load. Repairs to his wagon train required
-a week and by the time he returned five weeks had elapsed. "I stopped
-the team opposite the tules, got out and started over to look at the
-hole I'd dug. When I got within a few yards three or four naked squaw
-hags scurried into the brush. I stopped and looked away toward the
-mountains to give 'em a chance to hide. Then I noticed two Indian bucks,
-each leading a riderless horse, headed for the Panamints. Then I knew
-what had happened."
-
-Ed Stiles was a desert man and knew his Indians. Somewhere up in a
-Panamint canyon the chief had called a powwow and when it was over the
-head men had gone from one wickiup to another and looked over all the
-toothless old crones who no longer were able to serve, yet consumed and
-were in the way. Then they had brought the horses and with two strong
-bucks to guard them, they had ridden down the canyon and out across the
-desert to the water hole. There the crones had slid to the ground. The
-bucks had dropped a sack of pion nuts. Of course, the toothless hags
-could not crunch the nuts and even if they could, the nuts would not
-last long. Then they would have to crawl off into the scrawny brush and
-grabble for herbs or slap at grasshoppers, but these are quicker than
-palsied hands and in a little while the sun would beat them down.
-
-The rest was up to God.
-
-The distinction of driving the first 20 mule team has always been a
-matter of controversy. Over a nation-wide hook-up, the National
-Broadcasting Co. once presented a playlet based upon these conflicting
-claims. A few days afterward, at the annual Death Valley picnic held at
-Wilmington, John Delameter, a speaker, announced that he'd made
-considerable research and was prepared to name the person actually
-entitled to that honor. The crowd, including three claimants of the
-title, moved closer, their ears cupped in eager attention as Delameter
-began to speak. One of the claimants nudged my arm with a confident
-smile, whispered, "Now you'll know...." A few feet away his rivals,
-their pale eyes fixed on the speaker, hunched forward to miss no word.
-
-Mr. Delameter said: "There were several wagons of 16 mules and who drove
-the first of these, I do not know, but I do know who drove the first 20
-mule team."
-
-Covertly and with gleams of triumph, the claimants eyed each other as
-Delameter paused to turn a page of his manuscript. Then with a loud
-voice he said: "I drove it myself!"
-
-May God have mercy on his soul.
-
-A few days later I rang the doorbell at the ranch house of Ed Stiles,
-almost surrounded by the city of San Bernardino. As no one answered, I
-walked to the rear, and across a field of green alfalfa saw a man
-pitching hay in a temperature of 120 degrees. It was Stiles who in 1876
-was teaming in Bodie--toughest of the gold towns.
-
-I sat down in the shade of his hay. He stood in the sun. I said, "Mr.
-Stiles, do you know who drove the first 20 mule team in Death Valley?"
-
-He gave me a kind of _et-tu, Brute_ look and smiled.
-
-"In the fall of 1882 I was driving a 12 mule team from the Eagle Borax
-Works to Daggett. I met a man on a buckboard who asked if the team was
-for sale. I told him to write Mr. McLaughlin. It took 15 days to make
-the round trip and when I got back I met the same man. He showed me a
-bill of sale for the team and hired me to drive it. He had an eight mule
-team and a new red wagon, driven by a fellow named Webster. The man in
-the buckboard was Borax Smith.
-
-"Al Maynard, foreman for Smith and Coleman, was at work grubbing out
-mesquite to plant alfalfa on what is now Furnace Creek Ranch. Maynard
-told me to take the tongue out of the new wagon and put a trailer tongue
-in it. 'In the morning,' he said, 'hitch it to your wagon. Put a water
-wagon behind your trailer, hook up those eight mules with your team and
-go to Daggett.'
-
-"That was the first time that a 20 mule team was driven out of Death
-Valley. Webster was supposed to swamp for me. But when he saw his new
-red wagon and mules hitched up with my outfit, he walked into the office
-and quit his job."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VI
- Death Valley Geology
-
-
-The pleasure of your trip through the Big Sink will be enhanced if you
-know something about the structural features which are sure to arrest
-your attention.
-
-For undetermined ages Death Valley was desert. Then rivers and lakes.
-Rivers dried. Lakes evaporated. Again, desert. It is believed that in
-thousands of years there have been no changes other than those caused by
-earthquakes and erosion.
-
-It is no abuse of the superlative to say that the foremost authority
-upon Death Valley geology is Doctor Levi Noble, who has studied it under
-the auspices of the U.S. Geological Survey since 1917. He has ridden
-over more of it than anyone and because of his studies, earlier
-conclusions of geologists are scrapped today.
-
-From a pamphlet published by the American Geological Society with the
-permission of the U. S. Dept. of Interior, now out of print, I quote a
-few passages which Doctor Noble, its author, once described to me as
-"dull reading, even for scientists."
-
-"The southern Death Valley region contains rocks of at least eight
-geologic systems whose aggregate thickness certainly exceeds 45,000 feet
-for the stratified rocks alone."
-
-"The dissected playa or lake beds in Amargosa Valley between Shoshone
-and Tecopa contain elephant remains that are Pleistocene...."
-
-"Rainbow Mountain is one of the geological show places of the Death
-Valley region.... Here the Amargosa river has cut a canyon 1000 feet
-deep.... The mountain is made up of thrust slices of Cambrian and
-pre-Cambrian rocks alternating with slices of Tertiary rocks, all of
-which dip in general about 30 to 40 degrees eastward, but are also
-anticlinally arched."
-
-"None of the geologic terms in common use appear exactly to fit this
-mosaic of large tightly packed individual blocks of different ages
-occupying a definite zone above a major thrust fault."
-
-The significant feature is that a stratum that began with creation may
-lie above one that is an infant in the age of rock--a puzzle that will
-engage men of Levi Noble's talents for years to come. But one doesn't
-have to be a member of the American Geological Society to find thrills
-in other gripping features.
-
-Throughout the area south of Shoshone are many hot springs containing
-boron and fluorine--some with traces of radium. The water is believed to
-come from a buried river. The source of other hot springs in the Death
-Valley area is unknown.
-
-More startling features were related to Shorty Harris and me at
-Bennett's Well in the bottom of Death Valley where we met one of
-Shorty's friends. Lanky and baked brown, in each wrinkle of his face the
-sun had etched a smile. "Shorty," he said, "yachts will be sailing
-around here some day. There's a passage to the sea, sure as hell."
-
-"What makes you think so?" Shorty asked.
-
-"Those salt pools. Just come from there. I was watching the crystals;
-felt the ground move a little. Pool started sloshing. A sea serpent with
-eyes big as a wagon wheel and teeth full of kelp stuck his head up.
-Where'd he come from? No kelp in this valley. That prove anything?"
-
-Ubehebe Crater is believed to have resulted from the only major change
-in the topography of the valley since its return to desert, but John
-Delameter, old time freighter, thought geologists didn't know what they
-were talking about. "When I first saw Saratoga Spring I could straddle
-it. Full of fish four inches long. Next time, three springs and a lake.
-Fish shrunk to one inch and different shaped head."
-
-Actually these fish are the degenerate descendants of the larger fish
-that lived in the streams and lakes that once watered Death Valley--an
-interesting study in the survival of species. The real name, _Cyprinodon
-Macularius_, is too large a mouthful for the natives so they are called
-desert sardines, though they are in reality a small killifish.
-
-Dan Breshnahan, in charge of a road crew working between Furnace Creek
-Inn and Stove Pipe Well, ordered some of the men to dig a hole to sink
-some piles. Two feet beneath a hard crust they encountered muck. When
-they hit the pile with a sledge it would bounce back. Dan put a board
-across the top. With a man on each end of the board, the rebound was
-prevented and the pile driven into hard earth. "I'm convinced that under
-that road is a lake of mire and Lord help the fellow who goes through,"
-Dan said.
-
-A heavily loaded 20 mule team wagon driven by Delameter broke the
-surface of this ooze and two days were required to get it out. To test
-the depth, he tied an anvil to his bridle rein and let it down. The lead
-line of a 20 mule team is 120 feet long. It sank (he said) the length of
-the line and reached no bottom.
-
-On Ash Meadows, a few miles from Death Valley Junction and on the side
-of a mountain is what is known as The Devil's Hole which it is said has
-no bottom. True or false, none has ever been found.
-
-A steep trail leads down to the water which will then be over your head.
-Indians will tell you that a squaw fell into this hole within the memory
-of the living and that she was sucked to the bottom and came out at Big
-Spring several miles distant. The latter is a large hole in the middle
-of the desert and from its throat, also bottomless, pours a large volume
-of clear, warm water.
-
-"Explored?" shouted Dad Fairbanks one day when a white-haired prospector
-declared every foot of Death Valley had been worked over. "It isn't
-scratched!"
-
-Only the day before (in 1934), Dr. Levi Noble had been working in the
-mountains overlooking the valley on the east rim. Through his field
-glasses he saw a formation that looked like a natural bridge. When he
-returned to Shoshone he phoned Harry Gower, Pacific Borax Co. official
-at Furnace Creek of his discovery and suggested that Gower investigate.
-
-Since Furnace Creek Inn wanted such attractions for its guests, Gower
-went immediately and almost within rifle shot of a road used since the
-Seventies, he found the bridge.
-
-That too is Death Valley--land of continual surprise.
-
-Death Valley is the hottest spot in North America. The U.S. Army, in a
-test of clothing suitable for hot weather made some startling
-discoveries. According to records, on one day in every seven years the
-temperature reaches 180 on the valley floor. But five feet above ground
-where official temperatures are recorded the thermometer drops 55
-degrees to 125.
-
-The highest temperature ever recorded was 134 at Furnace Creek
-Ranch--only two degrees below the world's record in Morocco. In 1913,
-the week of July 7-14, the temperature never got below 127. Official
-recording differs little from that of Arabia, India, and lower
-California, but the duration is longer.
-
-Left in the sun, water in a pail of ordinary size will evaporate in an
-hour. Bodies decompose two or three hours after rigor mortis begins but
-some have been found in certain areas at higher altitudes dried like
-leather. A rattlesnake dropped into a bucket and set in the sun will die
-in 20 minutes.
-
-The evaporation of salt from the body is rapid and many prospectors
-swallow a mouthful of common salt before going out into a killing sun.
-
-One of the pitiable features of death on the desert is that bodies are
-found with fingers worn to the bone from frantic digging and often
-beneath the cadaver is water at two feet.
-
-There is also legendary weather for outside consumption. Told to see Joe
-Ryan as a source of dependable information, a tourist approached Joe and
-asked what kind of temperature one would encounter in the valley.
-
-"Heat is always exaggerated," said Joe. "Of course it gets a little warm
-now and then. Hottest I ever saw was in August when I crossed the valley
-with Mike Lane. I was walking ahead when I heard Mike coughing. I looked
-around. Seemed to be choking and I went back. Mike held out his palm and
-in it was a gold nugget and Mike was madder'n hell. 'My teeth melted,'
-Mike wailed. 'I'm going to kill that dentist. He told me they would
-stand heat up to 500 degrees.'"
-
-I met an engaging liar at Bradbury Well one day. He was gloriously drunk
-and was telling the group about him that he was a great grand-son of the
-fabulous Paul Bunyan.
-
-"Of course," he said, "Gramp was a mighty man, but he was dumb at that.
-One time I saw him put a handful of pebbles in his mouth and blow 'em
-one at a time at a flock of wild geese flying a mile high. He got every
-goose, but how did he end up? Not so good. He straddled the Pacific
-ocean one day and prowled around in China, and saw a cross-eyed
-pigeon-toed midget with buck teeth. Worse, she had a temper that would
-melt pig-iron.
-
-"Gramp went nuts over her. What happened? He married her. She had some
-trained fleas. If Gramp got sassy, she put fleas in his ears and ants in
-his pants and stood by, laughing at him, while he scratched himself to
-death. Hell of an end for Gramp, wasn't it?"
-
-In the late fall, winter, and early spring perfect days are the rule and
-if you are among those who like uncharted trails, do not hurry. Then
-when night comes you will climb a moonbeam and play among the stars. You
-will learn too, that life goes on away from box scores, radio puns, and
-girls with a flair for Veuve Cliquot.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VII
- Indians of the Area
-
-
-The Indians of the Death Valley country were dog eaters--both those of
-Shoshone and Piute origin. Both had undoubtedly degenerated as a result
-of migrations. The Shoshones (Snakes) had originally lived in Idaho,
-Oregon, and Washington. The Piutes in Utah, Idaho, and Nevada.
-
-The true blood connection of coast Indians may well be a matter of
-dispute. "Almost every 15 or 20 leagues you'll find a distinct dialect,"
-was said of California Indians. (Boscana in Robinson's Life in
-California, p. 220.) Most of them were hardly above the animal in
-intelligence or morality. Though the Death Valley Indians are called
-Shoshone and Piutes, to what extent their blood justifies the
-classification is the white man's guess.
-
-Those whom Dr. French found in the Panamint said they had no tribal
-name. Many California tribes were given names by the whites, these names
-being the American's interpretation of a sound uttered by one group to
-designate another. "They do not seem to have any names for themselves."
-(Schoolcraft's Arch., Vol. 3.)
-
-All seem to agree however, that the farther north the Indian lived, the
-more intelligent he was and the better his physique--which would
-indicate a relation to the better diet in the lush, well-watered and
-game-filled valleys and foothills. Some of the women are described by
-early writers as "exceedingly pretty." Others, "flat-faced and pudgy."
-"The Indians in the northern portion ... are vastly superior in stature
-and intellect to those found in the southern part." (Hubbard, Golden
-Era, 1856.)
-
-Certainly those found in Death Valley country reflected in their persons
-and in their character the niggardly land and the struggle for survival
-upon it. They were treacherous as its terrain. Cruel as its cactus.
-Tenacious as its stunted life.
-
-It is interesting to note the range of opinion and the conclusions drawn
-by earlier travelers.
-
-Of the Shoshones: "Very rigid in their morals." (Remi and Brenchley's
-Journal, Vol. 1, p. 85.)
-
-"They of all men are lowest, lying in a state of semi-torpor in holes in
-the ground in winter and in spring, crawling forth and eating grass on
-their hands and knees until able to regain their feet ... living in
-filth ... no bridles on their passions ... surely room for no missing
-links between them and brutes." (Bancroft's Native Races, Vol. 1, p.
-440.)
-
-"It is common practice ... to gamble away their wives and children.... A
-husband will prostitute his wife to a stranger for a trifling present."
-(Ibid. ch. 4, Vol. 1.)
-
-"Our Piute has a peculiar way of getting a foretaste of connubial
-bliss--cohabiting experimentally with his intended for two or three days
-previous to the nuptial ceremony, at the end of which time either party
-can stay further proceedings to indulge further trials until a companion
-more congenial is found." (S. F. Medical Press, Vol. 3, p. 155. See
-also, Lewis and Clark's Travels, p. 307.)
-
-"The Piutes are the most degraded and least intellectual Indians known
-to trappers." (Farnham's Life, p. 336.)
-
-"Pah-utes are undoubtedly the most docile Indians on the continent."
-(Indian Affairs Report, 1859, p. 374.)
-
-"Honest and trustworthy, but lazy and dirty," is said of the Shoshones.
-(Remi and Brenchley's Journal, p. 123.) Some ethnologists declare they
-cannot be identified with any other American tribe.
-
-Wives were purchased, cash or credit. Polygamy prevailed. Unmarried
-women belonged to all, but Gibbs says women bewailed their virginity for
-three days prior to marriage. "They allow but one wife." (Prince in
-California Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861.)
-
-Husbands were allowed to kill their mothers-in-law. The heart of a
-valiant enemy killed in battle was eaten raw or cut into pieces and made
-into soup. Women captives of other tribes were ravished, sold or kept as
-slaves. Some Southern California tribes sold their women and
-occasionally tribes were found without a single squaw.
-
-"They are exceedingly virtuous." (Remi and Brenchley's Journal, Vol. 1,
-pp. 1-23-8.)
-
-"Given to sensual excesses." (Farnham's Travel, p. 62.)
-
-"The Nevada Shoshones are the most pure and uncorrupted aborigines on
-the continent ... scrupulously clean ... chaste." (Prince, California
-Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861.)
-
-Thus the Indian who came or was driven to this wasteland evoked
-conflicting opinions and the real picture is vague.
-
-The lowest of California Indians is believed to have been the Digger,
-so-called because he existed chiefly upon roots and lived in burrows of
-his own making, but his isolation by ethnologists is not convincing. He
-was found around Shoshone by Fremont and Kit Carson and inhabited
-valleys to the north and west, but in the Death Valley region the Piute
-and Shoshone were dominant.
-
-Blood vengeance was deep-rooted. Found with the Indian collection of Dr.
-Simeon Lee at Carson City was a revealing manuscript that tells how
-swiftly it struck.
-
-Mudge rode up to another Indian standing on a Carson City street and
-without warning shot him dead and galloped away. The dead man had two
-cousins working at Lake Tahoe. The murder had occurred at 9:30 a.m. and
-by some means of communication unknown to whites, they were on Mudge's
-trail within two hours and had found him. Mudge promptly killed them
-both and fled again. Sheriff Ulric engaged Captain Johnnie, a Piute, to
-track the slayer. He found Mudge's lair, but Mudge was a sure shot, well
-protected and to rush him meant certain death. The posse decided to keep
-watch until thirst or hunger forced him out. "Me fix um," said Captain
-Johnnie.
-
-He disappeared, but soon returned with an enormous amount of tempting
-food which he contrived to place within easy reach of Mudge. "Him see
-moppyass (food). Eat bellyful and fall down asleep."
-
-That is exactly what happened and old Demi-John, the father of the
-murdered boys crawled stealthily through the sage and with his hunting
-knife severed the head from the sleeping Mudge's body.
-
-In Mono county Piutes killed the Chinese owner of a cafe and fed the
-carcass to their dogs. In court they blandly confessed and justified it,
-claiming the Chinaman had killed and pickled one of their missing
-tribesmen and then sold and served to them portions of the victim as
-"corned beef and cabbage."
-
-For the desert Indian life was raw to the bone. He was an unemotional,
-fatalistic creature as ruthless as the land. In the struggle to live, he
-had acquired endurance and cunning. He knew his desert--its moods, its
-stingy dole, its chary tolerance of life. He knew where the mountain
-sheep hid, the screw-bean grew and the fat lizard crawled. He knew where
-the drop of water seeped from the lone hill. He combed the lower levels
-of the range for chuckwalla, edible snakes, horned toads--anything with
-flesh; stuffed the kill into bags and preserved them for later use. He
-made flour from mesquite beans; stored pions, roots, herbs in his
-desperate fight to survive, and anything that crawled, flew, or walked
-was food. I have seen a squaw squatted beside the carcass of a dog,
-picking out the firmer flesh.
-
-When the Piute came to a spring, the first thing he did was to look
-about for a flat rock which he was sure to find if a member of his tribe
-had previously been there. Kneeling, he would skim the water from the
-surface and dash it upon this rock. Then he smelled the rock. If there
-was an odor of onion or garlic, he knew it contained arsenic and was
-deadly. Naturally, he would be concerned about another water hole. He
-had only to look about him. He would find partially imbedded in the
-earth several stones fixed in the form of a circle not entirely closed.
-The opening pointed in the direction of the next water. The distance to
-that water was indicated by stones inside the circle. There he would
-find for example, three stones pointing toward the opening. He knew that
-each of those stones indicated one "sleep." Therefore he would have to
-sleep three times before he got there. In other words, it was three
-days' journey.
-
-But which of these trails leading to the water should he take? There
-might be several trails converging at the water hole. The matter was
-decided for him. He walked along each of those trails for a few feet.
-Beside one of them he would find an oblong stone. By its shape and
-position he knew that was the trail that led to the next water.
-
-Under such circumstances a man would perhaps wonder if upon arrival at
-the next water hole he would find that water also unfit to use. The
-information was at hand. If, upon top of that oblong stone he found a
-smaller stone placed crosswise and white in color, he knew the water
-would be good water. If a piece of black malpai was there instead of the
-white stone, he knew the next water would be poison also.
-
-Not infrequently he would find other information at the water hole if
-there were boulders about, or chalky cliffs upon which the Indian could
-place his picture writing. If he saw the crude drawing of a lone man, it
-indicated that the land about was uninhabited except by hunters, but if
-upon the pictured torso were marks indicating the breasts of a woman, he
-knew there was a settlement about and he would find squaws and children
-and something to eat.
-
-Frequently other information was left for this wayfaring Indian. Under
-conspicuous stones about, he might find a feather with a hole punched
-through it or one that was notched. The former indicated that one had
-been there who had killed his man. The notch indicated that he had cut a
-throat.
-
-Since there was a difference between the moccasins of Indian tribes, the
-dust about would often inform him whether the buck who went before was
-friend or enemy.
-
-Like all American aborigines, the Piute had his medicine man, but the
-manner of his choosing is not clear. The one selected had to accept the
-role, though the honor never thrilled him, because he knew that when the
-score of death was three against him he would join his lost patients in
-the happy hereafter. Occasionally he was stoned to death by the
-relatives of the first lost patient and with the approval of the rest of
-the tribe. Not infrequently it was believed the medicine man's departed
-spirit then entered the medicine man's kin and they were also butchered
-or stoned to death.
-
-
-Note. Early writers refer to Pau Eutahs, Pah Utes, Paiuches, Pyutes, and
-Paiutes. The word Piute is believed to mean true Ute.
-
-Bancroft claimed the Piutes and Pah Utes were separate tribes, the
-latter being the Trout or Ochi Indians of Walker River; the former the
-Tule (or Toy) Indians of Pyramid Lake.
-
-There was an undetermined number of branches of the original Utah stock.
-Besides the above, there was another tribe called by other Indians,
-Cozaby Piutes, Cozaby being the Indian name of a worm that literally
-covered the shores of Mono Lake. This worm was a principal food of the
-tribe.
-
-Though "Piute" is the spelling justifiably used throughout the region,
-"Pahute" was chosen a few years ago by a group of scholars as the
-preferable form.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VIII
- Desert Gold. Too Many Fractions
-
-
-On the Nevada desert wind-whipped Mount Davidson (or Sun Mountain)
-guided the Forty Niners across the flat Washoe waste. At its foot they
-rested and cursed it because it impeded their progress to the California
-goldfields. Ten years later they rushed back because it had become the
-fabulous Comstock, said to have produced more than $880,000,000, though
-the Nevada State bureau of mines places the figure at $347,892,336. The
-truth lies somewhere between.
-
-"Pancake" Comstock had acquired, more by bluff and cunning than labor,
-title to gold claims others had discovered and cursed a "blue stuff"
-that slowed the recovery of visible particles of gold. Later the "blue
-stuff" was blessed as incredibly rich silver. A mountain of gold and
-silver side by side. It just couldn't be.
-
-A new crop of overnight millionaires. New feet feeling for the first
-step on the social ladder. The Mackays, the Floods, the Fairs, the
-Hearsts.
-
-All this was more like current than twenty year old history to Jim
-Butler on May 18, 1900, when his hungry burro strayed up a hill in
-search of grass. Soon a city stood where the burro ate and soon
-adventurers were poking around in the canyons of Death Valley, 66 miles
-south.
-
-Jim Butler, more rancher than gold hunter was a likable happy-go-lucky
-fellow, who could strum a banjo and sing a song. But when he found the
-burro in Sawtooth Pass he saw a ledge which looked as if it might have
-values. Born in El Dorado county in California in 1855, Butler was more
-or less gold conscious, but unexcited he stuck a few samples in his
-pocket and went on after the burro.
-
-A story survives which states that a half-breed Shoshone Indian known as
-Charles Fisherman had told Butler of the existence of the ore without
-disclosing its location and that Butler was actually searching for it
-when the burro strayed. The preponderance of evidence, however,
-indicates that Butler was en route to Belmont to see his friend, Tasker
-Oddie, who was batching there in a cabin. He gave Oddie one of the
-samples and after his visit, left for home.
-
-Oddie laid the sample on a window sill and forgot it.
-
-In Klondike a few days later, Butler showed another sample to Frank
-Higgs, an assayer. Half in jest he said: "Frank, I've no money to pay
-for an assay, but I'll cut you in on this stuff if it shows anything."
-
-Higgs looked at the sample and returned it to Butler: "Just a waste of
-time. Forget it."
-
-Later in Belmont Henry Broderick, a prospector dropped in for a visit
-with Oddie and noticed the sample Butler had given Oddie and looked it
-over. "This ore has good values," he told Oddie. "It's worth
-investigating." Oddie knew that Broderick's opinion was not to be
-underrated.
-
-Oddie was a young lawyer with little practice and a salary of $100 a
-year as District Attorney. Belmont had a population of 100. Oddie didn't
-have two dollars to risk, but he took the sample to W. C. Gayhart at
-Austin and offered Gayhart a fractional interest if he'd assay it. With
-few customers, Gayhart took a chance.
-
-The ore showed values and Oddie was mildly excited. Butler lived 35
-miles away in wild, difficult country and Oddie wrote him, enclosing the
-assay. Several weeks passed before Butler received the letter. Then
-Butler and his wife returned to Belmont only to find Oddie could not go
-with them. Jim and Mrs. Butler now returned home, loaded provisions,
-tools, and camp equipment in a wagon and three days later, Aug. 26,
-1900, they reached Sawtooth Pass and made camp.
-
-The Butlers staked out eight claims. Jim took for himself the one he
-considered best. He named it The Desert Queen. Mrs. Butler chose another
-and called it Mizpah. Jim located another for Oddie and named it Burro.
-The best proved to be Mrs. Butler's Mizpah.
-
-Returning to Belmont, they found Oddie at home. The matter of recording
-the location notices had to be attended to. "That will cost ten or
-fifteen dollars," Butler said. Neither of them had any money. Wils
-Brougher was recorder of Nye county and Oddie's friend, so Oddie made a
-proposition to Brougher. "If you'll pay the recorder's fees we'll give
-you an eighth."
-
-Brougher said, "Nye county is one of the largest counties in the United
-States, but there are only 400 people in it and I'm not getting many
-fees these days. Leave 'em."
-
-After they'd gone Brougher looked at the assay Oddie had left and
-decided to take a chance. The setup was now: Butler and his wife
-five-eighths, Oddie, Brougher, and Gayhart, one-eighth each.
-
-They managed to pool resources and obtained $25 in cash to provide
-material and provisions.
-
-Brougher, Oddie, Jim, and Mrs. Butler set out in October, 1900. Mrs.
-Butler did the cooking while the men dug, drilled, and blasted two tons
-of ore. The ore was sacked and hauled 150 miles to Austin and shipped to
-a San Francisco smelter. The returns showed high values but still they
-had a major problem--money to develop the claims. Because the country
-had been prospected and pronounced worthless, men of millions were not
-backing a banjo-picking rancher and a young lawyer with no money and few
-clients. The answer was leasing to idle miners willing to gamble muscle
-against money. The venture made many of them rich. The others recovered
-more than wages. As the leases expired the owners took them over.
-
-The camp where Mrs. Butler cooked became the site of the Mizpah Hotel
-and the City of Tonopah and the hill where the burro strayed produced
-many millions.
-
-There are several versions of the Butler discovery and the writer does
-not pretend that his own is the true one. He can only say that he knew
-many of those who were first on the scene and some of those who held the
-first and best leases, and his conclusions are based on their personal
-narratives.
-
-Oddie became one of the moguls of mining, Nevada's governor, and a
-senator of the United States.
-
-Twenty-six miles south of Tonopah was a place known as Grandpa, so named
-because there were always a few old prospectors camped at the water hole
-known as Rabbit Springs. These patriarchs had combed the desert about,
-for years without success.
-
-Al Myers, a prospector working on a hill nearby, came to the Grandpa
-Spring to fill a barrel of water and found his friend, Shorty Harris,
-who had been camping there, packing his burros to leave. "Better hang
-around, Shorty," Al advised. "I'm getting color."
-
-"Luck to you," Shorty laughed. "But any place where these old grandpas
-can't find color, is no place for me."
-
-In six weeks Myers and Tom Murphy made the big strike (1903) and Grandpa
-became Goldfield--one of the West's most spectacular camps. Some of the
-more promising claims of Goldfield were leased, the most valuable being
-that of Hays and Monette, on the Mohawk. In 106 days the lease produced
-$5,000,000.
-
-Out of the Mohawk one car was shipped which yielded over $579,000 and
-ore in all of the better mines was so rich that Goldfield quickly became
-the high-grader's paradise. Though wages at Tonopah were twice those
-paid at Goldfield, miners deserted the older camp for the lower wage and
-made more than the difference by concealing high-grade in the cuffs of
-their overalls or in other ingenious receptacles built into their
-clothing. Miners and muckers took the girls of their choice out of
-honkies and installed them in cottages. More than one of these gorgeous
-creatures, having found her man in her boom-town crib, later ascended
-life's grand stairway to live virtuously and bravely in a Wilshire
-mansion or a swank hotel.
-
-To stop the stealing, a change room was installed but many had already
-secured themselves against want. A wealthy resident of California once
-told me: "With the proceeds of the high-grade I took home I built
-rentals that led to bank connections and more lucky investments.
-Everybody was doing it."
-
-Tex Rickard, a gambler and saloon man, already known in Alaska and San
-Francisco for spectacular adventures, here began his career as a sports
-promoter in the ill-advised Jeffries-Johnson fight.
-
-One morning his Great Northern had more than its usual crowd. Men stood
-three deep at the bar, games were busy and Billy Murray, the cashier was
-rushed. It was not unusual for desert men to leave their money with
-Murray. He would tag and sack it and toss it aside, but today there was
-a steady stream being poked at him. Finally it got in his way and he had
-it taken through the alley to the bank, but the deluge continued.
-
-When it again got in his way, his assistant having stepped out, Billy
-took it to the bank himself. There he learned the reason for the flood
-of money. A run was being made on the John S. Cook bank. He satisfied
-himself that the bank was safe and returned to his cage. As fast as the
-money came in the front door, it went out the back and Billy Murray thus
-saved the bank and the town from collapse.
-
-A resourceful youngster who knew that wherever men recklessly acquire,
-they recklessly spend, dropped in from Oregon, got a job in Tom
-Kendall's Tonopah Club as a dealer. Good looking and likable, he made
-friends, took over the gambling concession and was soon taking over
-Goldfield and the state of Nevada. He was George Wingfield, who, when
-offered a seat in the United States Senate, calmly declined it.
-
-Goldfield is only 40 miles from the northern boundary of Death Valley
-National Monument and was in bonanza when Shorty Harris walked into the
-Great Northern saloon. "I've been drinking gulch likker," he told the
-bartender. "Give me the best in the house."
-
-The bartender reached for a bottle. "This is 100 proof 14 year old
-bourbon."
-
-Shorty drank it, laid a goldpiece on the bar. "Good stuff. I'll have
-another."
-
-"You must be celebrating," the bartender said.
-
-"You guessed it," Shorty said and laid a piece of high-grade beside his
-glass. "I've got more gold where that came from than Uncle Sam's got in
-the mint."
-
-A faro dealer noticed the ore and picked it up. "Good looking rock," he
-said and passed it to a promoter standing by. In a moment a crowd had
-gathered. "Looks like Breyfogle quartz," the promoter said and led
-Shorty aside. "I can make you a million on this. Want to sell?"
-
-"Not on your life," Shorty said, but after pressure and a few drinks, he
-agreed to part with an eighth interest. The deal closed, he left to see
-friends around town. He found each of them in a barroom. News of his
-strike had preceded him and each time he laid the ore on the bar someone
-wanted an interest. Someone called him aside and someone bought the
-drinks.
-
-Within an hour every fortune hunter in Goldfield was looking for Shorty
-Harris, each believing Shorty had found the Lost Breyfogle.
-
-When he left town, weaving in the dust of his burros, sixteen men wished
-him well, for each had a piece of paper conveying a one-eighth interest
-in Shorty's claim.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter IX
- Romance Strikes the Parson
-
-
-Scorning Al Myers's advice to locate a claim on the Goldfield hill,
-Shorty Harris headed south, prospecting as he went until he reached
-Monte Beatty's ranch where he camped with Beatty, a squaw man. "I'm
-going to look at a rhyolite formation in the hills four miles west. It
-looks good--that hill," Shorty told him.
-
-"Forget it," Beatty said, "I've combed every inch."
-
-With faith in Beatty's knowledge of the country, he abandoned the trip
-and crossed the Amargosa desert to Daylight Springs, found the country
-full of amateur prospectors excited by the discoveries at Tonopah and
-Goldfield. After a few weeks he decided there was nothing worthwhile to
-be found. "I had a hunch Beatty could be wrong about that formation and
-decided to go back."
-
-He was well outfitted and with five burros and more than enough
-provisions, was ready to go when, out of the bush came a cleancut
-youngster--a novice who had brought his wife along.
-
-"Shorty," he said, "we're out of grub. Can you spare any?"
-
-"Sure. But you'd be better off to go with me. I have enough grub for all
-of us."
-
-Ed Cross had all to gain; nothing to lose by following an experienced
-prospector.
-
-At a water hole known as Buck Springs they made camp. Within an hour
-they went up a canyon, each working a side of it. Shorty broke a piece
-of quartz from an outcropping; saw shades of turquoise and jade. "Come
-a-runnin' Ed," he shouted. "We've got the world by the tail and a
-downhill pull."
-
-They staked out the discovery claims. "How many more should we locate?"
-Cross asked.
-
-"None. Give the other fellow a chance. If this is as good as we think,
-we've got all the money we'll ever need. If it isn't and the other
-fellow makes a good showing it will help us sell this one."
-
-They went to Goldfield. Shorty showed the sample to Bob Montgomery, an
-old friend. Bob was skeptical. But in an hour the news was out and
-Goldfield en masse headed for the new strike. Those, who couldn't get
-conveyances, walked. Some pulled burro carts across the desert. Some
-started out with wheelbarrows. Jack Salsbury began to move lumber.
-Others brought merchandise, barrels of liquor. Everything to build a
-town.
-
-"Specimens of my ore," Shorty said, "were used by Tiffany for ring
-settings, lavallieres, bracelets. It went to Paris and London. Ore
-broken from the ledge sold for $50 a pound. I must have given away
-thousands of dollars' worth of it for souvenirs."
-
-Overnight Rhyolite was born. Shorty bought a barrel of liquor, drove a
-row of nails around the barrel, hung tin dippers on the nails and
-invited the town to quench its thirst. Two railroads came. One, 114
-miles from Las Vegas. Another, 200 miles from Ludlow.
-
-"Two things influenced me in naming it Bullfrog," Shorty said. "Ed had
-asked, 'what'll we name it?' As I looked at the green ore in my hand, a
-frog bellowed. 'Bullfrog,' I said." (One writer has stated erroneously
-that there is not a bullfrog on the desert.)
-
-The tycoons of mining and their agents appeared as if borne on magic
-carpets and in a little while men who would have turned him from their
-doors, were fawning around the little man with the golden smile and the
-ugly brawl for the Bullfrog was on--a struggle between cheap promoters
-who gave him cheap whiskey and moguls who gave him champagne.
-
-Scores of yarns have been written about the sale of the Bullfrog. It was
-one of the few things in Shorty's life which he discussed with reserve.
-In my residence two years before he died and in my presence he told my
-wife, to whom he was singularly devoted, the sordid story. "Cross had a
-good head," Shorty said. "He attended to business, sold his interest and
-retired to a good ranch.
-
-"I woke up one morning and judging from the empties, I must have had a
-grand evening. I reached for a full pint on the table and under it was a
-piece of paper with a note. I read it and learned for the first time
-that I'd sold the Bullfrog."
-
-"The law would have released you from that contract," I said.
-
-"I'd signed it," he answered quietly.
-
-I thought of the crumbling adobe on the Ballarat flat and the lean years
-that followed.
-
-"At that, I got good money for a fellow like me," he added. "I've never
-wanted for anything."
-
-A fortune blown like a bubble meant absolutely nothing--stopped no
-laugh; dimmed no hope; quenched no fire in his eager eyes.
-
-"If I'd got those millions the big boys would have hauled me off to
-town, put a white shirt on me. Maybe they would have made me believe
-Shorty Harris was important. 'Mr. Harris this and Mr. Harris that.' I've
-got something they can't take away. I step out of my cabin every morning
-and look it over--100 miles of outdoors. All mine."
-
-The future of Rhyolite seemed assured when Bob Montgomery sold to
-Charles M. Schwab, president of Bethlehem Steel Company, his interest in
-the claim known as the Montgomery Shoshone for more than $2,000,000.
-
-The discovery of this claim has been accredited to Shoshone Johnnie and
-historians have said that Montgomery bought it from Johnnie for a pair
-of overalls, a buggy, and a few dollars. Actually Bob Montgomery was
-among the first on the scene following Shorty's discovery strike and
-located the claim himself. Even if Johnnie had located it Montgomery
-would have been entitled to one-half interest for the reason that he had
-been grubstaking Johnnie for years.
-
-It never paid as a mine, but America was gold mad and the two railroads
-which brought mail for Rhyolite also carried stock certificates out and
-the promoters lost nothing.
-
-The strike at Bullfrog was made in 1904. Rhyolite attained a population
-of about 14,000 at its peak--then started downward. On January 1, 1926,
-I made a camp fire in its empty streets and beside it tried to sleep
-through a biting wind that seemed aptly enough a dirge. The next morning
-I poked around in the abandoned stores to marvel at things of value left
-behind. Chinaware and silver in hurriedly abandoned houses and in the
-leading cafe. The cribs still bore the castoff ribbons and silks of the
-girls and for all I know, the satin slipper which I found on a bed may
-have been the one that Shorty Harris filled with champagne to toast the
-charms of Flaming Jane.
-
-I walked up to the vacant depot. Across the door, through which
-thousands had passed from incoming trains with youth and hope and the
-eagerness of life, lay the long-dead carcass of a cow. It fitted, it
-seemed to me, the scene about.
-
-Like Tonopah, Skidoo on top of Tucki Mountain overlooking Death Valley
-may be accredited to the straying of a burro in 1905.
-
-John Ramsey and John Thompson, two prospectors, camped overnight in
-Emigrant Canyon which leads into Death Valley. The grass about was lush
-and they thought it safe to turn the burros loose. The burros strayed
-during the night and because the walls on the east side of the canyon
-are perpendicular, search was immediately confined to the sloping west
-area. But the burros, always unpredictable, found a way to ascend Tucki
-Mountain and there they were found--one of them actually straddling an
-outcropping of gold.
-
-This happened on the 23rd day of the month and because of a popular
-current slang expression, "Twenty-three for you--skidoo," (meaning
-phooey, or shut up) the claim and the town were named Skidoo.
-
-Bob Montgomery bought the claim on sight. A winding road with a
-spectacular view of Death Valley was built, a mill installed on the side
-of Telephone Canyon and water brought 22 miles from Panamint Canyon. A
-long rambling building on top of the mountain served as offices and
-living quarters for officials. A broad porch encircled it and afforded a
-sweeping and unforgettable view of Death Valley country.
-
-On the area about this building was the company town. Adjoining was "Our
-Town" where the cribs and honkies thrived.
-
-I first visited it with Shorty Harris, holding my breath most of the way
-on the steep, narrow, and winding road. We appropriated the company
-building for our temporary home. Shorty had owned claims there and had
-helped build the road.
-
-Montgomery paid $60,000 for the claims and took out $9,000,000 before
-production costs exceeded his profits, when work was abandoned.
-
-During World War I, Montgomery sold the pipe, which had brought the
-water to Skidoo, to Standard Oil Company at a price far in excess of its
-cost. That was the end of Skidoo.
-
-More interesting to me than the fate of Skidoo was that of Blonde Betty
-and the traveling preacher, of which Shorty was reminded when we
-strolled by the crib in which Betty had lived.
-
-"Skagway Thompson, as fine a chap as ever drew a cork, died right over
-there in that shack and we decided he deserved a nice planting.
-Everybody liked Skagway. Only women around at that time were crib girls
-and they banked his grave with wild flowers and I got this sky pilot to
-say a few words.
-
-"He was a young fellow, good looking and agreeable. I told him Skagway's
-friends thought it would be nice if one of the women in town would sing
-Skagway's favorite song. 'It's called "When the Wedding Bells Are
-Ringing"' I said, 'and I hope you don't mind if it's not in the hymn
-books.' I didn't tell him the girl who was going to sing it was Blonde
-Betty--a chippy--figuring he'd be on his way before he found out. That
-gal could sing like a flock of larks and after the service the preacher
-barged up to me and said he wanted to meet Betty and would I introduce
-him.
-
-"There was no way out and besides, I figured what he didn't know
-wouldn't hurt him. He told her what a wonderful voice she had, how the
-song had touched him and hoped she would sing at one of his meetings.
-
-"Blonde Betty was pretty as curly ribbon and I was afraid every minute
-he was going to ask if he could call on her, so I horned in and said,
-'Parson, excuse me, but I promised I would bring Miss Betty home right
-away.'
-
-"So I took her arm and pulled her away.
-
-"'You big-mouthed bum,' Betty says when we were out of hearing. 'Why
-don't you attend to your own business? I know how to act.'"
-
-Shorty pointed to a riot of wild flowers on the side of a hill across
-the gulch. "The next day I saw her and the Parson picking flowers right
-over there. Of course he didn't know then what she was. After that I
-reckon he didn't give a dam'. He chucked the preaching job and ran off
-with Betty. But maybe God went along. They got married and live over in
-Nevada and you couldn't find a happier family or a finer brood of
-children anywhere.
-
-"It is no argument for sin, but this was a hell of a country in those
-days and you just couldn't always live by the Book."
-
-On July 4, 1905 Shorty Harris made the strike which started the town of
-Harrisburg, now only a name on a signboard. A feud due to a partnership
-of curious origin, started immediately and is worth mention only because
-it confused historians of a later period who, gathering material after
-Shorty's death have given only the story of the feudist who survived
-him.
-
-Here is Shorty's version: "I was trying to save distance by taking the
-Blackwater trail across Death Valley into the Panamint. I had been over
-the country and had seen a formation that looked good and was going back
-to look it over. The Blackwater trail is a wet trail and one of my
-burros sank in the ooze. I had just gotten her out when a fellow I'd
-never seen before, came up. He said he was a stranger in the country and
-he wanted to get to Emigrant Springs where his two partners were
-waiting. He explained that the foreman at Furnace Creek had told him I
-had left only a short while before, but he might overtake me by
-hurrying, and I would show him the way. Then he asked if he could join
-me.
-
-"I told him it was free country and nobody on the square was barred.
-When I reached my destination I showed him the trail to Emigrant
-Springs. I reckon I talked too much on the way over--maybe made him
-think I had a gold mountain. Anyway, he said he believed he would look
-around a little to see what he could find. I didn't even know his name
-and though it was against the unwritten code, he followed me. There
-wasn't anything I could do about it without trouble and I was looking
-for gold--not trouble.
-
-"In 15 minutes I had found gold. He was pecking around a short distance
-away and also found rock with color and claimed a half interest. It was
-then that I learned his name--Pete Auguerreberry and that his partners
-were Flynn and Cavanaugh. Wild Bill Corcoran had grubstaked me. I told
-Pete five partners were too many and we should agree upon a division
-point--each taking a full claim and he could have his choice.
-
-"He refused and wanted half interest in both and nothing short of murder
-would have budged him. I went to Rhyolite for Bill Corcoran. He went for
-his partners. When we met, Corcoran had an offer to buy, sight unseen,
-from one of Schwab's agents. Everyone of us wanted to sell, except Pete
-who stood out for a fantastic price. His partners offered to give him a
-part of their share if he would accept the offer. Pete refused. He
-thought it was worth millions. Wild Bill organized a company and we
-started work."
-
-For awhile it seemed the Harrisburg claims would prove to be good
-producers. In the end it was just another town on the map for Shorty.
-Futile years for Pete.
-
-
-Once I asked Shorty Harris how he obtained his grubstakes. "Grubstakes,"
-he answered, "like gold, are where you find them. Once I was broke in
-Pioche, Nev., and couldn't find a grubstake anywhere. Somebody told me
-that a woman on a ranch a few miles out wanted a man for a few days'
-work. I hoofed it out under a broiling sun, but when I got there, the
-lady said she had no job. I reckon she saw my disappointment and when
-her cat came up and began to mew, she told me the cat had an even dozen
-kittens and she would give me a dollar if I would take 'em down the road
-and kill 'em.
-
-"'It's a deal,' I said. She got 'em in a sack and I started back to
-town. I intended to lug 'em a few miles away and turn 'em loose, because
-I haven't got the heart to kill anything.
-
-"A dozen kittens makes quite a load and I had to sit down pretty often
-to rest. A fellow in a two-horse wagon came along and offered me a ride.
-I picked up the sack and climbed in.
-
-"'Cats, eh?' the fellow said. 'They ought to bring a good price. I was
-in Colorado once. Rats and mice were taking the town. I had a cat. She
-would have a litter every three months. I had no trouble selling them
-cats for ten dollars apiece. Beat a gold mine.'
-
-"There were plenty rats in Pioche and that sack of kittens went like
-hotcakes. One fellow didn't have any money and offered me a goat. I knew
-a fellow who wanted a goat. He lived on the same lot as I did. Name was
-Pete Swain.
-
-"Pete was all lit up when I offered him the goat for fifty dollars. He
-peeled the money off his roll and took the goat into his shack. A few
-days later Pete came to his door and called me over and shoved a fifty
-dollar note into my hands. 'I just wanted you to see what that goat's
-doing,' he said.
-
-"I looked inside. The goat was pulling the cork out of a bottle of
-liquor with his teeth.
-
-"'That goat's drunk as a boiled owl,' Pete said. 'If I ever needed any
-proof that there's something in this idea of the transmigration of
-souls, that goat gives it. He's Jimmy, my old sidekick, who, I figgered
-was dead and buried.'
-
-"'Now listen,' I said. 'Do you mean to tell me you actually believe that
-goat is your old pal, whom you drank with and played with and saw buried
-with your own eyes, right up there on the hill?'
-
-"'Exactly,' Pete shouted, and he peeled off another fifty and gave it to
-me. So, you see, a grubstake, like gold, is where you find it."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter X
- Greenwater--Last of the Boom Towns
-
-
-Located on Black Mountain in the Funeral Range on the east side of Death
-Valley, Greenwater was the last boom town founded in the mad decade
-which followed Jim Butler's strike at Tonopah. Records show locations of
-mining claims in the district as early as 1884, but all were abandoned.
-
-The location notice of a "gold and silver claim" was filed in 1884 by
-Doc Trotter, a famous character of the desert, remembered both for his
-good fellowship and his burro--Honest John--a habitual thief of
-incredible cunning, "Picked locks with baling wire...."
-
-The first location of a copper claim was made by Frank McAllister who,
-with a man named Cooper and Arthur Kunzie, may be credited with one of
-the West's most spectacular mining booms.
-
-In 1905 Phil Creaser and Fred Birney took samples of the Copper Blue
-Ledge and sent them to Patsy Clark, who was so impressed that he
-dispatched Joseph P. Harvey, a prominent mining engineer to look at the
-property. Harvey started from Daggett and had reached Cave Spring in the
-Avawatz Mountains when he was caught in a cloudburst and lost all his
-equipment. He returned to Daggett, secured a new outfit and this time
-reached Black Mountain, but was unable to locate the claims.
-
-Again Birney and Creaser contacted Clark and this time the mining
-magnate came to Rhyolite, ordered another examination of the property,
-giving his agent authority to buy. Upon the assay's showing, the claims
-were bought. Immediately Charles M. Schwab, August Heinze, Tasker L.
-Oddie, Borax Smith, W. A. Clark, and many other moguls of mining hurried
-to the scene or sent their agents. In their wake came gamblers,
-merchants, crib girls, soldiers of fortune, and thugs.
-
-$4,125,000 was paid for 2500 claims. Result--a hectic town with as many
-as 100 people a day pouring out of the canyons onto the barren, windy
-slope.
-
-Noted mining engineers announced that Black Mountain was one huge
-deposit of copper with a thin overlay of rock, dirt, and gravel. "It
-will make Butte's 'Richest Hill on Earth' look like beggars' pickings,"
-they announced.
-
-Greenwater stocks sky-rocketed and so many people poured into the new
-camp that the town was moved two miles from the mines in order to take
-care of the growth which it was believed would soon make it a
-metropolis. Before pick and shovel had made more than a dent on the
-crust of Black Mountain, two newspapers, a bank, express lines, and a
-magazine were in operation.
-
-Here Shorty Harris missed another fortune only because his partner went
-on a drunk.
-
-Leaving Rhyolite, Shorty had induced Judge Decker, a convivial resident
-of Ballarat to furnish a grubstake to look over Black Mountain. He made
-several locations, erected his monuments, returned to Ballarat and gave
-them to Decker to be recorded.
-
-When the papers reached Ballarat with the news that the copper barons
-were bidding recklessly for Greenwater claims Shorty was broke again.
-Bursting into Chris Wicht's saloon, he shouted, "Where's the Judge?"
-
-Chris nodded toward the end of the bar where the Judge, swaying
-slightly, was waving his glass in lieu of a baton while leading the
-quartet in "Sweet Adeline." Wedging through the crowd, Shorty touched
-the Judge's elbow: "Lay off that cooking likker, Judge. It's Mum's Extra
-for us from now on."
-
-"Yeh? How come?" the Judge asked thickly.
-
-"We're worth a billion dollars," Shorty said. "I staked out that whole
-dam' mountain. Where're those location notices?"
-
-"What location notices?" Decker blinked.
-
-"The ones I gave you to take to Independence."
-
-With one hand the Judge steadied himself on the bar. With the other he
-fumbled through his pockets, finally producing a frayed batch of papers,
-covered with barroom doodling, but no recorder's receipt for the
-location notices. "Well, I'll be damned," he muttered.
-
-"So'll I," Shorty gulped.
-
-If Decker had recorded the notices both he and Shorty would have become
-rich through the sale of those claims.
-
-When laborers cleared the ground to begin work for Schwab, Patsy Clark,
-and others, they tore down the monuments containing the unrecorded
-notices.
-
-In a little cemetery on the gravel flats at Ballarat, lies Decker.
-
-Pleasantly refreshed with liquor one yawny afternoon he managed to have
-the last word in an argument with the constable, Henry Pietsch and went
-happily to his room. Later the constable thought of a way to win the
-argument and went to the Judge's cabin. A shot was heard and Pietsch
-came through the door with a smoking gun in his hand. Decker, he said,
-had started for a pistol in his dresser drawer. But Decker was found
-with a hole in his back, his spine severed. At Independence, the
-constable was acquitted for lack of evidence and returned to Ballarat to
-resume his duties, but was told that he might live longer somewhere
-else. Pietsch didn't argue this time and thus avoided a lynching. He
-left Ballarat and, I believe, was hanged for another murder.
-
-Among those who came early to Greenwater, none was more outstanding than
-a gorgeous creature with a wasp waist who stepped from the stage one
-day, patted her pompadour with jewelled fingers, gave the bustling town
-an approving glance. Then she turned to the bevy of blondes and
-brunettes she had brought. "It's a man's town, girls...."
-
-Bystanders were already eyeing the girls; their scarlet lips and the
-deep dark danger in their roving eyes.
-
-So Diamond Tooth Lil was welcomed to Greenwater and became important
-both in its business and social economy.
-
-It was agreed that Lil was a good fellow. Greenwater also learned that
-her word was good as her bond. She kept an orderly five dollar house and
-if anyone chose to break her rules of conduct, he ran afoul of her
-six-gun. Because she could fight like a jungle beast, she was also
-called Tiger Lil. Somewhere along the line, four of her upper teeth had
-been broken and in each of the replacements was set a diamond of first
-quality. As Greenwater prospered so did Diamond Tooth Lil.
-
-One day an exotic creature with a suggestion of Spanish-Creole and dark,
-compelling eyes dropped off the stage. She too had pretty girls and when
-the new bagnio had its grand opening, with champagne and imported
-orchestra, Diamond Tooth Lil sent a huge floral piece.
-
-A few nights later Lil was sitting in her parlor wondering where the men
-were. The girls were all banked around with folded hands.
-
-"Maybe there's a celebration...." A moment later a belated male barged
-in.
-
-"Willie, where's everybody?" Lil asked.
-
-Willie flicked a look at the idle girls. "Maybe," he announced, "they're
-down at that new cut-rate menage."
-
-"Cut-rate?" Lil cried.
-
-"Yeh. Three dollars."
-
-A steely glint came into Diamond Tooth Lil's eyes.
-
-She tossed her cigarette into the cuspidor, went to her room, picked up
-her six-gun, saw that it was loaded and hurried to her rival's.
-
-A rap on the door brought the dark beauty to the porch. "Listen dearie,"
-Diamond Tooth Lil began. "This is a union town. I hear you're scabbing."
-
-The hot Latin temper flared. "I run my business to suit myself...."
-
-"And you won't raise the price?" asked Diamond Tooth Lil.
-
-"Never!" Suddenly the exotic one looked into hard steel and harder eyes.
-
-"Okay. You're through. Start packing," ordered Lil.
-
-Something in the eyes behind the six-gun told the madam that surrender
-was wiser than a funeral and the scab house closed forever.
-
-A wayfarer in Greenwater announced that he was so low he could mount
-stilts and clear a snake's belly, but being broke, he could only sniff
-the liquor-scented air coming from Bill Waters's saloon and look
-wistfully at the bottles on the shelves. Then he noticed that Bill
-Waters was alone, polishing glasses. A sudden inspiration came and he
-sauntered in. "Bill," he said, "gimme a drink...."
-
-Bill Waters was no meticulous interpreter of English and slid a glass
-down the bar. A bottle followed. The drinker filled the glass, poured it
-down an arid throat. "Thanks," he called and started out.
-
-"Hey--" cried Bill Waters. "You haven't paid for that drink."
-
-"Why, I asked you to give me a drink...."
-
-"Yeh," Bill sneered. "Well, brother, you'd better pay."
-
-"Horse feathers--" said the fellow and proceeded toward the door.
-
-Bill Waters picked up a double barrelled shotgun, pointed it at the
-departing guest and pulled the trigger. The jester fell, someone called
-the undertaker and the porter washed the floor.
-
-It looked bad for Bill. But lawyers solve such problems. Bill said he
-was joking and didn't know the gun was loaded. The answer satisfied the
-court and Bill returned to his glasses.
-
-For a few years Greenwater prospered. Then it was noticed that the
-incoming stages had empty seats. Bartenders had more time to polish
-glasses. "The World's Biggest Copper Deposit" which the world's greatest
-experts had assured the moguls lay under the mountain just wasn't there.
-
-Today there is barely a trace of Greenwater. A few bottles gleam in the
-sun. The wind sweeps over from Dante's View or up Dead Man's Canyon. The
-greasewood waves. The rotted leg of a pair of overalls protrudes from
-its covering of sand. A sunbaked shoe lies on its side.
-
-But somewhere under its crust is a case of champagne. Dan Modine, the
-freighter, buried it there one dark night over 40 years ago and was
-never able to find it.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XI
- The Amargosa Country
-
-
-In Hellgate Pass I met Slim again, resting on the roadside, his burro
-browsing nearby. Slim, I may add here, already had a niche in
-Goldfield's hall of fame. He had walked into a gambling house one day
-broke, thirsty, nursing a hangover, and hoping to find a friend who
-would buy him a drink. Though it was a holiday and the place crowded, he
-saw no familiar face, but while waiting he noticed the cashier was busy
-collecting the winnings from the tables. He also noticed that in order
-to save the time it required to unlock the door of the cage, the cashier
-would dump the gold and silver coins on the shelf at his wicker window,
-then for safety's sake, shove it off to fall on the floor inside.
-
-Slim watched the procedure awhile and with a sudden bright idea,
-sauntered out. A few moments later he returned through an alley with an
-auger wrapped in a tow sack, crawled under the house and soon a stream
-of gold and silver was cascading into Slim's hat.
-
-A lookout at a table nearest the cage, hearing a strange metallic noise,
-went outside to investigate and peeking under the floor, saw Slim
-without being seen. It was just too good to keep. Stealthily moving
-away, he spread the news and half of Goldfield was gathered about when
-Slim, his pockets bulging with his loot, crawled out only to face a
-jeering, heckling crowd.
-
-Cornered like a rat in a cage, he couldn't run; he couldn't speak. He
-could only stand and grin and somehow the grin caught the crowd and
-instead of a lynching, Slim was handcuffed and led away and later the
-merciful judge who had been in the crowd declared Goldfield out of
-bounds for Slim and sent him on his way.
-
-At no other place in the world except Goldfield, with its craving for
-life's sunny side, could such an incident have occurred.
-
-After greetings Slim confided that he was en route to a certain canyon,
-the location of which he wouldn't even tell to his mother. There, not a
-cent less than $100,000,000 awaited him. No prospector worthy of the
-name ever bothers to mention a claim of less value. Not sure of the
-roads ahead, I asked him for directions.
-
-"You'd better go down the valley," he advised, pointing to a small black
-cloud above Funeral Range. "Regular cloudburst hatchery--these
-mountains."
-
-At a sudden burst of thunder we flinched and at another the earth seemed
-to tremble. Forked lightning was stabbing the inky blackness and I
-expected to see the mountains fall apart. "Something's got to give,"
-Slim said. "Look at that lightning ... no letup." Another roar rumbled
-and rolled over the valley. "God--" muttered Slim, "I haven't prayed
-since I fell into a mine shaft full of rattlesnakes."
-
-As we watched the incessant play of lightning, Slim told me about his
-fall into the shaft: "Arkansas Ben Brandt was working about 100 yards
-away. Deaf as a lamp post, Ben is, but I kept praying and hollering and
-just when I'd given up, here comes a rope. You can argue with me all day
-but you can't make me believe the Lord didn't unstop old Ben's ears."
-
-Slim gave me a final warning. "Take the road over the mountain when you
-come to the Shoshone sign. When you get there be sure to see Charlie
-before you go any farther."
-
-At every water hole where prospectors were gathered I'd heard someone
-tell someone else to see Charlie. At Furnace Creek I'd heard the vice
-president of the Borax Company tell an official of the Santa Fe railroad
-to see Charlie and only an hour before I met Slim I had stopped to give
-a tire patch to a young miner with a flat. While I waited to see that
-the patch stuck, I learned he was on his way to consult Charlie.
-
-"My helper," he confided, "jumped my claim after he learned I hadn't
-done last year's assessment work. That's legal if a fellow's a skunk but
-when he stole my wife and chased me off with my own shotgun,
-bigod--that's different." I suggested a lawyer. "I'll see Charlie
-first...."
-
-Naturally I became curious about this Charlie, who seemed to be a
-combination of Father Confessor and the Caliph Haroun Alraschid to all
-the desert. "Just who is Charlie?" I asked Slim.
-
-"He runs the store at Shoshone. Tell him I'll be down soon. I want him
-to handle my deal." He slapped his burro and we parted--he for his
-$100,000,000, I to leave the country. Watching the spring in his step a
-moment, I got into my car and knew at last the why of those dark
-alluring canyons that ran up from the hungry land and hid in the hills.
-I knew why there are riches that nothing can take away and why rainbows
-swing low in the sky. The good God had made them so that fellows like
-Slim could climb one and ride.
-
-Driving along I found myself trying to appraise the endless waste. Was
-it a blunder of creation, hell's front yard or God's back stairs? It was
-easy to understand the appeal of vast distances, of desert dawns and
-desert nights but what was it that made men "go desert"?
-
-The answer was becoming clearer. Fellows like Slim had found God in a
-snake hole, or if you prefer--a way of life patterned with infinite
-precision to their needs. It is easy enough to tear into scraps,
-another's formula for happiness and recommend your own but that is an
-egotism that only the fool will flaunt and I began to suspect that the
-Slims and the Shortys had found a freedom for which millions in the
-tired world Outside vainly struggled and slowly died.
-
- "I wanted the gold, and I got it--
- Came out with a fortune last fall--
- Yet somehow life's not what I thought it,
- And somehow the gold isn't all.
-
- It grips you like some kinds of sinning;
- It twists you from foe to a friend;
- It seems it's been since the beginning;
- It seems it will be to the end."
- --_Robert W. Service._
-
-Rounding a sharp turn in the road that led over and around a hill
-jutting out from a mountain of black malpai, I saw a sign: "Shoshone"
-and just beyond, a little settlement almost hidden in a thicket of
-mesquite. A sign on a weather-beaten ramshackle building read, "Store."
-A few listing shacks on a naked flat. An abandoned tent house, its torn
-canvas top whipping the rafters in the wind. Whirlwinds spiraling along
-dry washes to vanish in hummocks of sand.
-
-The presence of three or four prospectors strung along a slab bench
-either staring at the ground at their feet or the brown bare mountains,
-only emphasized the depressing solitude and I decided if I had to choose
-between hell and Shoshone I'd take hell.
-
-Reaching the store through deep dust, I guessed correctly that the big
-fellow giving me an appraising look was Charlie. He was slow in his
-movements, slow in his speech and I had the feeling that his keen, calm
-eyes had already counted the number of buttons on my shirt and the
-eyelets in my shoes. I asked about the road to Baker.
-
-"Washed out. Won't be open for two weeks."
-
-"Two weeks?" I gasped. "Long enough to kill a fellow, isn't it?"
-
-"Well, there's a little cemetery handy. Just up the gulch."
-
-Impulsively I thrust out my hand. "Shake. You win. Now that we
-understand each other, have you a cabin for rent for these two weeks?"
-
-"Yes, but you'd better take it longer," he chuckled. "In two weeks
-you'll be a native and won't want to get out."
-
-The showing of the cabin was delayed by a lanky individual who was
-pawing over a pile of shoes. "Charlie, soles on my shoes are worn
-through. These any good?"
-
-"Not worth a dam'," Charlie said. He picked up hammer and nails, handed
-them to the lanky one. "Some old tires outside. Cut off a piece and tack
-it on. I'll have some good shoes next time you're in."
-
-A miner in an ancient pickup stopped for gas. As Brown filled the tank
-he noticed a tire dangerously worn. "Blackie, you need a new casing to
-get across Death Valley."
-
-"These'll do," Blackie answered as he dug into all his pockets, paid for
-the gas and got into the car.
-
-"Wait a minute," Brown said and in a moment he was rolling a new tire
-out, lifting it to the bed of the pickup. He handed Blackie a new tube.
-"If you use them, pay me. If you don't, bring 'em back."
-
-Blackie regarded him a moment. "How'd you know I was broke?" he grinned,
-and chugged away.
-
-A man stopped a truck in front of the door, came in and asked how far it
-was to Furnace Creek. Charlie looked him over, then glanced at the
-truck. "Fifty-eight miles the short way. Nearly 80 the other. You'll
-have to take the long way."
-
-"Why?" the fellow bristled.
-
-"Your load is too high for the underpass on the short route. Road's
-washed out anyway."
-
-The man frowned and turned to go.
-
-"Wait a minute," Charlie called. He reached for a sack of flour, laid it
-on a counter. Then he stood a slab of bacon on its edge and cut off a
-chunk. "You'll stop at Bradbury Well--"
-
-"I won't stop nowhere," the truckman said.
-
-"You'll have to. Your radiator will be boiling." He got a carton, put
-the flour and bacon in it and reaching on a shelf behind, got coffee,
-sugar, and canned milk and put these in. "Old Dobe Charlie Nels is
-camped there. Poor old fellow hasn't been in for two weeks...."
-
-The man looked at Charlie, uncertain. "You want me to drop it off, huh?"
-
-"Yes," Charlie said and lugging the carton to the truck, he shoved it
-in.
-
-With squinted eyes the driver watched. "Mister, I'll surely fill up here
-on my way back," and with a friendly wave, climbed into his cab and I
-began to understand why all over the desert I'd heard of Charlie.
-
-The cabin assigned me was the usual box type, shaded by the overhanging
-branches of a screwbean mesquite.
-
-"Cabin's not much," Charlie said, "but you'll have a Beauty Rest
-mattress to sleep on. My wife says folks'll put up with most anything if
-they have a good bed." He looked the room over and I noticed that
-nothing escaped him. Wood and kindling. Oil in the lamp. Water in the
-pitcher--an ornate vessel with enormous roses edged with gilt. He opened
-a closet door, saw that the matching vessel was in place and went out.
-After arranging my belongings, with time to kill, I returned to the
-store, hoping to learn something about nearby trails.
-
-A short woman who preceded me slammed a can of coffee on the counter,
-removed her long cigarette holder, blew a ring of smoke at the ceiling
-and asked Charlie where he got the coffee. He told her that it came in a
-shipment.
-
-"Well bigod, you send it back."
-
-Charlie laughed and turned to me: "This is Myra Benson. You want to stay
-on the good side of Myra. She has charge of the dining room."
-
-My remark that good coffee was my early morning weakness led to an
-invitation to sample her brew. "Mine too," she said. "The pot's on the
-stove before daylight, if you're up that early."
-
-I soon discovered that Myra's language was just a bit of color Death
-Valley imparts to speech, for she was deeply religious if not in all its
-forms, in all of its essentials and the occasional use of a two-fisted
-phrase did not in the least detract from the eternal feminine of one of
-Death Valley's most remarkable women.
-
-Guided by the light in her kitchen, I joined her the next morning while
-Shoshone still slept, and over a delicious cup learned something about
-people and places.
-
-The man with the wide Stetson was Dan Modine, deputy sheriff. Liked
-poker. The quiet, squat fellow with the blue pop eyes was Billy de Von.
-"College man. Works on the roads. Taught in the University of Mexico
-before he came here. Siberian Red? Oh, that's Ernie Huhn. No place on
-Godamighty's earth he hasn't been. As soon bet $1000 as two bits on a
-pair of jacks."
-
-"The tall thin fellow they called Sam? Must be Sam Flake. Here before
-Noah built the ark."
-
-Knowing that Mormons had pioneered in the area, I was curious about an
-undersized man pushing an oversize baby carriage loaded with infants and
-a dozen youngsters trailing him. "Does he happen to be one of the
-Faithful who has clung to his wives?" I asked.
-
-"That's Eddie Main," Myra laughed. "Bachelor. Just loves kids. He was
-born in San Francisco in the days when a nickel just wasn't counted
-unless it had a dime alongside. His folks sent him to New York to be
-educated. Eddie didn't like it. 'It's a nickel town,' Eddie said.
-'Cheapest hole on earth.' He came to the desert and the desert took him
-over. When he's not hauling kids around he's reading. Don't get out on a
-limb in an argument with Eddie. You'll lose sure. Every now and then
-Eddie goes East for a vacation. It's awful on the mothers. They have to
-take care of their own children and the children want Eddie."
-
-"Who is Hank, the fellow that came in with the pickup Ford?" I asked.
-
-"Our bootlegger. Comes Wednesdays and Saturdays. Regular as a bread
-route. Always tell when he's due. Bench is crowded. Didn't you notice
-the tarpaulin over his truck? Always two kegs and a sack of empty pints
-and quarts. Rough roads here. Siphons out what you want. Death Valley
-Scotty? Around yesterday. Lit up like a barn afire." The short man with
-the black whiskers was Henry Ashford who, with his brothers Harold and
-Rudolph owned the Ashford mine.
-
-"How does such a little store in a place like this make a living for the
-Browns?"
-
-"I wonder myself, at times," she said. "Everybody around here takes
-their troubles to Charlie or Stella. Maybe you noticed their home--the
-cottage with the screen porch a few steps from the store. Stella was
-telling me yesterday she needed a new carpet for her living room. I
-said, 'I'm not surprised. You're running a nursery, emergency hospital,
-and a domestic relations court.' Sometimes young couples find their
-marriage going on the rocks. The woman goes to Stella to get the kinks
-out. As for Charlie, if you're around long enough you'll see him most
-every morning strolling over to the shacks in the jungle or up to the
-dugouts in Dublin Gulch. He thinks nobody knows what he's doing or maybe
-they figure he's just taking a walk. I know. Some of these old fellows
-are always in a bad way. Just last week Charlie came in here and told me
-to send something a sick man could eat over to old Jim. 'I'll have to
-take him to the hospital soon as I can get my car ready,' he said. Three
-hundred miles--that trip.
-
-"And there's Phil. You'll see him around. Fine steady chap. Lost his job
-when the mine he worked in shut down. Long as he was working he was the
-first in the dining room when I opened the door. He began to miss a
-breakfast, then a dinner, and finally he didn't show up at all. I
-supposed he was cooking his own and didn't mention it. Kept his chin up.
-You could hear him laughing loud as anybody on the bench, but Charlie
-noticed that once a day Phil would follow his nose over into the
-mesquite where somebody was sure to share a mulligan stew.
-
-"One day when Phil was sitting alone on the woodpile just outside my
-kitchen, Charlie sat down beside him. They didn't know I was there.
-'Phil,' Charlie says, 'the ditch that carries the runoff up at the
-spring needs widening. Could you spare a few days to put it in shape?'
-
-"Phil left that bench running, got a pick and shovel and went singing up
-the road and to this day he doesn't know that Charlie just created that
-job so he could eat."
-
-I mentioned the fellow with black hair and blue eyes. "He complained of
-rheumatism and slapped his knees a lot."
-
-"Oh, that's Dutch Barr. It isn't rheumatism. Just a sign he's going on a
-drunk."
-
-The lanky man with the blond eyebrows and sombre face which lighted so
-easily to laugh, was Whitey Bill McGarn. "... Never had a worry in his
-life...."
-
-I learned also that the mountain of malpai which lifts above Shoshone
-was a burial place for a race of Indians antedating the Piutes and
-Shoshones. "They buried their dead in a crouching position on their
-knees, elbows bent, hands at their ears. Old Nancy, who was Sam Yundt's
-squaw wife before he got rich, says they were buried that way so they
-would be ready to go quick when the Great Spirit called."
-
-The first rose of dawn was in the sky when I left Myra. "You'll have
-time enough to look around before breakfast," she told me and
-recommended a view of the valley from the flat-topped mesa above my
-cabin. "You can reach the top by climbing up a gully and holding on to
-the greasewood. You can see the dugouts in Dublin Gulch too. Some real
-old timers live there."
-
-A sweeping view of the little valley rewarded the climb.
-
-Below, Shoshone lay, tucked away in the mesquite. No honking horns, no
-clanging cars. No swollen ankles dragging muted chains to bench or
-counter, desk or machine. Soon faint spirals of smoke leaned from the
-shanties. Shoshone was awakening. It would wash its face on a slab
-bench, eat its bacon and eggs, and somebody would go out to look for two
-million dollars.
-
-After breakfast, I joined the old timers on the bench. "No--nothing
-exciting happens around here," Joe Ryan told me and stopped whittling to
-look at a car coming up the road. A moment later the car stopped at the
-gas pump and three smartly tailored men stepped out. I heard one say,
-"Odd looking lot on that bench, aren't they?" Then Joe said to the
-fellow at his side, "Queer looking birds, ain't they?"
-
-"How much is gas?" one of the tourists asked.
-
-"Thirty cents," Charlie said.
-
-"Why, it's only 18 in the city," the man flared. "How far is it to the
-next gas?"
-
-Charlie told him, and Big Dan sitting beside me muttered: "Dam' fool'll
-pay 50 cents up there."
-
-The driver climbed into the car and Charlie asked if he had plenty of
-water.
-
-"A gallon can full...."
-
-"Not enough," Charlie warned.
-
-A fellow in the back seat spoke, "Aw, go on. He wants to sell a
-canteen...."
-
-As the car pulled out, Joe called to Charlie: "You're sold out of
-canteens, ain't you?"
-
-"Yes. But I was going to give him one of those old five gallon cans on
-the dump." He went inside and Joe Ryan said, "Won't get far on a gallon
-of water." He waved his knife toward the little cemetery at the mouth of
-the gulch. "Lot of smart Alecs like him up there, that Charlie dragged
-in offa the desert."
-
-It was five days almost to the hour when Ann Cowboy, a Piute squaw came
-to the store with an Indian boy who couldn't speak English; nodded at
-the boy and said to Charlie: "Him see...." She pointed to the big black
-mountain of malpai above Shoshone, whirled her finger in a circle, shot
-it this way and that, then patted the floor. "You savvy?"
-
-Her dark eyes watched Charlie's and when she had finished Charlie called
-Joe Ryan and together they went across the road, climbed into a pickup
-truck and left in a hurry. Even I understood that somebody on the other
-side of that mountain was in trouble, but I had no idea that in three or
-four hours the pickup would return with a cadaver under a tarpaulin and
-a thirst-crazed survivor whose distorted features bore little
-resemblance to those of man.
-
-Big Dan helped lift the victim from the truck. "There were three," Dan
-said. "Where is the other fellow?"
-
-"We looked all over," Joe shrugged.
-
-"The one that's missing," Dan said, "is the fellow that griped about the
-canteen. I remember his black hair."
-
-They carried the still-living man over to Charlie's house and left him
-to the ministrations of the capable Stella. Charlie returned to the
-store, got a pick and shovel from a rack, handed one to Ben Brandt and
-one to Cranky Casey. Not a word was spoken to them. They took the tools
-and started toward the little cemetery at the mouth of Dublin Gulch.
-
-I joined Dan on the bench. "Well," Dan said, "they saved the price of a
-canteen."
-
-
-Two spinsters--teachers of zoology in a fashionable eastern school for
-girls--came in search of a place they called Metbury Springs. Brown told
-them there were no such springs in the Death Valley region. Obviously
-disappointed, one produced a map, spread it on the counter, ran her
-finger over a maze of notes and looking up asked what sort of rats lived
-about Shoshone. Charlie told them that very few rats survived their
-natural enemies and were seldom seen.
-
-"What do they look like?" the teacher asked.
-
-"Just regular rats," Charlie told her.
-
-Again she consulted her notes. "Do you mean to say the only rat you've
-seen here is _Mus decumanus_?"
-
-"Mus who?" Charlie asked. "Only rats around here besides the two-legged
-kind are just plain everyday rats."
-
-The ladies gathered up their papers, went outside, looked over the
-hills, consulted their maps, and returned to Brown. "Sir, this is
-Metbury Spring," one announced, "and for your own information we may add
-that in no other place in the world is there a rat like the one you have
-here."
-
-The amazing feature of this incident is that it is true. The rats in
-some unexplained way had disappeared.
-
-The spinsters remained for weeks but failed to find the specimen they
-sought, but Charlie learned that the first man known to have settled at
-Shoshone was a man named Brown and Shoshone's first name was Metbury
-Spring.
-
-
-Death came to Shoshone that week-end. George Hoagland, prospector,
-reached Trail's End. Charlie announced the news to the bench and asked
-for volunteers to dig the grave. Bob Johnson, another prospector, jumped
-up. "I'll help."
-
-The others gave Bob a quick look and exchanged slow ones with each
-other, because it was known that Bob had not liked Hoagland. "I've been
-in lots of deals with that bastard," he had often said. "Came out loser
-every time. Always left himself a hole to wiggle out of."
-
-Right or wrong, Bob's opinion was shared by many. Herman Jones glanced
-after Bob, now going for a pick and shovel. "That's sure white of Bob,
-forgetting his grudge," Herman said and all Shoshone approved.
-
-I joined the little group that filed up to the cemetery at the mouth of
-the gulch for the graveside ceremony. We stood about waiting for the box
-that contained all there was of George.
-
-They take death on the desert just as they do any other grim fact of
-nature. They talked of George and the hard, chalky earth Bob had to dig
-through in the hot sun. There were mild arguments about whose bones lay
-under this or that unmarked grave. "Dad Fairbanks brought that fellow
-in...." "No such thing. That's Tillie Younger--member of Jesse James's
-gang. I helped bury him...."
-
-Presently there was a stir and I saw Charlie over where the women were.
-He had another chore and was doing it because there was no one else to
-do it.
-
-"Usually reads a coupla verses," Joe Ryan told me. "But somebody stole
-the only Bible in Shoshone."
-
-The box was lowered, the grave filled and Charlie stepped forward. He
-held his hat well up in front of his chest and I suspected that he had a
-few notes pasted in the hat. Those about were listening intently as
-people will to one who has something to say and says it in a few words.
-
-Suddenly I was conscious of mumbling and the tramping of earth and
-seeing Brown flick a glance out of the corner of his eye toward the
-disturbing sound, I turned to see Bob Johnson jumping up and down on the
-earth that filled the grave--careful to miss no inch of it. When he had
-tamped it sufficiently he stepped aside and muttered angrily: "Now dam'
-you--let's see you wiggle out of this hole!"
-
-Yet, when the hills are covered with wild flowers one may see on the
-unsodded graves of the little cemetery a bottle or a tin can filled with
-sun cups or baby blue eyes and in the dust the tracks of a hobnailed
-shoe.
-
-I soon discovered the bench was more than a slab of wood. It was a state
-of Hallelujah. For the most part those who gathered there were a silent
-lot, but as one unshaven ancient told me, "Too damned much talk in the
-world. Two-three words are plenty--like yes, naw, and dam'." Some of
-them had beaten trails from Crede or Cripple Creek, Virginia City or
-Bodie. "It's a clean life and clean money," was an expression that ran
-like a formula through their conversation.
-
-"Of course, few keep the money they get," Joe Ryan said. "Jack Morissey
-couldn't read or write. He struck it rich. Bought a diamond-studded
-watch and couldn't even tell the time of day. Went to Europe; hit all
-the high spots; came back and died in the poor house. But he had his
-fun, which makes more sense than what Nat Crede did. He hit it rich.
-Built a town and a palace. Then blew his brains out and left all his
-millions to a Los Angeles foundling."
-
-One oldster remembered Eilly Orrum of Virginia City. "She had followed
-the covered wagons and made a living washing our clothes, but she got
-into our hearts. Everybody liked her. Some say she forgot to get a
-divorce from her second husband before she married Sandy Bowers. Nobody
-blamed her. She and Sandy ran a beanery. Eilly would feed anybody on the
-cuff. John Rodgers ran up a board bill and couldn't pay it. He had a few
-shares in a no-count claim and talked Eilly into taking the shares to
-settle the bill.
-
-"Within two weeks Eilly was getting $20,000 a month from that deal. It
-wasn't long before she was giggling happily and telling everybody she
-didn't see how folks could live on less than $100,000 a year."
-
-"Julia Bulette? Ran a snooty fancy house. But she taught Virginia City
-how to eat and what, and soon the rich fellows wouldn't stand for
-anything except the world's best foods."
-
-"Oh yes, everybody knew Old Virginny. Gave the town its name. Always
-drunk. Discovered the Ophir. Swapped it for a mustang pony and a pint of
-likker to old Pancake Comstock. When he sobered up he discovered the
-pony was blind. Pancake swapped an eighth interest in the Ophir to a
-Mexican, Gabriel Maldonado, for two burros. The Mexican took out
-$6,000,000. Pancake was quite a lady-killer. Ran away with a miner's
-wife. Fellow was glad to get rid of her, but decided he'd beat hell out
-of Pancake. Found him in new diggings nearby and jumped him. 'You don't
-want her,' Pancake says. 'Be reasonable. I'll buy her.'
-
-"They haggled awhile and the fellow agreed to accept $50 and a plug
-horse. He took the money and started for the horse.
-
-"'Wait a minute,' Pancake says, 'I want a bill of sale,' and wrote it
-out on the spot, and made the fellow sign it. Didn't keep her long
-though. She ran away with a tramp fiddler. The Comstock Lode produced
-over a billion dollars. He might have had a fifth of that. Just too
-smart for his own good. Finally paid the price. Found him on the trail
-one day. Brains blowed out. Suicide."
-
-Dobe Charlie Nels was at Bodie, rendezvous of the toughest of the bad
-men when the United States Hotel rented its rooms in six-hour shifts and
-guests were awakened at the end of that period to make places for
-others. He recalled Eleanor Dumont, whose deft fingers dealt four kings
-to the unwary and four aces to herself. Smitten lovers had shot it out
-for her favors on the Mother Lode and on the Comstock, but when life and
-love still were fair, fate played a scurvy trick on the beauteous
-Eleanor. The shadow of a little down began to show on her lip and
-darkened with the years and so she became Madame Moustache. "She just
-got tired living and one night she went outside, swallowed a little
-pellet and passed the deal to God."
-
-But the charmers of Bodie and its bad men and the millions its hills
-produced were not so deeply etched on his memory as the job he lost
-because he did it well. Hungry and broke when he arrived he took the
-first job offered--stacking cord wood.
-
-"It was a job I really knew. The boss drove stakes 4x8 feet alongside a
-mountain of cut wood. I figured I had a long job. He left and I took
-pains to make every cord level on top, sides even. When the boss came
-back he blew up, kicked over my piles and wanted to know if I was trying
-to ruin him. 'If you'd picked out a few crooked sticks and crossed a few
-straight ones, you could have made a cord with half the wood. Get out
-and don't come back.'" Charlie also had a story of a memorable night.
-
-A bartender in one of Bodie's better saloons was putting his stock in
-order after a busy night when three celebrants in swallow tails and
-toppers came unsteadily through the doors. The two on the outside were
-gallantly steadying the one in the center as they led him to the bar.
-The bartender smiled understandingly when, coming for their orders, he
-noticed the center man's head was pillowed on his arms over the bar, his
-topper lying on its side in front of his face. Recalling that the fellow
-had consumed often and eagerly but had paid for none in an earlier
-session, he nodded at the silent one: "Shall I count him out?"
-
-"Oh no. Bill's buying this time."
-
-The drinks served, the bartender left to attend another late patron and
-moments passed before he returned to find Bill just as he had left him,
-but alone--his drink untouched. He tapped Bill's shoulder and asked
-payment for the drinks. When three taps and three demands brought no
-answer, he picked up a bung starter; went around the counter, seized
-Bill by the shoulder, wheeled him around only to discover that Bill was
-dead. Startled and panicky, the bartender now ran to the door, saw
-Bill's friends weaving up the street and ran after them, told them
-excitedly that Bill had croaked.
-
-"Oh," one said thickly. "Bill's ticker jammed in our room an hour ago.
-His last words were, 'Fellows, I want you to have a drink on me.'
-Couldn't refuse old Bill's last request."
-
-When Dobe Charlie had finished this story he turned to a clear-eyed
-ancient standing nearby. "Jim, I reckon you'd call me a
-Johnny-come-lately since you were a Forty-Niner."
-
-"No," Jim said. "I was 12 when I came to Hangtown. I remember a fellow
-they called Wheelbarrow John, because he made a better wheelbarrow than
-anyone else. He saved $3000 and went back East. He was John Studebaker.
-Made wagons first. Then autos.
-
-"Young fellow named Phil Armour came. No luck. Pulled out. He did all
-right in Chicago though. Founded Armour Company.
-
-"Did I ever tell you about the Digger Ounce? No? Well, it's history. The
-Digger Indians didn't know what gold was. Actually they'd been throwing
-nuggets at rabbits and couldn't believe their eyes when they saw miners
-exchange the same stuff for food and clothing at the store. The Indians
-had been getting it along the stream beds for ages. So they came in with
-their buckskin loin bags full of it. The merchant took it all right, but
-when he balanced his scales, he used a weight that gave the Digger only
-one dollar for every five he was entitled to. Then the Indian had to pay
-three prices for everything he bought. One miner loafing around the
-store, followed the Diggers one day, learned where they were getting it
-and cleaned up $40,000 in no time. That's history too.
-
-"Crooked merchants used the same trick on drunken whites and anybody
-else who didn't keep their eyes open. So the Digger Ounce became a
-byword all along the Mother Lode."
-
-But of all the stories about the Comstock this fine old gentleman told
-us, I like best one about Joe Plato. Young, strong, and handsome as
-Apollo, Joe craved a fling after months of toil in the gulches with no
-sight of woman other than the flat-faced Washoe squaws.
-
-In San Francisco Joe saw a big red apple and he wanted it. A
-breath-taking girl sold him the apple and he wanted her. He acquired the
-girl also. His gambols over, Joe handed her five shares of ten he owned
-in a Comstock claim. 'A little token,' he grinned, never dreaming the
-beautiful wanton had a heart and loved him madly. So he forgot her. She
-didn't forget Joe.
-
-Months later the ten shares were worth on the market $1,000,000. Joe
-remembered then. 'Too much for a girl like that.'
-
-To beat the news and retrieve the stock, he braved Sierra storms, found
-her. In the battle of wits she played her cards superbly. "Of course,"
-she said at last, "... if we were married...."
-
-So the beaten Joe faced the preacher.
-
-When Joe Plato died she took her millions to San Francisco, married a
-rich merchant, became a social leader and the mother of nabobs.
-
-
-One morning at breakfast Myra informed me that I could get to Bradbury
-Well, a famous landmark on the road to Death Valley. To break the
-routine, I went. The route leads over Salsbury Pass, named for Jack
-Salsbury--a congenital promoter who was forever hunting something to
-promote. He had made and lost fortunes in cattle, lumber, and mines and
-for a while lived at Shoshone.
-
-In a ravine near Bradbury Well were two or three dugouts. In one was the
-ubiquitous Rocky Mountain George--lean, seamed, and soft voiced. On the
-box he used for a table lay a letter mailed in Denver and bearing this
-address: "Rocky Mountain George, Nevada." Known all over the gold belt,
-a dozen postmasters had sent it from town to town and now it had caught
-up with George.
-
-Meeting George a few weeks later in Beatty I recalled our meeting. He
-hadn't shaved in a week and his torn overalls were covered with grime. A
-well-tailored gentleman came out of the hotel across the street and
-stepped into a smart car. "Hey, Jim--" George called. "Come over here a
-minute...." The man left his car and walked over. "Jim, I want you to
-meet my friend...." Jim and I shook hands. "Jim's our governor," George
-added and I looked again at Nevada's Governor James Scrugham, later its
-U. S. Senator. For an hour he and George talked of canyons in which,
-they decided, somebody would find a billion dollars and I decided
-Democracy was safe on the desert.
-
-Walking up the wash from George's dugout I was surprised to see a slim
-blonde with blue eyes and a nice smile. Obviously she had just left her
-stove, for she had a steaming pot of coffee in her hand. I made some
-inane remark about the beauty of the morning.
-
-"It's nearly always like this," she said and after a moment I was
-sitting on the bench outside the dugout sipping coffee. I learned that
-her name was Helen. "Why shouldn't I try prospecting? I've nothing to
-lose. I had a job clerking, but I just couldn't scrimp enough to pay for
-medicine and the doctors' bills."
-
-That and the telltale spot on her cheek seemed reason enough for her
-presence and, as she explained, "I might make a strike."
-
-Later in Beatty, I noticed a small crowd about the office of Judge W. B.
-Gray, Beatty's marrying Justice, who was also interested in mines.
-"What's the riot?" I asked Rocky Mountain George, who was whittling on
-the bench beside me. "Helen made a big strike," he told me and I hurried
-over and met her coming out--radiant and excited.
-
-"I've just heard of your strike," I said. "Where did you make it?"
-
-"Right in that wash," she laughed. "He came along one day and--well, we
-just got to liking each other and--" She paused to introduce me to a
-good looking clean-cut fellow and added: "So we just up and married."
-
-The population of Beatty had so changed in one generation that in 1949
-when the town wanted to put on a celebration, not a citizen could be
-found who knew Beatty's first name. Finally a former acquaintance was
-located at Long Beach who advised a booster group that the name of its
-founder was William Martin Beatty. The gentleman is mistaken. Beatty's
-first name was Montelius and was called Monte by all old timers.
-
-A feature of social life in Shoshone was the Snake House--an
-unbelievable structure made of shook from apple crates, scraps of
-corrugated iron found in the dump, tin cut from oil cans, and cardboard
-from packing cartons, which because of scant rainfall, served almost as
-well as wood or iron.
-
-A fellow comes in from the hills, craves relaxation and finds it in the
-Snake House. Though he never plays poker, Eddie Main who lived a few
-yards away was induced to function as a sort of Managing Director, to
-see that the game remained a gentleman's game.
-
-Inside, swinging from the roof is a Coleman lantern and under it a big
-round table covered with a blanket stretched tight and tacked under the
-edges. A rack of chips. Chairs for players and kegs and beer crates for
-spectators. A stove in the corner furnishes heat when needed. If you
-limit your poker to penny ante, the game is not for you. I have seen
-more than $1000 in the pots and large bets are the rule.
-
-One night Sam Flake who has been in Death Valley country longer than any
-living man, joined the game. Sam, a student of poker, ran afoul of four
-queens and went home broke. The next day as he worked in a mine tunnel,
-Sam was holding a post mortem over his disaster. He went over his play
-point by point. Like many a desert man used to solitude, Sam
-occasionally talked to himself aloud, And unaware that Whitey Bill
-McGarn was in a stope just above him, Sam diagnosed his loss: "I opened
-right. I anted right. I bet right. I called right. Can't be but one
-answer. I was sitting in the wrong seat." (Sam Flake died suddenly at
-Tecopa Hot Springs in 1949.)
-
-The village of Tecopa is 11 miles south of Shoshone. When the railroad
-was built stations were given names of local significance and this
-honors the Indian chief, Cap Tecopa.
-
-Important discoveries of gold, silver, lead, and talc were made and are
-still being worked. In the early days murders of both whites and
-Indians, without any clues were of frequent occurrence. Someone recalled
-that every killing of an Indian by a white man had been followed by a
-white man's murder.
-
-The Piute believed in blood atonement and when a young American was
-found butchered in the Ibex hills, friends of the deceased went to Cap
-Tecopa with evidence which indicated the murder was committed by Cap's
-tribesmen. "We want these killings stopped," they told him heatedly.
-
-Cap denied any knowledge of the crime and brushed aside the suggestion
-that he produce the assassin. "Too many Indians," Cap said. "But if you
-help, I can stop the killings."
-
-"How?" they demanded.
-
-"You tell hiko no kill Indian. I tell Indian no kill hiko."
-
-Cap Tecopa was a good prospector and owned a coveted claim which he
-refused to sell.
-
-Among the fortune seekers was a flashily dressed individual who wore a
-tall silk topper. The beegum fascinated Cap and he wanted it. He
-followed the wearer about, his eyes never leaving the shiny headgear. At
-last the urge to possess was irresistible and he approached the owner. A
-lean finger gingerly touched the sacred brim. "How much?"
-
-All he got was a shake of the head. Failure only stimulated Tecopa's
-desire. His money refused, Cap in his desperation thought of the claim
-which the cunning of the promoters, the wiles of gamblers, the pleas of
-friends had failed to get.
-
-The owner of the hat annoyed by Tecopa, decided to get rid of him. "You
-take hat. I take claim."
-
-The Indian reached for the topper. "Take um," he grunted and the deal
-was made. Several other versions of this story are recalled by old
-timers.
-
-The Tecopa Hot Springs were highly esteemed by the desert Indian, who
-always advertised the waters he believed to have medicinal value. In the
-Coso Range he used the walls of a canyon approaching the springs for his
-message. The crude drawing of a man was pictured, shoulders bent,
-leaning heavily on a stick. Another showed the same man leaving the
-springs but now walking erect, his stick abandoned.
-
-The Tecopa Springs are about one and a half miles north of Tecopa and
-furnish an astounding example of rumor's far-reaching power. Originally
-there was only one spring and when I first saw it, it was a round pool
-about eight feet in diameter, three feet deep and so hidden by tules
-that one might pass within a few feet of it unaware of its existence.
-The singularly clear water seeped from a barren hill. About, is a
-blinding white crust of boron and alkali. There Ann Cowboy used to lead
-Mary Shoofly, to stay the blindness that threatened Mary Shoofly's
-failing eyes. When the whites discovered the spring, the Indians
-abandoned it.
-
-Later it became a community bath tub and laundry. Prospectors would
-"hoof" it for miles to do their washing because the water was hot--112
-degrees, and the borax content assured easy cleansing. Husbands and
-wives began to go for baths and someone hauled in a few pieces of
-corrugated iron and made blinds behind which they bathed in the nude. A
-garment was hung on the blind as a sign of occupation and it is a
-tribute to the chivalry of desert men that they always stopped a few
-hundred feet away to look for that garment, and advanced only when it
-was removed.
-
-Today you will see two new structures at the spring and long lines of
-bathers living in trailers parked nearby. They are victims of arthritis,
-rheumatism, swollen feet, or something that had baffled physicians,
-patent medicines, and quacks. They come from every part of the country.
-Somebody has told them that somebody else had been cured at a little
-spring on the desert between Shoshone and Tecopa.
-
-Some live under blankets, cook in a tin can over bits of wood hoarded
-like gold, for the vicinity is bare of growth. It is government land and
-space is free. Some camp on the bare ground without tent, the soft silt
-their only bed. "Something ails my blood. Shoulder gets to aching. Neck
-stiff. Come here and boil out" ... "Like magic--this water. I've been to
-every medicinal bath in Europe and America. This beats 'em all."
-
-You finally turn away, dazed with stories of elephantine legs, restored
-to perfect size and symmetry. Of muscles dead for a decade, moving with
-the precision of a motor. Of joints rigid as a steel rail suddenly
-pliable as the ankles of a tap dancer.
-
-Here they sit in the sun--patient, hopeful; their crutches leaning
-against their trailer steps. They have the blessed privilege of
-discussing their ailments with each other. "Oh, your misery was nothing.
-Doctors said I would never reach here alive...."
-
-An analysis shows traces of radium.
-
-A few miles below Tecopa is another landmark of the country known as the
-China Ranch. To old timers it was known as The Chinaman's Ranch. One
-Quon Sing, who had been a cook at Old Harmony Borax Works quit that job
-to serve a Mr. Osborn, wealthy mining man with interests near Tecopa.
-His service with Osborn covered a period of many years.
-
-"I can't state it as a fact," Shorty Harris once told me, "but I have
-been told by old settlers that Osborn located him on the ranch as a
-reward for long and faithful service."
-
-The land was in the raw stage, with nothing to appeal to a white man
-except water. It was reached through a twisting canyon which filled at
-times with the raging torrents dropped by cloudbursts. Erosion has left
-spectacular scenery. In places mud walls lift straight up hundreds of
-feet. Nobody but a Chinaman or a bandit hiding from the law would have
-wanted it.
-
-There was a spring which the Chinaman developed and soon a little stream
-flowed all year. The industrious Chinaman converted it into a profitable
-ranch. He planted figs and dates and knowing, as only a Chinaman does,
-the value and uses of water the place was soon transformed into a garden
-with shade trees spreading over a green meadow--a cooling, restful
-little haven hidden away in the heart of the hills. He had cows and
-raised chickens and hogs. He planted grapes, dates, and vegetables and
-soon was selling his produce to the settlers scattered about the desert.
-From a wayfaring guest he would accept no money for food or lodging.
-
-After the Chinaman had brought the ranch to a high state of production a
-white man came along and since there was no law in the country, he made
-one of his own--his model the ancient one that "He shall take who has
-the might and he shall keep who can." He chased the Chinaman off with a
-shot gun and sat down to enjoy himself, secure in the knowledge that
-nobody cared enough for a Chinaman to do anything about it.
-
-The Chinaman was never again heard of.
-
-The ranch since has had many owners. Though the roads are rough and the
-grades difficult, on the broad verandas that encircle the old ranch
-house, one feels he has found a bit of paradise "away from it all."
-
-Sitting on the porch once with Big Bill Greer, who owned a life interest
-in it until his demise recently, we talked of the various yarns told of
-the Chinaman.
-
-"The best thing he did was that planting over there by the stream." He
-lifted his huge form from the chair. "Just wait a minute. I'll get you a
-specimen."
-
-While he was gone I strolled around to see other miracles wrought by the
-heathen chased from his home by a Christian's gun. When I returned Bill
-was waiting with two tall glasses, diffusing a tantalizing aroma of
-bourbon. Floating on the liquor were bunches of crisp, cooling mint. He
-gave me one, lifted the other. "Here's to Quon Sing. God rest his soul,"
-Bill said.
-
-As we slowly sipped I asked him if he had brought the specimen.
-
-"It's the mint," Bill said.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XII
- A Hovel That Ought To Be a Shrine
-
-
-An Indian rode up to the bench, leaped from his cayuse and tried to tell
-Joe Ryan something about a "hiko." Joe matched his pantomime and broken
-English, finally jerking a thumb over his shoulder and the Indian went
-into the store.
-
-"That's Indian Johnnie," Joe said: "Hundred and fifty miles to his
-place, other side of the Panamint. Awful country to get at. Shorty
-Harris is in a bad way at Ballarat."
-
-A few moments later Charlie drove his pickup to the pump, filled the gas
-tank and before we realized it, was swallowed in a cloud of dust. "He's
-in for a helluva trip," Joe said.
-
-Before the day was over, snow covered the high peaks and a biting wind
-drove us from the bench. "Let's go over to the Mesquite Club," Joe said.
-
-We hurried across the road to the sprawling old building hidden in a
-thicket and listing in every direction of the compass, but over the
-roof, like friendly arms crooked the branches of big mesquite trees.
-Among mining men that ramshackle was known around the world.
-
-Inside was a big pot-bellied stove. Beside it, a huge woodbox. Chairs
-held together with baling wire. Two or three old auto seats hauled in
-from cars abandoned on the desert. An ancient, moth-eaten sofa on which
-the wayfarer out of luck was privileged to sleep. Three or four tables,
-each with a dog-eared deck of cards where old timers played solitaire or
-a spot of poker. There were books and magazines--high and low-brow, left
-by the tourists. But there was a friendliness about the shabby room that
-had nothing to gain from mahogany or chandeliers of gold.
-
-Wind kept us indoors for two days. On the third we were on the bench
-again when someone said, "Here comes Charlie...."
-
-A moment later Joe and Big Dan were helping Charlie take Shorty Harris,
-dean of Death Valley prospectors, more dead than alive, into a cabin and
-lay him on the bed. "You must have had an awful time," Joe said to
-Charlie.
-
-"Not too bad ... made it," Charlie answered as he started a fire in the
-stove. He brought in water and wood and turned to Joe. "Wish you'd fill
-up that gas tank and see about the oil...."
-
-Joe looked at him, puzzled.
-
-"Got to take him to the hospital," Charlie said.
-
-We knew that meant another trip of 140 miles.
-
-"Damned if you do," Joe said. "I'll get somebody to go."
-
-I supposed after the all night trip under such conditions Brown would go
-to bed but an hour later when I went to the store for some small
-purchase a woman climbed out of a pickup truck and with three small
-children, came in. She lived on her ranch 60 miles away and had come to
-buy her month's supply of provisions--a full load for the truck. When
-she paid her bill she nodded toward her brood: "Charlie, those kids look
-like brush Indians with all that hair...."
-
-Charlie got scissors and comb and went to work. Before he had swept out
-the shorn locks Ben Brandt came in, holding his jaw.
-
-"Feels like a stamp mill," he groaned. "Haven't slept in a week. Be dead
-by the time I get to Barstow." It was 125 miles to Barstow and Ben was
-waiting for a ride with someone going that way.
-
-Charlie went behind the counter, returned with forceps, opening and
-closing the jaws of the instrument two or three times as if in practice
-and then he turned to the sufferer: "You understand it's against the law
-for me to use these things. In a pinch--"
-
-"To hell with the law," Ben snapped. "Yank it out!"
-
-Charlie took a chair to the back porch. Ben sat down and with a
-vice-like arm about Ben's head, the forceps went in and the tooth came
-out.
-
-I went outside and sat on the bench with a better understanding of
-Shoshone and people and values which come only from friendships closely
-knitted and help unselfishly given.
-
-Why does a man like the desert? As good an answer as any is another
-question: Why does he like chicken? Students of human behavior, poets,
-writers, gushing debutantes and greying dowagers, humorless scientists,
-and bored urbanites have labored mightily to explain it.
-
-"Something just gets into the blood," one says, frankly groping for an
-answer. Immensities of space. Solitudes that whittle the ego down to
-size. Detachment from routine cares. A feel of nearness to whatever it
-is that is God. Stars to finger. The muted symphonies of farflung sky
-and earth.
-
-Whatever it is, I was now aware that as between hell and Shoshone, I
-would give the nod to Shoshone. I was getting used to Shoshone and
-desolation when a few days later Charlie came out of the store and sat
-beside me on the bench. "Road's open," he said. "I reckon you're in a
-hurry to get away."
-
-I didn't answer at once but conscious of his searching look, finally
-stammered that Dan Modine wanted me to go with him to Happy Jack's
-party. "I can spare another day...." Charlie lit a cigarette, took a
-puff or two. "You've gone desert," he chuckled and went back into the
-store.
-
-For a week I'd been hearing of Happy Jack's party and when Dan told me
-that everyone within 100 miles would be on hand, I was glad to go. Dan
-gave me Jack's background on the 35 mile trip across dry washes, deep
-sands, and hairpin turns on pitching hills.
-
-Born on the desert, Jack was the son of a Forty Niner and a Piute squaw.
-He had grown up as an Indian and had married Mary, a full blood Piute.
-Jack's brother Lem married Anna, another squaw.
-
-"Lem had worked at odd jobs and in the mines," Dan said. "Now and then
-he and Anna would do a little prospecting. Anna found a claim that
-showed a little color. Lem worked alongside his squaw a couple weeks,
-but it was a back breaking job and Lem quit it. But Anna kept digging
-and one day she came up to their shack with a piece of ore that was
-almost pure gold. Anna's find made them rich.
-
-"I reckon money does things to people. Anyway, it didn't take Lem long
-to get rid of Anna. He gave her enough so that she could take it easy.
-Then he pushed off to the city to live high, wide, and handsome. I see
-Anna now and then. She's not jolly like she used to be. Lem has always
-wanted Jack to get rid of Mary and come to the city. In fact, Jack told
-me once that Lem offered to give him half of his money if he would do
-that. But Jack said, to hell with the city. He's the happy go lucky
-sort. Big, good looking, and lazy. His old dobe under the cottonwood
-tree and the water running by with plenty of outdoors--that suits Jack."
-
-We found, as Dan had predicted, that everybody in the country had come
-to Jack's party. A long U shaped table was placed outside under the
-shade of a tree. From nearby pits came a tantalizing aroma of barbecue.
-A keg of bourbon encircled with glasses stood beside a bucket of
-dripping mint. Cigars and cigarettes were on top of the keg and Jack saw
-that his guests were always supplied.
-
-There was an orchestra with capable musicians, Jack occasionally pinch
-hitting for the bull fiddler when the latter took time out for a drink
-or a dance. But when the snare drum player wanted his bourbon, Jack was
-like a kid pulling doodads from a Christmas tree. "It will last a week,"
-Dan said. "A few may pull out after a day or two, but others will take
-their places."
-
-"This must have cost Jack a year's labor," I said. "I told him that
-once," Dan laughed. "He asked me what else would a fellow work a year
-for."
-
-Jack's views of life and things were Mary's, except that Mary knew lean
-years come and if any provisions were to be made for them she would have
-to make them. She tended the goats and the sheep, cut the deer and the
-mountain sheep into strips and hung them high, where the flies wouldn't
-get them, to cure in the breeze. If Jack wanted to throw a party, so did
-Mary. "... Big party ... kill fat steer. Five sheep. Heap good time...."
-To Jack's everlasting credit, be it said that whatever Mary did, suited
-Jack.
-
-"Oh, him fine man," Mary would say. "Like home. Play with children. No
-get mad...."
-
-There may be somewhere in this world a morsel approaching Mary's
-barbecued mountain sheep, but I've never tasted it.
-
-Jack told me later that the best meat is that from an old ram with no
-teeth. "He hasn't eaten all winter, because his teeth won't let him cut
-the hard, woody sage and being starved when spring comes, he gorges on
-the new sacatone. He fattens quickly and his flesh is tender."
-
-While Dan and I were walking about, a long limousine came across the
-valley and parked behind a screen of mesquite well away from the house
-and the guests. Dan and I happened to be nearby as a big, dark man
-expensively tailored stepped out. A lady fashionably dressed remained in
-the car.
-
-"That's Lem," Dan explained. "When he was a kid he ran around in a gee
-string. I reckon his wife doesn't want to meet the in-laws."
-
-We came upon him a moment later and while he and Dan talked of old times
-Jack rushed down and embraced Lem. "Come up," he urged, but Lem's
-interest was lukewarm. Mary was busy and he would see her later. No, he
-didn't wish a drink. He had cigars. Just stopped in to see how Jack was
-and if he'd changed his mind.
-
-Dan and I moved away and sat under a shed along the runoff of the spring
-and had no choice about listening to a conversation not intended for our
-ears.
-
-Jack was squatted on his heels and his brother was sitting on a boulder.
-Lem was talking, his voice brittle: "Of course, we married squaws ...
-but we are more white than Indian. I'll give you all the money you need.
-Let Mary go back to her people. She'll be happy. Look at Anna ... she's
-contented and better off with her own people and it will be the same
-with Mary."
-
-Lem lifted his hand, a big diamond ring flashing on his finger as he
-pointed to the squalid cabin where Jack's fat squaw, her face beaming,
-was serving the guests. "Look at that hovel. Just a pig sty. If you
-prefer that to $10,000 a year, it's your business. I've come out for the
-last time...."
-
-Jack, bareheaded, rose, his hair rumpled in the wind as he glanced at
-the things about--the sagging roof, the shade tree beside it and
-following his glance I saw Mary smile at him and wave. Then he turned to
-Lem: "A pig sty, huh? Ten thousand a year. Mansion in the city." His
-eyes traveled over Lem's smart tailored suit, the diamond, the malacca
-cane pecking the gravel at his feet. I could see Jack's fingers digging
-at his palms, the muscles rippling along his wrists and I sensed that he
-was seething inside.
-
-"Pig sty.... One year I recollect, no crop. No meat. No game. Nothing. I
-was down with fever. She was down too, but she got up and walked and
-crawled from here to Indian Springs. Through the brush. Over the
-mountain to get grub from her people. Why, sometimes I'd feel like going
-off by myself and bawling...." Jack turned again to his brother, flint
-in his dark eyes. "I ought to brain you. To hell with your money. She
-stuck with me and bigod, I'll stick with her."
-
-Then Jack calmly strode back to his party, and somehow it seemed to me
-the hovel had suddenly become a holy shrine.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIII
- Sex in Death Valley Country
-
-
-Sex, of course, went with the white man to the desert, but because there
-were no Freuds, no Kinseys stirring the social sewage, it was considered
-merely as a biologic urge and thus its impact on the lives of the early
-settlers was a realistic one. It was not good for man to live alone. The
-husky young adventurer found a water hole and a cottonwood tree and
-built a cabin. But he found it wasn't a home. The lonely immensity of
-space he knew, was no place for a white woman and none were there. He
-faced the fundamental problem squarely and looked about for a squaw.
-
-He paid Hungry Bill or some other Indian head man $10 for the mate of
-his choice and that sanctified the relation. She brought a certain
-degree of orderliness to the cabin, washed his clothes, cooked his
-meals. A child was born and the cabin became a home. The squaw could
-sharpen a stick, walk out into the brush and return with herbs and roots
-and serve a palatable dinner. She worked his fields, groomed his horses
-and relieved him of responsibility for the children. The progeny
-followed the rules of breeding. Some good. Some bad.
-
-Said old Jim Baker, who married a Shoshone, pleading for a "squar" deal
-for his son: "There's only one creature worse than a genuine Indian and
-that's a half breed. He has got two devils in him and is meaner than the
-meanest Indian I ever saw. That boy of mine is a half-breed and he ain't
-accountable."
-
-Almost all of the first settlers were squaw men and the matings were
-tolerated because they were understood. It was often a long journey to
-obtain the sanction of a Chief and the squaw was taken without
-formality. Many of these matings lasted and the offspring were absorbed
-without social embarrassment in the life of the community. Dr. Kinsey
-would have had little joy in his search for perversion or infidelities,
-though there is the instance of a drunken squaw who aroused the owner of
-a saloon at midnight on the Ash Meadows desert and shouted: "I want a
-man...."
-
-Once Shoshone faced the desperate need of a school. There were only
-three children of school age in the little settlement and the nearest
-school was 28 miles away. Parents complained, but authorities at the
-county seat nearly 200 miles away, pointed out that the law required 13
-children or an average attendance of five and a half to form a school
-district.
-
-Like other community problems it was taken to Charlie, though none
-believed that even Charlie could solve it.
-
-The time for the opening of schools was but a few weeks away when one
-day Brown headed his car out into the desert. "Hunting trip," he
-explained.
-
-In a hovel he found Rosie, a Piute squaw with a brood of children. "How
-old?" Charlie asked.
-
-"Him five ... him six now," she said. "Him seven. Him eight."
-
-"How'd you like to live at Shoshone? Plenty work. Good house."
-
-"Okay. Me come," Rosie said.
-
-With the half breeds, the school was able to open.
-
-Rosie was a challenging problem. She would have taken no beauty prize
-among the Piutes, but when along her desert trails she acquired these
-children of assorted parentage, Fate dealt her an ace.
-
-With the few dollars Rosie wangled from the several fathers for the
-support of their children, she lived unworried. She liked to get drunk
-and the only nettling problem in her life was the federal law against
-selling liquor to Indians. So she established her own medium of
-exchange--a bottle of liquor. Unfortunately she spread a social disease
-and that was something to worry about.
-
-"Rosie has Shoshone over a barrel," Joe Ryan said. "If we run her out,
-we won't have enough children for school."
-
-Then there was the economic angle--the loss of wages by afflicted miners
-and mines crippled by the absence of the unafflicted who would take time
-off to go to Las Vegas for the commodity supplied by Rosie.
-
-Charlie arranged for Ann Cowboy to look after Rosie's children and
-called up W. H. Brown, deputy sheriff at Death Valley Junction and told
-him to come for Rosie. Brownie, as he is known all over the desert, came
-and took Rosie into custody. "What'll I charge her with?"
-
-"She has a venereal disease," Charlie said.
-
-"There's no law I know of against that...."
-
-"All right. Charge her with pollution. She got drunk and fell into the
-spring." Then Charlie called up the Judge and suggested Rosie have a
-year's vacation in the county jail.
-
-The paths that radiated from Rosie's shack in the brush like spokes from
-the hub of a wheel, were soon overgrown with salt grass. She served her
-sentence and returned to Shoshone and the paths were soon beaten smooth
-again.
-
-Eventually Brown declared Shoshone out of bounds for Rosie and she moved
-over into Nevada. There she found a lover of her tribe and one night
-when both were drunk, Rosie decided she'd had enough of him and with a
-big, sharp knife she calmly disemboweled him--for which unladylike
-incident she was removed to a Nevada prison where the state cured her
-syphilis and turned her loose--if not morally reformed, at least
-physically fit.
-
-One of Rosie's patrons was a man thought to be in his middle fifties.
-Always carefully groomed, his white shirts, spotless ties, and tailored
-suits were conspicuous in a place where levis were the rule. He was also
-a total abstainer. When he died suddenly and it was learned he was 82
-years old, Shoshone gasped. An item in his will read: "To Rosie, $50 to
-buy whiskey."
-
-Living in a wickiup in the mesquite was the Indian, Tom Weed, who shared
-with his squaw a passion for liquor. Sober, Tom was industrious in the
-Indian way. He knew the country, when and where the mountain sheep were
-fattest; the herbs that cured and the best grasses for the beautiful
-baskets woven by his wife.
-
-Tom filed on a deposit of non-metallic ore near Shoshone and forgot it.
-A subsequent locater found a buyer. Considerable capital was to be
-invested and the purchaser decided that Tom, if so disposed, could at
-least challenge the title. In order to dispose of Tom he sent the
-document to Dad Fairbanks together with a check payable to Tom for $1000
-and asked Dad to get a quit claim deed from Tom.
-
-Since $1000 was more than Tom ever expected to see in his life he was
-eager to sign. "You cash check?" he asked Dad.
-
-"Sure," Dad told him.
-
-As Dad was getting the money he said, "Tom, long winter ahead. Hard to
-get work. Don't you think you'd better leave money with me? Might come
-in handy." Dad saw that Tom was impressed and added: "You told me
-yesterday you were going over to Las Vegas. That's another good reason.
-Think it over."
-
-"Okay. Me think." Tom stood for a long moment staring at the floor,
-studying every angle of the problem. Finally he thrust his palm at Dad
-and said gravely: "Might die...."
-
-Dad gave him the money and Tom went to Las Vegas. In an hour he was
-drunk. In three he was broke and in jail.
-
-One night he and his squaw got blissfully drunk. They were sleeping in a
-shed full of combustible junk when it caught fire. Other Indians
-attracted by their screams rushed to the scene but both were dead. From
-Tom's wickiup, a few feet from the shed, they took Tom's guns and
-saddles, his squaw's priceless baskets--all the belongings of both--and
-tossed them into the flames. Thus the evil spirits were kept away and
-the souls of Tom and his squaw passed happily to the Piute heaven which
-is a place where there is a big lake and forests filled with game and
-the squaws are strong and plentiful.
-
-
-The Johnnie Mine, an important gold producer, east of Shoshone, was
-located by John Tecopa, son of Cap Tecopa, Pahrump Chief.
-
-Tecopa found the float; gave Ed Metcalf an interest to help him locate
-the ledge. Bob and Monte Montgomery bought the claim. They interested
-Jerry Langford, who induced the Mormon Church to get behind the project.
-
-The Potosi was an early discovery on Timber Mountain between the Johnnie
-Mine and Good Springs. (It was here that Carole Lombard, wife of Clark
-Gable, was killed in an airplane accident in 1941.) From this mine came
-the lead which made the bullets used in the Mountain Meadows massacre.
-Jeff Grundy, a prospector of early days, said his father molded the
-bullets and delivered them to John D. Lee, who after 20 years was
-executed for the murder of the 123 victims of the massacre.
-
-Lee was the owner of Lee's Ferry, which was the only place where the
-Colorado River could be crossed in the Grand Canyon area until the
-present suspension bridge 500 feet high was built.
-
-Near Johnnie are Ash Meadows and the beautiful Pahrump Valley,
-overlooked by the Charleston Mountains--the summer sleeping porch of Las
-Vegas, 35 miles south.
-
-At Ash Meadows lived Jack Longstreet, who wore his hair long enough to
-cover his ears. He claimed kinship with the distinguished South Carolina
-family of that name. Easier to prove is that Mr. Longstreet came from
-Texas and as a 14 year old youngster was caught with a band of horse
-thieves in Colorado. The older ones were hanged but because of his youth
-Longstreet was released after his ears were cropped to brand him for
-identification by others. He lived and drank lustily for 96 years and
-died with a competency.
-
-Near Johnnie also lived Mary Scott, who discovered the Confidence Mine,
-a landmark in Death Valley. Mary was a squaw who, after consorting with
-several white men, chose for her mate a half-breed named Bob Scott. On a
-hunting and trapping trip Mary picked up some ore which Scott decided
-was silver. Since silver could not be profitably handled because of
-transportation costs, Scott filed no notice.
-
-Years after Scott's death, Mary showed samples of the ore to her cousin,
-an Indian named Bob Black and Bob showed it to Frank Cole, a millwright
-at the Johnnie Mine. Cole and Jimmy Ashdown grubstaked Mary and Bob, who
-returned to Death Valley and located the property. Samples showed rich
-gold.
-
-For a wagon with a canopy and a spavined horse Cole and Ashdown secured
-the interest of Mary and Bob. Cole and Ashdown then sold to the
-Montgomery brothers, who through Bishop Cannon secured backing for the
-venture from the Mormon Church.
-
-Dan Driscoll built the road to the mine. Shorty Harris, Bob Warnack, and
-Rube Graham dug the well and mine shaft. It produced rich ore to a depth
-of 65 feet, where the vein was broken up.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIV
- Shoshone Country. Resting Springs
-
-
-The country about Shoshone is identified with the earliest migration of
-Americans to California.
-
-It is a curious fact that prior to the coming of Jedediah Smith who, in
-1826 was actually the first American to enter the state from the east,
-the contented Spanish believed that the Sierras were insurmountable
-barriers to invasion by the hated American or any attacking enemy.
-
-After Smith the first white American to look upon the Shoshone region so
-far as known, was William Wolfskill, a Kentucky trapper who left Santa
-Fe in 1830-31 on a trading expedition with stores of cloth, garments,
-and gimcracks.
-
-Having had poor luck in disposing of his cargo, when he reached the
-Virgin River he decided to push westward across the Mojave Desert and
-entered California by way of Cajon Pass. After resting at San Gabriel he
-went north into the San Joaquin Valley. There he disposed of his stock
-at fabulous prices, taking in trade mules, horses, silks, and other
-items which he took to Taos and Santa Fe, receiving for this merchandise
-equally huge profits.
-
-Wolfskill later settled in Los Angeles, one of the earliest Americans in
-the pueblo where he acquired large land holdings. There he established
-the citrus industry, planting a grove in what is now the heart of Los
-Angeles.
-
-In 1832 Joseph B. Chiles organized a party at Independence, Missouri,
-and started for California. It numbered 50 men, women, and children.
-Upon reaching Fort Laramie, Wyoming (which was officially Fort John, but
-for some reason was never so called) Chiles met Joseph Reddeford Walker
-and employed him as guide.
-
-Eighteen years before the Bennett-Arcane party came to grief, Walker had
-discovered Walker River and Walker Lake in Nevada, afterward named for
-him. After reaching the Sierras, his jaded teams were unable to cross
-and had to be abandoned, the party narrowly escaping death. Having heard
-of the southerly course over the old Spanish Trail, he turned back and
-over it guided the Chiles party.
-
-Early in 1843, John C. Fremont led a party of 39 men from Salt Lake City
-northward to Fort Vancouver and in November of that year, started on the
-return trip to the East. This trip was interrupted when he found his
-party threatened by cold and starvation and he faced about; crossed the
-Sierra Nevadas and went to Sutter's Fort. After resting and outfitting,
-he set out for the East by the southerly route over the old Spanish
-trail, which leads through the Shoshone region.
-
-At a spring somewhere north of the Mojave River he made camp. The water
-nauseated some of his men and he moved to another. Identification of
-these springs has been a matter of dispute and though historians have
-honestly tried to identify them, the fact remains that none can say "I
-was there."
-
-In the vicinity were several springs any of which may have been the one
-referred to by Fremont in his account of the journey. Among these were
-two water holes indicated on early maps as Agua de Tio Mesa, and another
-as Agua de Tomaso.
-
-There are several springs of nauseating water in the area and some of
-the old timers academically inclined, insisted that Fremont probably
-camped at Saratoga Springs, which afforded a sight of Telescope Peak or
-at Salt Spring, nine miles east on the present Baker-Shoshone Highway at
-Rocky Point.
-
-Kit Carson was Fremont's guide. Fremont records that two Mexicans rode
-into his camp on April 27, 1844, and asked him to recover some horses
-which they declared had been stolen from them by Indians at the
-Archilette Spring, 13 miles east of Shoshone.
-
-One of the Mexicans was Andreas Fuentes, the other a boy of 11
-years--Pablo Hernandez. While the Indians were making the raid, the boy
-and Fuentes had managed to get away with 30 of the horses and these they
-had left for safety at a water hole known to them as Agua de Tomaso.
-They reported that they had left Pablo's father and mother and a man
-named Santiago Giacome and his wife at Archilette Spring.
-
-With Fremont, besides Kit Carson, was another famed scout, Alexander
-Godey, a St. Louis Frenchman--a gay, good looking dare devil who later
-married Maria Antonia Coronel, daughter of a rich Spanish don and became
-prominent in California.
-
-In answer to the Mexicans' plea for help, Fremont turned to his men and
-asked if any of them wished to aid the victims of the Piute raid. He
-told them he would furnish horses for such a purpose if anyone cared to
-volunteer. Of the incident Kit Carson, who learned to write after he was
-grown, says in his dictated autobiography: "Godey and myself volunteered
-with the expectation that some men of our party would join us. They did
-not. We two and the Mexicans ... commenced the pursuit."
-
-Fuentes' horse gave out and he returned to Fremont's camp that night,
-but Godey, Carson, and the boy went on. They had good moonlight at first
-but upon entering a deep and narrow canyon, utter blackness came, even
-shutting out starlight, and Carson says they had to "feel for the
-trail."
-
-One may with reason surmise that Godey and Carson proceeded through the
-gorge that leads to the China Ranch and now known as Rainbow Canyon.
-When they could go no farther they slept an hour, resumed the hunt and
-shortly after sunrise, saw the Indians feasting on the carcass of one of
-the stolen horses. They had slain five others and these were being
-boiled. Carson's and Godey's horses were too tired to go farther and
-were hitched out of sight among the rocks. The hunters took the trail
-afoot and made their way into the herd of stolen horses.
-
-Says Carson: "A young one got frightened. That frightened the rest. The
-Indians noticed the commotion ... sprang to their arms. We now
-considered it time to charge on the Indians. They were about 30 in
-number. We charged. I fired, killing one. Godey fired, missed but
-reloaded and fired, killing another. There were only three shots fired
-and two were killed. The remainder ran. I ... ascended a hill to keep
-guard while Godey scalped the dead Indians. He scalped the one he shot
-and was proceeding toward the one I shot. He was not yet dead and was
-behind some rocks. As Godey approached he raised, let fly an arrow. It
-passed through Godey's shirt collar. He again fell and Godey finished
-him."
-
-Subsequently it was discovered that Godey hadn't missed, but that both
-men had fired at the same Indian as proven by two bullets found in one
-of the dead Indians. Godey called these Indians "Diggars." The one with
-the two bullets was the one who sent the arrow through Godey's collar
-and when Godey was scalping him, "he sprang to his feet, the blood
-streaming from his skinned head and uttered a hideous yowl." Godey
-promptly put him out of his pain.
-
-They returned to camp. Writes Fremont: "A war whoop was heard such as
-Indians make when returning from a victorious enterprise and soon Carson
-and Godey appeared, driving before them a band of horses recognized by
-Fuentes to be part of those they had lost. Two bloody scalps dangling
-from the end of Godey's gun...."
-
-Fremont wrote of it later: "The place, object and numbers considered,
-this expedition of Carson and Godey may be considered among the boldest
-and most disinterested which the annals of Western adventure so full of
-daring deeds can present." It was indeed a gallant response to the plea
-of unfortunates whom they'd never seen before and would never see again.
-
-When Fremont and his party reached the camp of the Mexicans they found
-the horribly butchered bodies of Hernandez, Pablo's father, and Giacome.
-The naked bodies of the wives were found somewhat removed and shackled
-to stakes.
-
-Fremont changed the name of the spring from Archilette to Agua de
-Hernandez and as such it was known for several years. He took the
-Mexican boy, Pablo Hernandez, with him to Missouri where he was placed
-with the family of Fremont's father-in-law, U. S. Senator Thomas H.
-Benton. The young Mexican didn't care for civilization and the American
-way of life and in the spring of 1847 begged to be returned to Mexico.
-Senator Benton secured transportation for him on the schooner Flirt, by
-order of the Navy, and he was landed at Vera Cruz--a record of which is
-preserved in the archives of the 30th Congress, 1848.
-
-Three years later a rumor was circulated that the famed bandit, Joaquin
-Murietta was no other than Pablo Hernandez.
-
-Lieutenant, afterwards Colonel, Brewerton was at Resting Springs in 1848
-with Kit Carson who then was carrying important messages for the
-government to New Mexico. He found the ground white with the bleached
-bones of other victims of the desert Indians. Brewerton calls them Pau
-Eutaws.
-
-The Mormons began early to look upon this region as a logical part of
-the State of Deseret, for the creation of which, Brigham Young
-petitioned Congress, setting forth among reasons for the recognition of
-such a state that: "... We are so far removed from all civilized society
-and organized government and also natural barriers of trackless deserts,
-including mountains of snow and savages more bloody than either, so that
-we can never be united with any other portion of the country."
-
-As early as 1851, the far-seeing Young decided to found a colony of
-Saints in San Bernardino, California, to extend Mormon influence. Sam
-Brannan, brilliant adherent of that faith, had already come to
-California with the nucleus of a Mormon colony in 1846, two years before
-Marshall discovered gold.
-
-Brannan became an outstanding figure among the Argonauts. None exceeded
-him in leadership or popularity in the building of San Francisco and the
-state. He grew rich and unfortunately began drinking; finally abandoned
-Mormonism and died poor.
-
-The colonizers sent out by Brigham Young were in three divisions. One
-under the leadership of Amasa Lyman, who brought his five wives. Another
-was headed by Charles C. Rich, who was accompanied by three of his
-wives. It is interesting to note that Rich became the father of 51
-children by five wives.
-
-The third division was under the command of Captain Jefferson Hunt,
-guide for the entire party. These leaders were all able men who were
-highly regarded by gentiles. They also camped at Agua de Hernandez and
-it was the Mormons who junked the previous name and gave one with
-significance. They called it "Resting Springs" and this more fitting
-name has lasted.
-
-On May 21, 1851, the Mormon elder, Parley P. Pratt, heading a party of
-missionaries en route to the South Sea Islands writes in his diary: "We
-encamped at a place called Resting Springs.... This is a fine place for
-rest.... Since leaving the Vegas (Las Vegas) we have traveled 75 miles
-through the most horrible desert.... Twenty miles from the Vegas we were
-assailed ... by a shower of arrows from the savage mountain robbers....
-Leaving Resting Springs the party arrived at Salt Spring gold mines
-toward evening...."
-
-In 1850, Phineas Banning, pioneer resident of Los Angeles and later
-owner of Catalina Island, hauled freight from Los Angeles to the gold
-mine at Salt Spring opposite Rocky Point just south of the Amargosa
-River on the Baker road and in 1854 Mormons discovered gold 25 miles
-south of Resting Springs, long before Dr. French searched for the
-Gunsight in Death Valley.
-
-The Amargosa River is one of the world's most remarkable water courses.
-Originating at Springdale, north of Beatty, Nevada, it twists southward
-in zigzag pattern until it reaches a point about 34 miles south of
-Shoshone. There it turns west, crosses Highway 127, enters Death Valley
-at its most southerly point and then turns north to disappear 60 miles
-from the place of its origin.
-
-You may cross and re-cross it many times totally unaware of its
-existence, but in the cloudburst season it can and does become a
-terrible agent of destruction.
-
-In 1853 Major George Chorpenning obtained a contract to carry mail
-between the Mormon colony of San Bernardino, California, and Salt Lake.
-To reach Resting Springs, a station on the route, required five days.
-Today it is a journey of four hours.
-
-Resting Springs was also a relay station for white outlaws and Indian
-raiders from Utah, Wyoming, and the Dakotas. Even before Fremont,
-Carson, or the Mormons old Bill Williams, for whom Bill Williams River,
-Bill Williams Mountain, and the town of Williams, Arizona, are named was
-at Resting Springs.
-
- [Illustration: Map of Death Valley]
-
- [Illustration: John W. Searles, looking for gold, made a fortune in
- borax.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Like Weepah which "Boomed
- and Busted" after one day, Gilbert died after a few weeks.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD G. WEIGHT Saratoga Springs]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. The Bottom
- of America]
-
- BAD WATER
- 279.6 FEET BELOW SEA LEVEL
- LOWEST POINT IN THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE
-
- <== SHOSHONE 57
- <== BAKER 93
- FURNACE CREEK 17 ==>
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Grave of
- Jas. Dayton.
- Bones are those of his horses.]
-
- [Illustration: Dugouts in Dublin Gulch at Shoshone.]
-
- [Illustration: Mesquite Club, Shoshone. Known throughout the West.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Golden
- Canyon]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. One of the
- famous Twenty Mule Teams.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Here boomed
- and busted the C. C. Julian swindle. Great names and great banks
- were shamefully involved.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Yellow Aster Mine
- (foreground) made owners rich. Randsburg in the background.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Belle Springs (Agua Tomaso)
- on old Salt Lake trail. Camp site of John C. Fremont.]
-
- [Illustration: Ralph Jacobus Fairbanks, outstanding pioneer, every
- man's friend.]
-
- [Illustration: Dobe Charlie Nels.
- He saw Bodie boom and die.]
-
- [Illustration: Bodie, hellroarer from cemetery. Now another ghost
- town.]
-
- [Illustration: Seldom-seen Slim, colorful desert character.]
-
- [Illustration: Senator Charles Brown, benevolent overlord of Death
- Valley.]
-
- [Illustration: Panamint Tom, noted Piute, brother of Hungry Bill,
- Indian Chief]
-
- [Illustration: Where these wickiups were, now stands luxurious
- Furnace Creek Inn.]
-
- [Illustration: Courtesy Frasher's Photo. Pomona, Calif. Darwin
- Falls]
-
- [Illustration: First House in Shoshone, built by Cub Lee.]
-
- [Illustration: Shorty Harris and his cabin at Ballarat, Panamint
- Valley.]
-
- [Illustration: Jim Butler, the discoverer of Tonopah Silver.]
-
- [Illustration: Sir Harry Oakes, booted off a train one day,
- discovered one of the world's richest mines the next.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Beatty, Nevada. Bare
- Mountain in distance.]
-
- [Illustration: "Ma" and "Dad" Fairbanks.
- He was known to the Indians as Long Man.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Old Road Sign in Emigrant
- Wash.]
-
- Townsend Pass -->
- <-- Skidoo 7 M.
-
- [Illustration: Rock resting on gravel, gravel on sand. Here Quon
- Sing, heathen, created an oasis, was chased off by Christian's
- guns.]
-
- [Illustration: Death Valley Scotty on his native heath.]
-
- [Illustration: Charles and Stella Brown, Shoshone.]
-
- [Illustration: Station at Rhyolite, Nevada, long a ghost town.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Monument in
- Death Valley honors Shorty Harris.]
-
- BURY ME BESIDE JIM DAYTON IN THE VALLEY WE LOVED. ABOVE ME WRITE:
- "HERE LIES SHORTY HARRIS, A SINGLE BLANKET JACKASS
- PROSPECTOR."--EPITAPH REQUESTED BY SHORTY (FRANK) HARRIS BELOVED GOLD
- HUNTER. 1856-1834. HERE JAS. DAYTON, PIONEER, PERISHED 1898.
-
- TO THESE TRAILMAKERS WHOSE COURAGE MATCHES THE FOUNDERS OF THE LAND
- THIS BIT OF EARTH IS DEDICATED FOREVER.
-
- [Illustration: Pete Harmon, prospector. He walked more than 400
- miles in July to visit Shorty Harris when he heard that he was ill.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD. O. WEIGHT Calico, Ghost Town]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Wild Burro
- Colt]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Death Valley's fantastic
- rock formations seen from Auguerreberry's Point.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Old Harmony Borax Works,
- opposite Furnace Creek.]
-
- [Illustration: January 2, 1926. We camped our second night out at
- the Phantom City of Rhyolite.]
-
- [Illustration: Dublin Gulch, Shoshone. In these dugouts lived Joe
- Volmer, Dobe Charley and Jack Crowley, prospectors.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Golden Street, Rhyolite]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Bad Water, here the thirsty
- drank and died.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Ballarat, once an important
- freight station, now sand and sage.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Stables of Tufa Works used
- by Twenty Mule Teams, where borax was mined.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT Zabriskie Ruins. Opals may
- be found in the canyon at right.]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Charcoal
- Pits]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Typical
- Death Valley Canyon]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Death Valley
- sand dunes]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Effect of
- prehistoric convulsions]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Furnace
- Creek wash]
-
- [Illustration: COURTESY FRASHER'S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF. Ryan, and an
- abandoned borax mine.]
-
-Williams was a Baptist preacher, turned Mountain Man. He had guided
-Fremont through the terrors of the San Juan country and was accused of
-cannibalism when hunger threatened one detachment. Of Williams Kit
-Carson said: "In starving times, don't walk ahead of Bill Williams."
-
-Williams brought a band of Chaguanosos Indians to Resting Springs and
-made it an outpost for a horse stealing raid. With him were Pegleg Smith
-and Jim Beckwith, the mulatto who after having been a blacksmith with
-Ashley's Fur Traders in 1821, became a famous guide, Indian Chief,
-trader, and scout. (Also called Beckwourth and Beckworth.)
-
-Leaving Resting Springs, they proceeded through Cajon Pass for their
-loot and on May 14, 1840, Juan Perez, administrator at San Gabriel
-Mission excited Southern California when he announced that every ranch
-between San Gabriel and San Bernardino had been stripped of horses. Two
-days later posses from every settlement in the valley started in
-pursuit. The raiders made it a running battle, defeated several
-detachments, adding the latter's stock and grub to their plunder.
-
-Five days later, reinforcements were sent from Los Angeles, Chino, and
-other settlements, all under command of Jose Antonio Carrillo--ancestor
-of the movie celebrity, Leo Carrillo. He had "225 horses, 75 men, 49
-guns with braces of pistols, 19 spears, 22 swords and sabers, and 400
-cartridges."
-
-The posse threw fear into the raiders, but didn't catch them, though the
-latter lost half of the stolen horses. At Resting Springs, Carrillo
-found some abandoned clothing, saddles, and cooking utensils. Fifteen
-hundred horses that had died from thirst or lack of food were counted
-during the chase.
-
-Later, when Pegleg Smith was chided about the high price he demanded of
-an emigrant for a horse, he remarked: "Well, the horses cost me plenty.
-I lost half of them getting out of the country and three of my best
-squaws...."
-
-The earliest American settler at Resting Springs remembered by old
-timers was Philander Lee, a rough and somewhat eccentric squaw man. He
-was big, straight as a ramrod, afraid of nothing, and of an undetermined
-past. He was there in the early Eighties. He cleared 200 acres, raised
-alfalfa, stock, and some fruit. He had a way of adding the last part of
-his first name to his offspring, Leander and Meander are samples. Some
-of his descendants still live in the country.
-
-It was near Resting Springs Ranch while Phi Lee owned it that Jacob
-Breyfogle, of lost mine fame, was scalped by Hungry Bill's tribesmen.
-The story is told in another chapter.
-
-Phi Lee's brother, Cub Lee, who added spicy pages to the annals of Death
-Valley country, built the first home erected at Shoshone--an adobe which
-still stands. It was long the home of the squaw, Ann Cowboy. Another
-brother of Phi Lee was known as "Shoemaker" because he roamed the desert
-as a cobbler. All were squaw men.
-
-Cub Lee established a reputation for keeping his word and it was said no
-one ever disputed it and lived. Indians over in Nevada were giving a
-"heap big" party. His squaw wanted to go. Cub didn't. "You stay home,"
-he ordered. "If you go, I'll kill you." He rode away and upon returning,
-discovered she was absent. He leaped on his cayuse, went to the party
-and found her. Whipping out his gun he killed both wife and son, blew
-the smoke out of his pistol and leisurely rode away.
-
-But the Nevada officials thought Cub Lee was too meticulous about
-keeping his word and Cub had a brief cooling off period in the pen.
-
-Pegleg Smith made Resting Springs his headquarters for the greatest haul
-in the history of California horse stealing and reached Cajon Pass
-before the theft was discovered. These horses were driven into Utah and
-there sold to emigrants, traders, and ranchers. Smith may be said to be
-the inventor of the Lost Mine, as a means of getting quick money. The
-credulous are still looking for mines that existed only in Pegleg's fine
-imagination.
-
-Thomas L. Smith was born at Crab Orchard, Kentucky, October 10, 1801.
-With little schooling, he ran away from home to become a trapper and
-hunter, and following the western streams eventually settled in Wyoming.
-He married several squaws, choosing these from different tribes, thus
-insuring friendly alliance with all.
-
-He had been a member of Le Grand's first trapping expedition to Santa Fe
-and was an associate of such outstanding men as St. Vrain, Sublette,
-Platte, Jim Bridger, Kit Carson, the merchant Antoine Rubideaux
-(properly Robedoux) of St. Louis. He spoke several Indian languages and
-earned the gratitude of the Indians in his area by leading them to
-victory in a battle with the Utes. Able and likable, he also had iron
-nerves and courage. His morals, he justified on the ground that his were
-the morals of the day.
-
-J. G. Bruff, historian, whose "Gold Rush-Journal and Drawings" is good
-material for research, met Smith on Bear River August 6, 1849, and wrote
-in his diary: "Pegleg Smith came into camp. He trades whiskey." Actually
-he traded anything he could lay his hands on.
-
-While trapping for beaver with St. Vrain on the Platte, Smith was shot
-by an Indian, the bullet shattering the bones in his leg just above the
-ankle. He was talking with St. Vrain at the moment and after a look at
-the injury, begged those about to amputate his leg. Having no experience
-his companions refused. He then asked the camp cook to bring him a
-butcher knife and amputated it himself with minor assistance by the
-noted Milton Sublette.
-
-Smith was then carried on a stretcher to his winter quarters on the
-Green River. While the wound was healing he discovered some bones
-protruding. Sublette pulled them out with a pair of bullet molds. Indian
-remedies procured by his squaws healed the stump and in the following
-spring of 1828 he made a rough wooden leg. Thereafter he was called
-Pegleg by the whites and We-he-to-ca by all Indians.
-
-A wooden socket was fitted into the stirrup of his saddle and with this
-he could ride as skillfully as before. In the lean, last years of his
-life, he could be seen hopping along under an old beaver hat in San
-Francisco to and from Biggs and Kibbe's corner to Martin Horton's.
-Something in his appearance stamped him as a remarkable man.
-
-Major Horace Bell, noted western ranger, lawyer, author, and editor of
-early Los Angeles, relates that he saw Pegleg near a Mother Lode town,
-lying drunk on the roadside, straddled by his half-breed son who was
-pounding him in an effort to arouse him from his stupor.
-
-Smith had little success as a prospector, but saw in man's lust for
-gold, ways to get it easier than the pick and shovel method.
-
-In the pueblo days of Los Angeles, Smith was a frequent visitor at the
-Bella Union, the leading hotel. Always surrounded by a spellbound group,
-he lived largely. When his money ran out he always had a piece of
-high-grade gold quartz to lure investment in his phantom mine.
-
-And so we have the Lost Pegleg, located anywhere from Shoshone to
-Tucson. Nevertheless, no adequate story of the movement of civilization
-westward can ignore South Pass and Pegleg Smith.
-
-
-About 25 miles east of Shoshone and set back from the road under willows
-and cottonwoods, an old house identifies a landmark of Pahrump
-Valley--the Manse Ranch, once owned by the Yundt family.
-
-The original Yundt was among the first settlers, contemporary with
-Philander and Cub Lee and Aaron Winters. Yundt was a squaw man and his
-children, Sam, Lee, and John followed the father in taking squaws for
-their wives.
-
-Sam Yundt was operating a small store at Good Springs and making a
-precarious living when a sleek and talented promoter secured a mining
-claim nearby and induced Sam to enlarge his stock in order to care for
-the increased business promised by supplying provisions for the mine's
-employees. Sam, with visions of quick, profitable turnovers, stocked the
-empty shelves. For a few months the bills were paid promptly, then
-lagged. Sam yielded to plausible excuses and carried the account.
-Finally his own credit was jeopardized and wholesalers began to threaten
-suits. Then he heard the sheriff had an attachment ready to serve. In
-his desperation Sam went to the debtor. "I'm ruined," he pleaded. "You
-fellows will have to raise some money or we'll all quit eating."
-
-The fellow said, "All I can give you is stock in the Yellow Pine. It's
-that or nothing."
-
-Sam Yundt had done with next to nothing all his life, took the stock and
-waited for the sheriff. Then the miracle--pay dirt and Sam Yundt was
-rich, and now he did the natural thing. He decided he would live at a
-pace that matched his means.
-
-George Rose, an old friend, had a mine in the Avawatz and he needed
-money. He went to Sam. "Now that you're rich," he told Sam, "you'll be
-taking life easy. I've got some swamp land on the coast near Long Beach.
-Best duck shooting I know of and I'll sell it cheap."
-
-Sam didn't want it but he bought it just to accommodate his friend. In a
-little while the swamp land was an oil field and oil added another
-fortune to Yellow Pine's gold. Sam put his squaw Nancy, away, moved to
-the city and married a white woman. Nancy was provided for and for years
-she could be seen driving all over the desert in her buggy.
-
-A later owner of the Manse was one of whom the writer has a revealing
-memory. A battered Ford stopped at Shoshone and an unshaven individual
-stepped out, went into the store and came out with a loaf of bread and a
-chunk of bologna. Dirty underwear showed through a flapping rent in his
-patched overalls as he tore off a piece of bread and a chunk of the
-bologna and had his meal. The uneaten portions he tossed into the tool
-box, wiped his hands on his thighs and his mouth on his hand.
-
-"Jean Cazaurang," Brown chuckled, "won't pay six bits for lunch in the
-dining room. Worth $2,000,000."
-
-When the dinner gong sounded Cazaurang went to his tool box, retrieved
-the rest of the bologna, twisted a hunk from the bread loaf, tossed the
-rest back into the tool box. This time he saved a dollar. He curled
-himself up in the Ford that night and saved $2.00. Besides the Manse
-Ranch he had a 10,000 acre ranch in Mexico, stocked with sheep, cattle,
-and horses, and had several mines.
-
-Jean's end was not a happy one. One payday at his ranch, the good
-looking and likable young Mexican who worked for him, came for his
-money. Jean counted out the money from a poke and poured it into the
-palm of the Mexican. The Mexican counted it and with a smile looked at
-Jean. "Pardon me, Seor ... it's two bits short."
-
-"Be gone," ordered Jean.
-
-"But Seor, I have worked hard. My wife is hungry and I am hungry. My
-children are hungry."
-
-"Be gone," again shouted Jean and whipped out his gun.
-
-But the Mexican was young, lean, and lithe and he seized Jean's wrist
-and when he turned the wrist loose Jean Cazaurang was dead. And then the
-Mexican made one mistake. Instead of going to the sheriff he became
-panic stricken and taking the body to a nearby ravine, he heaved it into
-the brush where it was found later, feet up.
-
-But Jean Cazaurang had saved two bits.
-
-A big luxuriously appointed hearse came for Jean and people said it was
-the first decent ride he'd ever had in his life.
-
-Sentiment was with the Mexican, but he drew a short term for bungling.
-
-Because in one will Jean left his property to his wife and in another to
-his housekeeper, the estate was tied up in court, where it remained for
-11 years--fat pickings for lawyers. Finally the widow was awarded one
-half the estate under community property law, but the widow was dead.
-The housekeeper got the other half, and so ends the story of Jean
-Cazaurang and two bits.
-
-Rarely did desert ranches show other profits than those which one finds
-in doing the thing one likes to do, as in the case of a recent owner of
-the Manse--the wealthy Mrs. Lois Kellogg--the soft-voiced eastern lady
-who fell in love with the desert, drilled an artesian well, the flow of
-which is among the world's largest. Small, cultured, she yet found
-thrills in driving a 20-ton truck and trailer from the Manse to Los
-Angeles or to the famed Oasis Ranch 200 miles away in Fish Lake
-Valley--another desert landmark which she bought to further gratify her
-passion for the Big Wide Open.
-
-And there you have a slice of life as it is on the desert--one miserably
-dying in his lust for money, one fleeing its solitude; another seeking
-its solace.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XV
- The Story of Charles Brown
-
-
-The story of Charles Brown and the Shoshone store begins at Greenwater.
-In the transient horde that poured into that town, he was the only one
-who hadn't come for quick, easy money. On his own since he was 11 years
-old, when he'd gone to work in a Georgia mine, he wanted only a job and
-got it. In the excited, loose-talking mob he was conspicuous because he
-was silent, calm, unhurried.
-
-There were no law enforcement officers in Greenwater. The jail was 130
-miles away and every day was field day for the toughs. Better citizens
-decided finally to do something about it. They petitioned George Naylor,
-Inyo county's sheriff at Independence to appoint or send a deputy to
-keep some semblance of order.
-
-Naylor sent a badge over and with it a note: "Pin it on some husky
-youngster, unmarried and unafraid and tell him to shoot first."
-
-Again the Citizens' Committee met. "I know a fellow who answers that
-description," one of them said. "Steady sort. Built like a panther. Came
-from Georgia. Kinda slow-motioned until he's ready for the spring.
-Name's Brown."
-
-The badge was pinned on Brown.
-
-Greenwater was a port of call for Death Valley Slim, a character of
-western deserts, who normally was a happy-go-lucky likable fellow. But
-periodically Slim would fill himself with desert likker, his belt with
-six-guns, and terrorize the town.
-
-Shortly after Brown assumed the duties of his office, Slim sent word to
-the deputy sheriff at Death Valley Junction that he was on his way to
-that place for a little frolic. "Tell him," he coached his messenger,
-"sheriffs rile me and he'd better take a vacation."
-
-After notifying the merchants and the residents, who promptly barricaded
-themselves indoors, the officer found shelter for himself in Beatty,
-Nevada.
-
-So Slim saw only empty streets and barred shutters upon arrival and
-since there was nothing to shoot at he headed through Dead Man's Canyon
-for Greenwater. There he found the main street crowded to his liking and
-the saloons jammed. He made for the nearest, ordered a drink and
-whipping out his gun began to pop the bottles on the shelves. At the
-first blast, patrons made a break for the exits. At the second, the
-doors and windows were smashed and when Slim holstered his gun, the
-place was a wreck.
-
-Messengers were sent for Brown, who was at his cabin a mile away. Brown
-stuck a pistol into his pocket and went down. He found Slim in Wandell's
-saloon, the town's smartest. There Slim had refused to let the patrons
-leave and with the bartenders cowed, the patrons cornered, Slim was
-amusing himself by shooting alternately at chandeliers, the feet of
-customers and the plump breasts of the nude lady featured in the
-painting behind the bar. Following Brown at a safe distance, was half
-the population, keyed for the massacre.
-
-Brown walked in. "Hello, Slim," he said quietly. "Fellows tell me you're
-hogging all the fun. Better let me have that gun, hadn't you?"
-
-"Like hell," Slim sneered. "I'll let you have it right through the
-guts--"
-
-As he raised his gun for the kill, the panther sprang and the battle was
-on. They fought all over the barroom--standing up; lying down; rolling
-over--first one then the other on top. Tables toppled, chairs crashed.
-For half an hour they battled savagely, finally rolling against the
-bar--both mauled and bloody. There with his strong vice-like legs
-wrapped around Slim's and an arm of steel gripping neck and shoulder,
-Brown slipped irons over the bad man's wrists. "Get up," Brown ordered
-as he stood aside, breathing hard.
-
-Slim rose, leaned against the bar. There was fight in him still and
-seeing a bottle in front of him, he seized it with manacled hands,
-started to lift it.
-
-"Slim," Brown said calmly, "if you lift that bottle you'll never lift
-another."
-
-The bad boy instinctively knew the look that pages death and Slim's
-fingers fell from the bottle.
-
-Greenwater had no jail and Brown took him to his own cabin. Leaving the
-manacles on the prisoner he took his shoes, locked them in a closet. No
-man drunk or sober he reflected, would tackle barefoot the gravelled
-street littered with thousands of broken liquor bottles. Then he went to
-bed.
-
-Waking later, he discovered that Slim had vanished and with him, Brown's
-number 12 shoes. He tried Slim's shoe but couldn't get his foot into it.
-There was nothing to do but follow barefoot. He left a blood-stained
-trail, but at 2 a.m. he found Slim in a blacksmith shop having the
-handcuffs removed. Brown retrieved his shoes and on the return trip Slim
-went barefoot. After hog-tying his prisoner Brown chained him to the bed
-and went to sleep.
-
-Thereafter, the bad boys scratched Greenwater off their calling list.
-
-Slim afterwards attained fame with Villa in Mexico, became a good
-citizen and later went East, established a sanatorium catering to the
-wealthy and acquired a fortune.
-
-Among the first arrivals in Greenwater was a lanky adventurer known to
-the Indians as Long Man and to whites for his ability to make money in
-any venture and an even more marvelous inability to keep it. He was
-Ralph Jacobus Fairbanks. Broke at the time, he was seeking the quickest
-way to a "comeback."
-
-Foreseeing that the biggest names in copper meant a rush, he had taken a
-look at the little stagnant spring with a green scum that was to give
-the town its name.
-
-"Not enough water in it to do the family washing," he decided and with
-uncanny talent for seeing opportunity where others would starve to
-death, he was soon peddling water at a dollar a bucket. He had hauled it
-40 miles uphill from Furnace Creek wash.
-
-A hopeful, but late arrival who expected to find the town crowded with
-killers was an undertaker who came with a huge stock of coffins. The
-prospect of a quick turnover seemed to guarantee success, but in two
-years Greenwater had exactly one funeral and he sold but one coffin.
-Disgusted he stacked the caskets in the center of his shop; left and was
-never again heard of.
-
-Fairbanks came into town one day with his sweat-stained 16 mule team,
-noticed the abandoned coffins, picked out the largest and best and gave
-Greenwater its first watering trough, which was used as long as the town
-lasted.
-
-Fairbanks soon made enough money to acquire a hotel, store, and a bar,
-which became a popular rendezvous. Fairbanks was born of well-to-do
-parents, in a covered wagon en route to Utah in 1857. Of the thousands
-who flocked into Greenwater, only he and Charles Brown were to remain in
-Death Valley country and wrest fortunes from America's most desolate
-region. To Greenwater he brought his wife, Celestia Abigail, who shared
-his spirit of adventure, but fortunately for him she possessed a caution
-which he lacked. Among their children was a beautiful and vivacious
-daughter, Stella.
-
-Fairbanks, who was of the quick, go-getting type, didn't care for Brown.
-Born in the North, he was critical of the slow-moving, silent, young
-Georgian and unacquainted with the Deep South's drawl, he referred to
-him as "that damned foreigner."
-
-The reputation of the Fairbanks camaraderie spread, and Mrs. Fairbanks,
-who understood the longing of a youngster for a home-cooked meal,
-invited Brown to dinner.
-
-There were other young fortune seekers in Greenwater who were also
-occasional guests at the Fairbanks dinners--among them a Yankee from
-Maine--Harry Oakes, of whom the world was to hear later. Allen Gillman,
-known as the Rattlesnake Kid, because of his stalking rattlesnakes to
-indulge his hobby of making hat bands and trinkets, later to become
-associated with Bernarr McFadden. Wealthy young mining engineers. Bank
-clerks with futures. Brown apparently had none.
-
-"He'll get out of the country like he came in--afoot and broke," rivals
-told Stella. So when romance came, there was still a long trail ahead.
-
-Then came Greenwater's first warning of trouble. A few miners were laid
-off; a few padlocks appeared on a few cabins; a few merchants
-complained. Soon it was noticed that the tinny pianos from which
-slim-fingered "professors" swept the two-step and the waltz were
-gathering dust while the girls lolled in empty honkies. But when Diamond
-Tooth Lil padlocked her door and joined the rush to a new copper strike
-at Crackerjack in the Avawatz Mountains the wiser knew that Greenwater
-was through.
-
-With no guests Fairbanks told off on his fingers, departed patrons, mine
-owners, doctors, lawyers. "Just Charlie left. Wonder what's keeping
-him?" Celestia Abigail knew. She knew that the big Georgian was
-desperately in love with Stella and didn't care how many of her suitors
-left.
-
-With mines closing and few official duties, Brown loaded a burro with
-supplies and with Joe Yerrin went on a prospecting trip. Their course
-led across Death Valley. They were caught in a heat that was a record,
-even for the Big Sink, and ran out of water. Fortunately they were
-within a few miles of Surveyor's Well--a stagnant hole north of
-Stovepipe. The burros were also suffering and Brown and Yerrin staggered
-to water barely in time to escape death.
-
-The well there is dug on a slant and looking down they saw a prospector
-kneeling at the water, filling a canteen and blocking passage.
-
-"Reckon you fellows are thirsty," he greeted. "I'll hand you up a drink.
-Have to strain it though. Full of wiggletails." He pulled his shirt tail
-out of his pants, stretched it over a stew pan, strained the water
-through it and handed the pan up to Brown. "Now it's fit to drink," he
-said proudly.
-
-"It was no time to be finicky," Charlie said. "We drank."
-
-Brown and Yerrin combed hill and canyon but failed to find anything of
-value. Yerrin knew of another place. "You can have it," Brown said. "I
-left a good claim."
-
-Yerrin eyed him a long moment, then grinned: "Stella, huh?"
-
-The sage in Greenwater streets was rank now and again Ralph Fairbanks
-looked out over the dying town. "Ma, we're getting out," he said. He
-emptied his pockets on the table; counted the cash. "Ten dollars and
-thirty cents. Can't get far on that--"
-
-He was interrupted by a knock at the door. There stood a stranger who
-wanted dinner and lodging for the night. During the evening the guest
-disclosed that he was en route to his mining claim near a place called
-Shoshone, 38 miles south. It was near a spring with plenty of water,
-warm, but usable. He wanted to put 50 miners to work but first he had to
-find someone willing to go there and board them.
-
-"Maybe we'd go," Fairbanks said. "What'll you pay for board?"
-
-"A dollar and a half a day. Figures around $2250 a month."
-
-Ralph looked at Ma. She nodded. "It's a deal," he said.
-
-The next morning the guest left.
-
-Fairbanks turned to his wife. "I can haul these abandoned shacks down
-there in no time. Charlie's not working, I can get him to help."
-
-Ralph Fairbanks had stayed with Greenwater to the bitter end. Now he
-hauled it away.
-
-The road to the new site was over rough desert, gutted with dry washes.
-Brown slept in the brush, put the shacks up while Fairbanks went for
-others. Both worked night and day to get the place ready. Finally they
-had lodging for 50 men, a dining room, and quarters for the family. With
-$2250 a month they could afford a chef and Ma could take it easy. Stella
-could go Outside to a girl's school.
-
-Then like a bolt of lightning came the bad news. The Greenwater guest,
-they learned, was just an engaging liar, with no mine, no men. He was
-never heard of again.
-
-Without a dollar they were marooned in one of the world's most desolate
-areas. Stumped, Fairbanks looked at Brown. "I've been rich. I've been
-poor. But this is below the belt. What'll we do?"
-
-"I can get a job with the Borax Company," Brown said. "But you?"
-
-"We have that canned goods we brought to feed that liar's hired men.
-I'll figure some way to live in this God-forsaken hole."
-
-From the dining room, prepared for the $2250 monthly income, he lugged a
-table, set it outside the door facing the road. Then he went to the
-pantry, filled a laundry basket with the cans of pork and beans,
-tomatoes, corned beef, and milk brought from Greenwater. He arranged
-them on the table, wrenched a piece of shook from a packing crate and on
-it painted in crude letters the word, "Store." He propped it on the
-table and went inside. "Ma," he announced, "we're in business."
-
-You could have hauled the entire stock and the table away in a
-wheelbarrow and every person in the country for 100 miles in either
-direction laid end to end would not have reached as far as a bush league
-batter could knock a baseball.
-
-The wheelbarrow load of canned goods went to the Indians living in the
-brush and the prospectors camped at the spring. Another replaced it and
-the "store" moved then into the dining room prepared for the
-non-existent boarders. Powder, a must on the list of a desert store, was
-added. The desert man, they knew, needed only a few items but they must
-be good. Overalls honestly stitched. Bacon well cured. Shoes sturdily
-built for hard usage.
-
-"If we sell a shoddy shirt, an inferior pick or shovel to one of our
-customers," they told the wholesaler, "we will never again sell anything
-to him nor to any of his friends."
-
-Soon the prospectors were telling other prospectors they met on the
-trails: "Square shooters--those fellows. Speak our language...." The
-squaws and the bucks told other squaws and bucks. Soon new trails cut
-across the desert to Shoshone and soon the store outgrew the dining room
-in the Fairbanks residence.
-
-From Zabriskie, now an abandoned borax town a few miles south of
-Shoshone, an old saloon and boarding house was cut into sections and
-hauled to Shoshone. It had been previously hauled from Greenwater where
-it had served as a labor union hall and club house. It was deposited
-directly across the road from the original store.
-
-So began in 1910 an empire of trade that is almost unbelievable.
-
-Charlie had at last coaxed the right answer from Stella but there wasn't
-enough in the business at the start to support two families, plus the
-score of children and grandchildren of Fairbanks. At Greenwater he had
-known all the moguls of mining and he had only to ask for a job to get
-one. Retaining his interest in the Shoshone store he became
-superintendent of the Pacific Borax Company's important Lila C. mine and
-thus formed a connection which grew into valuable friendships with the
-executives. The Shoshone business grew and soon required his entire time
-and that of Stella.
-
-Born in Richfield, Utah, Stella Brown grew up in Death Valley country
-and a reel of her life would show an exciting story of triumph over life
-in the raw; in desolate deserts and in boom towns where bandits and
-bawdy women rubbed elbows with the virtuous, millionaire with crook, and
-caste was unknown. If a girl went wrong; if an Indian was starving; a
-widow in need--there you would find her. Some day somebody will write
-the inspiring story of Stella Brown.
-
-Not all those who were told to see Charlie were seeking directions or
-suffering from toothache. When General Electric desperately needed talc,
-its agents were so advised. When Harold Ickes came out to promote
-President Roosevelt's conservation ideas and officials of the War
-Department sought critical material, they too were given the old
-familiar advice and took it, and one day I saw the President of the
-Southern Pacific Railroad stand around for an hour while Charlie waited
-for a Pahrump Indian to make up his mind about a pair of overalls.
-
-Today the store that started on a kitchen table requires a large
-refrigerating plant and lighting system, three large warehouses, two
-tunnels in a hill. About a dozen employees work in shifts from seven in
-the morning till ten at night, to take care of the store, cabins, and
-cafe. Three big trucks haul oil, gas, powder, and provisions to mines in
-the region. Out of canyon, dry wash, and over dunes they come for every
-imaginable commodity, and get it.
-
-A millionaire city man who vacations there sat down on the slab bench
-beside Brown, aimlessly whittling. "Listen, Charlie," he said. "Why
-don't you get out of this desolation and move to the city where you can
-enjoy yourself?"
-
-"Hell--" Charlie muttered, and went on with his whittling.
-
-The new store stands upon the site where Ma Fairbanks' kitchen table
-displayed the canned goods brought from Greenwater. Modern to the minute
-and air-cooled it would be a credit to any city.
-
-
-Again I heard the old familiar, "See Charlie," and while he was telling
-someone how to get to a place no one around had ever heard of, I glanced
-over the Chalfant Register, a Bishop paper, and noticed a letter it had
-published from a lady in Wisconsin seeking information about a brother
-who had gone to Greenwater more than 40 years ago. She had never heard
-of him since.
-
-When Charlie joined me I called his attention to the letter. "I saw it,"
-he said. "Nobody answered and the editor sent the letter to me. I have
-just written her that the brother who came to find out what happened,
-died suddenly at Tonopah, only a few hours by auto from Greenwater. The
-other brother was killed in a saloon. I knew him and the man who killed
-him."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XVI
- Long Man, Short Man
-
-
-Before Tonopah, the first, and Greenwater, the last of the boom camps,
-Indians roaming the desert from Utah westward were showing trails to two
-hikos, who were to become symbols for the reckless courage needed to
-exist in the wasteland. They were known as Long Man and Short Man.
-
-Previous pages have given part of the story of Long Man.
-
-Coming into Death Valley country in the late Nineties, Ralph Jacobus
-Fairbanks wanted to know its water holes, trails, and landmarks. He
-hired Panamint Tom, brother of Hungry Bill, as a guide. Because Tom's
-name was linked with Bill's in stories of missing men, Fairbanks carried
-his six-gun.
-
-Panamint Tom was also armed. When they reached the rim of Death Valley
-and started down, Fairbanks said, "Tom, this is Indian country. You know
-it. I don't. You go first...."
-
-Taking no chance on a surprise night attack, he directed the layout of
-the camp so that their beds were safely apart. Each slept with his gun.
-Around the camp fire, Tom nonchalantly confessed that he'd had to kill
-five white men.
-
-The mission accomplished, they started back. When they came out of the
-valley Tom said, "Long Man, this is white man's country. You know it. I
-don't. You go first." In after years, referring to their trip, Tom said,
-"Long Man, you heap 'fraid that time." "I was," Fairbanks confessed. "Me
-too," Tom said.
-
-When the Goldfield strike was made, Fairbanks saw that a supply station
-on the main line of travel was a surer way to wealth than the gamble of
-digging. He knew of a ranch with good water and luxuriant wild hay at
-Ash Meadows. Hay was worth $200 a ton. The owner had abandoned the
-ranch, however, and moved into the hills. Fairbanks could get little
-information concerning his whereabouts. "Up there somewhere," he was
-told, with a gesture indicating 50 miles of sky line. But he wanted the
-hay and started out and by patient inquiry located his man just before
-daylight on the second day. "What will you give for it?" the man asked.
-
-"Well," Fairbanks parried, "you know it'll cost me as much as the ranch
-is worth to get rid of that wild grass." Having only a vague idea of its
-real worth he had decided to offer $4000, but sensed the man's eagerness
-to sell and started to offer $1000. Suddenly it occurred to him that
-someone else might have made an offer. "I'll go $2000 and not a nickel
-more."
-
-"You've bought a ranch," the owner said.
-
-Elated, Fairbanks wrote a contract by candlelight on the spot. Both
-signed and they started back to find a notary. "I determined the fellow
-should not get out of my sight until the deed was recorded. If he wanted
-a drink of water, so did I. If he wished to speak to someone, I wanted a
-word with the same man."
-
-Finally the deal was closed and Fairbanks started home. Outside, he met
-Ed Metcalf, chuckling.
-
-"What's so funny, Ed?"
-
-Metcalf pointed to the departing seller. "He was just telling me about
-being worried to death all morning for fear a sucker he'd found would
-get out of his sight. He's been trying to unload his ranch for $500 and
-some idiot gave him $2000."
-
-Fairbanks also operated a freighting service to the boom towns in the
-gold belt as far north as Goldfield and Tonopah. Rates were fantastic
-and he made a fortune. He opened Beatty's first cafe in a tent.
-
-Money was plentiful and after a trip with a 16 mule team over rough
-roads to Goldfield, he was ready for a relaxing change to poker. When
-the white chips are $25, the reds $50, and the blues $500 the game is
-not for pikers and he would bet $10,000 as calmly as he would 10 cents.
-
-In such a game one night he found himself sitting beside a player who
-had removed his big overcoat with wide patch pockets and hung it on his
-chair. Fairbanks noticed the fellow had a habit of gathering in the
-discards when he wasn't betting and his deal would follow. He also
-noticed intermittent movements of the fellow's deft fingers to the big
-patch pocket and soon saw that every ace in the deck reposed in the
-pocket.
-
-Later in the game, Fairbanks opened a jackpot. Every man stayed. The
-crook raised discreetly and most of the players stayed. Fairbanks bet
-$1000.
-
-"Have to raise you $5000," the crook said.
-
-Fairbanks met the raise. "... and it'll cost you $5000 more," he said
-evenly.
-
-With the confidence that came from the cached aces, the sharper shoved
-out the five, smiled exultantly as he spread four kings and a deuce and
-reached for the pot.
-
-"Not so fast," Fairbanks said as he laid four aces and a ten on the
-table.
-
-The crook gave him a quick look. Fairbanks' eyes were steady. Neither
-said a word. The crook couldn't. He knew that Fairbanks' long fingers
-had found the big patch pocket.
-
-When three men and a jackass no longer made a crowd in Shoshone, Ralph
-Fairbanks became restless. With a population of 20--half of it his own
-progeny, he felt that civilization was closing in on him. "Charlie, I've
-been in one place too long...." He had now become "Dad Fairbanks" to all
-who knew him.
-
-The automobile was being increasingly used in desert travel and
-transcontinental trips were no longer a daring adventure or the result
-of a bet. Sixty miles south of Shoshone there was a wretched road that
-pitched down the washboard slope of one range into a basin, then up the
-gully-crossed slopes of another. Part of the transcontinental highway,
-it was a headache to the traveler. Radiators usually boiled down hill
-and up.
-
-To this desolate spot went Dad Fairbanks. The hot blasts from the dunes
-of the Devil's Playground and the dry bed of Soda Lake made summer a
-hell and the freezing winds from Providence Mountains turned it into a
-Siberian winter.
-
-Here in 1928 Dad Fairbanks built cabins and a store and installed a gas
-pump. Water was hauled in. "Coming or going," he said, "when they reach
-this place they've just got to stop, cool the engine, and fill up for
-the hill ahead." The place is Baker on Highway 91.
-
-Here, as at Shoshone, sales technique was tossed into the ash can.
-Stopping for dinner one day I met Dad coming out of the dining room.
-"How's the fare?" I asked.
-
-"Are you hungry?"
-
-"Hungry as a bear...."
-
-"All right. Go in. A hungry man can stand anything." Then in an
-undertone he added: "Employment agent sent me the world's worst cook.
-Take eggs."
-
-Later as we talked in the sheltered driveway a Rolls-Royce limousine
-drove up and a well-fed and smartly tailored tourist stepped out and
-spoke to Dad: "Do you know me?" he asked.
-
-Dad looked at him hesitantly. "Face is familiar."
-
-"You loaned me $300, 25 years ago."
-
-"I loaned a lotta fellows money."
-
-"But I never paid it back."
-
-"A helluva lot of 'em didn't," Dad said.
-
-The stranger reached into his pocket, pulled $1000 from a roll and
-handed it to Dad. "I'm Harry Oakes," he said. "Where's Ma?"
-
-So they went over to Dad's house and with Ma Fairbanks who had shared
-all of Dad's fortunes, good and bad, they sat down and Oakes talked of
-the long trail that led from 300 borrowed dollars to an annual income of
-five million.
-
-Harry Oakes had gone to Canada and learning that the legal title to a
-mining claim would expire at midnight on a certain date, he and his
-partner W. G. Wright sat up in a temperature of forty below, to relocate
-the Lakeshore Mine--Canada's richest gold property.
-
-Born in Maine, Harry Oakes became a subject of England and was at this
-time Canada's richest citizen, with an estimated fortune of
-$200,000,000.
-
-It was a long way from the Niagara palace back to Greenwater and
-Shoshone and as Ma Fairbanks and Dad and Harry sat in the plain little
-desert cottage, I couldn't keep from wondering why a man with
-$200,000,000 would wait 25 years to repay that $300.
-
-In his native town of Sangerville in Maine, Harry Oakes was criticized
-when, as a youngster with every opportunity to pursue a successful
-career according to the staid Maine formula, he became excited by gold.
-"Quick easy money." "Just a dreamer." He talked big, acted big, and was
-big.
-
-But Harry Oakes started out in life to make a fortune by finding a gold
-mine and you can't laugh aside the determination and courage with which
-he stuck to his purpose until he succeeded.
-
-Dad Fairbanks spent nearly 50 years in Death Valley country and it is a
-bit ironical that at last, the Baker climate drove him from the desert
-to Santa Paula and later, of all places, to Hollywood.
-
-"I should never have believed it of you," I kidded.
-
-"Hell--" Dad retorted, "I wanted solitude. Haven't you got enough sense
-to know that the lonesomest place on Godamighty's earth is a city?"
-
-He died in 1943 and at the funeral were the state's greatest men and its
-humblest--bankers, lawyers, doctors, beggarmen, muckers and miners, and
-with them, those he loved best--sun-baked fellows from the towns and the
-gulches along the burro trails. No man who has lived in Death Valley
-country did more to put the region on the must list of the American
-tourist and none won more of the regard and affections of the people.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XVII
- Shorty Frank Harris
-
-
-No history of Death Valley has been written in this century without
-mention of the Short Man--Frank (Shorty) Harris--and none can be.
-Previous pages have given most of his story. After his death at least
-two hurried writers who never saw him have stated that Shorty discovered
-no mines, knew little of the country.
-
-From a page of notes made before I had ever met him, I find this record:
-"Stopped at Independence to see George Naylor, early Inyo county sheriff
-and now its treasurer. We talked of early prospectors. Naylor said: 'I
-have known all of the old time burro men and have the records. Shorty
-Harris has put more towns on the map and more taxable property on the
-assessors' books than any of them.'"
-
-I first met Shorty at Shoshone. Entering the store one day, Charles
-Brown told me there was a fellow outside I ought to know, and in a
-moment I was looking into keen steady eyes--blue as water in a canyon
-pool--and in another Shorty Harris was telling me how to sneak up on
-$10,000,000. Thus began an acquaintance which was to lead me through
-many years from one end of Death Valley to the other, with Shorty,
-mentor, friend, and guide.
-
-Of course I had heard of him. Who hadn't? In the gold country of western
-deserts one could find a few who had never heard of Cecil Rhodes or John
-Hays Hammond, but none who had not heard of Shorty Harris. Wherever
-mining men gathered, the mention of his name evoked the familiar, "That
-reminds me," and the air thickened with history, laughter, and lies.
-
-He was five feet tall, quick of motion. Hands and feet small. Skin soft
-and surprisingly fair. Muscles hard as bull quartz. With a mask of
-ignorance he concealed a fine intelligence reserved for intimate friends
-in moments of repose.
-
-It is regrettable that since Shorty's death, writers who never saw him
-have given pictures of him which by no stretch of the imagination can be
-recognized by those who had even a slight acquaintance with him. Authors
-of books properly examine the material of those who have written other
-books. In the case of Shorty this was eagerly done--so eagerly in fact,
-that each portrayal is the original picture altered according to the
-ability of the one who tailors the tale. All are interesting but few
-have any relation to truth.
-
-Shorty Harris was so widely publicized by writers in the early part of
-the century that when the radio was invented, he was a "natural" for
-playlets and columnists. It was natural also that the iconoclast appear
-to set the world right. He employed Shorty to guide him through Death
-Valley. "I want to write a book," he explained, "and I have only three
-weeks to gather material."
-
-The trip ended sooner. "What happened?" I asked Shorty when I read the
-book and was startled to see in it a statement that Shorty became lost;
-had never found a mine; and never even looked for one.
-
-"Did he say that?" Shorty laughed.
-
-"And more of the same," I said.
-
-"Well, let's let it go for what it's worth.... He bellyached from the
-minute we set out."
-
-Those who knew Shorty best--Dad Fairbanks, Charles Brown, Bob
-Montgomery, George Naylor, H. W. Eichbaum, and the old timers on the
-trails had entirely different impressions. There was, however, around
-the barrooms of Beatty and other border villages a breed of later
-comers--"professional" old timers always waiting and often succeeding in
-exchanging "history" for free drinks. Though they may have never known
-Shorty in person, they were not lacking in yarns about him and rarely
-failed to get an audience.
-
-There were also among Shorty's friends a few who had another attitude.
-"What has he ever done that I haven't?" the answer being that nothing
-had been written about them.
-
-With variations the original pattern became the pattern for the
-succeeding writer. In the interest of accuracy it is not amiss to say
-that Shorty Harris was not buried standing up. The writer saw him
-buried. It is not true that he ever protested the removal of the road
-from the site of the place where he wished to be buried, because he
-never knew that he would be buried there. Nor did he have the remotest
-idea that a monument would be erected to him, because the idea of the
-monument was born after his death, as related elsewhere.
-
-He did not leave Harrisburg on July 4, 1905 to get drunk at Ballarat.
-Instead, he went to Rhyolite to find Wild Bill Corcoran, his grubstaker.
-
-He did enjoy the yarns attributed to him and their publication in
-important periodicals. But he was also painfully shy and ill at ease
-away from his home. Even at the annual Death Valley picnics held at
-Wilmington, near Los Angeles, he could never be persuaded to face the
-crowds.
-
-One cannot laugh aside the part he played nor the monument that honors
-one of God's humblest. His strike at Rhyolite brought two railroads
-across the desert, gave profitable employment to thousands of men, added
-extra shifts in steel mills and factories making heavy machinery and
-those of tool makers. The building trades felt it, banks, security
-exchanges, and scores of other industries over the nation--all because
-Shorty Harris went up a canyon. And it is not amiss to ask if these
-historians did their jobs as well.
-
-At my home it was difficult to get Shorty to accept invitations to
-dinners to which he was often invited by service clubs, but in the
-Ballarat cabin he was as sure of himself as the MacGregor with a foot
-upon his native heath and an eye on Ben Lomond.
-
-His passion for prospecting was fanatical. I asked him once if he would
-choose prospecting as a career if he had his life to live over.
-
-"I wouldn't change places with the President of the United States. My
-only regret is that I didn't start sooner. When I go out, every time my
-foot touches the ground, I think 'before the sun goes down I'll be worth
-$10,000,000.'"
-
-"But you don't get it," I reminded him.
-
-He stared at me with a sort of "you're-too-dumb" look. "Who in the hell
-wants $10,000,000? It's the game, man--the game."
-
-Nor is the picture of his profligacy altogether true. Despite Shorty's
-disregard for money he had a canniness that made him cache something
-against the rainy day. At Lone Pine Charlie Brown was packing Shorty's
-suit case before taking him to a doctor. "Shorty, what's this lump in
-the lining of your vest?"
-
-"Oh, there was a hole in it. Poor job of mending I guess," Shorty
-answered guilelessly.
-
-"I'll see," Charlie said and ripping a few stitches removed $600 in
-currency.
-
-Shorty's last years furnish a story of a man too tough to die. He had
-had three major operations, when in 1933 I received the following
-telegram: "Wall fell on me. Hurry. Bring doctor. Shorty Harris." It had
-been sent by Fred Gray from Trona, 27 miles from Ballarat, nearest
-telegraph station.
-
-My wife and I hurried through rain, snow, sleet; over washed out desert
-and mountain roads. Outside the cabin in the dusk, shivering in a cold
-wind, we found two or three of Shorty's friends and Charles and Mrs.
-Brown, who had also made a mad dash of 150 miles over roads--some of
-which hadn't been traveled in 30 years.
-
-Puttering around his cabin, Shorty had jerked at a wire anchored in the
-walls and brought tons of adobe down upon himself. He was literally dug
-out, his ribs crushed, face black with abrasions. With rapidly
-developing pneumonia he had lain for 60 hours without medical attention
-and with nothing to relieve pain. We learned later from Dr. Walter
-Johnson, who had preceded us, that if a hospital had been within a block
-it would have been fatal to move him. All agreed that Death sat on
-Shorty's bedside.
-
-"A cat has only nine lives," Fred Gray said gravely, and outside in the
-gathering gloom we planned his funeral. Because of the isolation of
-Ballarat and lack of communication we arranged that when the end came,
-Fred Gray would notify Brown and bring the body down into Death Valley
-for burial. There we would meet the hearse.
-
-Because bodies decompose quickly in that climate, time was important.
-While we planned these details, my wife, who had been at Shorty's
-bedside, joined us. "Shorty's not going to die," she said. "He's
-planning that trip up Signal Mountain you and he have been talking
-about."
-
-I tiptoed into the room. He was staring at the ceiling, seeing faraway
-canyons; the yellow fleck in a broken rock. Suddenly he spoke: "I'm
-losing a thousand dollars a day lying here. Why, that ledge--"
-
-A week after returning to our home we received another telegram from
-Trona asking that we come for him. He had insisted upon being laid in
-the bed of a pickup truck and taken across the Slate Range to Trona,
-where we met him.
-
-At our home he lay on his back for weeks, fed with a spoon. Always
-talking of putting another town on the map. Always losing a million
-dollars a day. He was miraculously but slowly recovering when an
-Associated Press dispatch bearing a Lone Pine date made front page
-headlines with an announcement of his death.
-
-Though the report was quickly corrected, his presence at our house
-brought reporters, photographers, old friends, and the merely curious.
-At the time the Pacific Coast Borax Company's N.B.C. program was
-featuring stories based on his experiences over a nation-wide hook-up.
-Among the callers also were moguls of mining and tycoons of industry who
-had stopped at the Ballarat cabin to fall under the spell of his ever
-ready yarns.
-
-Among these guests, one stands out.
-
-It was a hot summer day when I saw on the lawn what appeared to be a big
-bear, because the squat, bulky figure was enclosed in fur. Answering the
-door bell I looked into twinkling eyes and an ingratiating smile. "They
-told me in Ballarat that Shorty Harris was here." I invited him in.
-
-"I'll just shed this coat," he said, stripping off the bearskin garment.
-"... sorta heavy for a man going on 80." He laid it aside. "It's double
-lined. Fur inside and out. You see, I sleep in it. Crossed three
-mountain ranges in that coat before I got here. May as well take this
-other one off too." He removed another heavy overcoat, revealing a cord
-around his waist. "Keep this one tied close. Less bulky...."
-
-Under a shorter coat was a heavy woolen shirt and his overalls concealed
-two pairs of pants. He went on: "I was with Shorty at Leadville. My
-name's Pete Harmon. We ought to be rich--both of us. Why, I sold a hole
-for $2500 in 1878. Thought I was smart. They've got over $100,000,000
-outa that hole. I was at Bridgeport when I heard Shorty was sick, so I
-says, 'I'll just step down to Ballarat and see him.' (The 'step' was 298
-miles.) When I got there Bob Warnack tells me he's in Los Angeles. When
-I get there they tell me he's with you. So I just stepped out here."
-
-He had "stepped" 481 miles to see his friend.
-
-I ushered him in and left them alone. After an hour I noticed Pete
-outside, smoking. I went out and urged him to return and smoke inside,
-but he refused. "It's not manners," he insisted.
-
-Later I happened to look out the window and saw him empty the contents
-of a small canvas sack into his hand. There were a few dimes and nickels
-and two bills. He unfolded the currency. One was a twenty. The other, a
-one. He put the coins in the sack and came inside. A few moments later,
-from an adjacent room I heard his soft, lowered voice: "Shorty, I'm
-eatin' reg'lar now and got a little besides. I reckon you're kinda shy.
-You take this."
-
-"No--no, Pete. I'm getting along fine...."
-
-I fancy there was a scurry among the angels to make that credit for Pete
-Harmon.
-
-Late in the afternoon Pete donned his coats. "I'd better be going. I've
-got a lotta things on hand. A claim in the Argus. When the money comes
-in, well--I always said I was going to build a scenic railroad right on
-the crest of Panamint Range. Best view of Death Valley. It'll pay. How
-far is it to San Diego?"
-
-"A hundred and forty miles...."
-
-"Well, since I'm this far along I'll just step down and see my old
-partner. Take care of Shorty...." And down the road he went.
-
-With humility I watched his passage, hoping that the good God would go
-with him and somehow I felt that of all those with fame and wealth or of
-high degree who had gone from that house, none had left so much in my
-heart as Pete.
-
-During this period of convalescence Shorty was often guest in homes of
-luxury and when at last I took him to Ballarat I was curious to see what
-his reaction would be to the squalor of the crumbling cabin.
-
-When we stepped from the car, he noticed Camel, the blind burro drowsing
-in the shade of a roofless dobe. "Old fellow," he said, "it's dam' good
-to see _you_ again...." I unloaded the car, brought water from the well
-and sat down to rest. Shorty sat in a rickety rocker braced with baling
-wire. I regarded with amusement the old underwear which he'd stuffed
-into broken panes; the bare splintered floor; the cracked iron stove
-that served both for cooking and heating. The wood box beside it. The
-tin wash pan on a bench at the door.
-
-Then I noticed Shorty was also appraising the things about--the hole in
-the roof; the box nailed to the wall that served as a cupboard. A
-half-burned candle by his sagging bed. For a long time he glanced
-affectionately from one familiar object to another and finally spoke:
-"Will, haven't I got a dam' fine home?"
-
-For ages poets have sung, orators have lauded, but so far as I'm
-concerned, Shorty said it better.
-
-The last orders from the surgeon had been, "Complete rest for three
-months."
-
-In the late afternoon we moved our chairs outside. The sun still shone
-in the canyons and after he had seen that all his peaks were in place,
-he turned to me: "I'm losing $5,000,000 a day sitting here. Soon as
-you're rested, we'll start. You'll be in shape by day after tomorrow,
-won't you?"
-
-I restrained a gasp as he pointed to the side of a gorge 8000 feet up on
-Signal Mountain. "No trip at all...."
-
-No argument could convince him that the trip was foolhardy and on the
-third day we started through Hall's Canyon opposite the Indian Ranch.
-The ascent from the canyon is so steep that in many places we had to
-crawl on hands and knees. The three and a half miles were made in seven
-hours, but on the return the inevitable happened. Shorty, exhausted,
-staggered from the trail and collapsed. When he rose, he wobbled, but
-managed to reach a bush and rolled under it. I ran to his side. It
-seemed the end. "You go ahead," he said weakly. "I'm through."
-
-I had given him all my water and exacting a promise that he would remain
-under the bush, I started for help at the Indian Ranch, to bring him
-out.
-
-Coming up, I had paid no attention to the trail and was uncertain of my
-way--which was further confused by criss-crossed trails of wild burros
-and mountain sheep. Coming to a canyon that forked, I was not sure which
-to take and panicked with fear took a sudden uncalculated choice and
-started up a trail. The desert gods must have guided my feet, for it
-proved to be the right one and an hour later I came upon the green
-seepage of water.
-
-I dug a hole; let the scum run off then drank slowly and lay down to
-rest. In my last conscious moment a huge rattler passed within a few
-inches of my face. But rattlers were unimportant then and I went to
-sleep.
-
-The swish of brush awoke me and I saw Shorty staggering down the trail.
-He fell beside the water and was instantly asleep. Time I knew, was the
-measure of life and I allowed him twenty minutes to rest, then awoke him
-and made him go in front. On a ledge, he slumped again, his body hanging
-over the cliff with a 1000 foot fall to rocks below.
-
-I managed to catch him by the seat of his trousers as he began to slip,
-and dragged him back on the trail. Somehow I got him to the bottom.
-There the canyon widens upon a level area covered with dense growth.
-Walking ahead I suddenly missed him. He had crawled from the trail and
-it required an hour to find him and this I did by the noise of his
-rattly breathing.
-
-I half carried, half dragged him to the car and lifted him in. He was
-asleep before I could close the door and remained unconscious for the
-entire 11 miles of corduroy road to Ballarat. There Fred Gray and Bob
-Warnack lifted him from the car and laid him on his bed. None of us
-believed that Shorty Harris would ever leave that bed alive.
-
-The next morning I tiptoed softly out of the room, went over to the old
-saloon and had breakfast with Tom, the caretaker. Afterward we sat
-outside smoking and talking of Hungry Hattie's feuding and her sister's
-mining deals, when we heard steady thumping sounds coming from Shorty's
-place. We looked. Bareheaded, Shorty Harris was chopping wood.
-
-Shorty was born near Providence, Rhode Island, July 2, 1856. He had only
-a hazy memory of his parents. His father, a shoemaker, died impoverished
-when Shorty was six years old. "... I went to live with my aunt. If she
-couldn't catch me doing something, she figured I'd outsmarted her and
-beat me up on general principles."
-
-At nine he ran away and obtained work in the textile mills of Governor
-William Sprague, dipping calico. The village priest taught him to read
-and write and apart from this, his only school was the alley. The
-curriculum of the alley is hunger, tears, and pain but somehow in that
-alley he found time to play and learned that with play came laughter.
-Thenceforth life to Shorty Harris was just one long playday.
-
-In 1876 he started West and crawled out of a boxcar in Dodge City,
-Kansas. About were stacks of buffalo hides, bellowing cattle,
-"chippies," gamblers, cow hands, and a chance for youngsters who had
-come out of alleys.
-
-"... Among those I remember at Dodge City were my friends Wyatt Earp and
-a thin fellow with a cough. If he liked you he'd go to hell for you. He
-was Doc Holliday--the coldest killer in the West. I had a job in a
-livery stable. Job was all right, but too much gunplay. Cowboys shooting
-up the town. Gamblers shooting cowboys."
-
-Flushed with his pay check, Shorty wandered into a saloon and met one of
-the percentage girls--a lovely creature, not altogether bad. They danced
-and Shorty suggested a stroll in the moonlight. And soon Shorty was in
-love.
-
-"Shorty," she asked, "why be a sucker? Why don't you go to Leadville?
-You might find a good claim."
-
-"I'm broke," he told her.
-
-"I've got some money," she said, and reached into her purse.
-
-"I'm no mac," he snapped.
-
-Finally she thrust the bills into his pocket.
-
-At Leadville he went up a gulch. Luck was kind. He found a good claim
-and going into Leadville sold it for $15,000. Later it produced
-millions. Within a week he was penniless. "Why, all I've got to do is to
-go up another gulch," he told sympathetic friends.
-
-On this trip his feet were frozen and he was carried out on the back of
-his partner. Taken to the hospital, the surgeon told him that only the
-amputation of both feet could save his life.
-
-Telling a group of friends about it in the Ballarat cabin later, Shorty
-of course had to add a few details of his own: "Dan Driscoll came to see
-me and I told him what the sawbones said. 'Why hell,' Dan says. 'Won't
-be nothing left of you. You've got to get outa here. When that nurse
-goes, I'll take you to a doc who'll save them feet.' And the first thing
-I knew I was in the other hospital.
-
-"The doc whetted his meat cleaver, picked up a saw and was about to go
-to work, when he found there was nothing to dope me with. 'I'll fix it,'
-Doc says, and wham--he slapped me stiff. I don't know what he did, but
-when I came to I was good as new."
-
-After selling a second claim to Haw Tabor, Shorty was again in the money
-and remembered the girl in Dodge City. Returning, he looked her up, took
-her to dinner. They danced and dined and Shorty toasted her in "bubble
-water." "I reckon everybody in Dodge City thought a caliph had come to
-town. No little girl suffered for new toggery. No bum lacked a tip. In a
-week I was broke again.
-
-"Going down to the freight yard to steal a ride on the rods I met the
-girl and the next I knew, I was begging her to marry me. 'Shorty, you
-don't know anything about my past, and still you want to marry me?'
-
-"'You don't know anything about my past either,' I said. But it was no
-go."
-
-Years afterward when Shorty and I were camped in Hall Canyon, I asked
-him if he would actually have married a girl like her.
-
-"Who am I to count slips?" he bristled. "I did ask her," and he swabbed
-a tear that had dried fifty years ago.
-
-In 1898, after working for a grubstake he started on the trip that led
-at last to Death Valley, by way of the San Juan country--one of the
-world's roughest regions. "I walked through Arizona, to Northern
-Mexico--every mile of it desert. A labor strike in Colonel Green's mines
-threw me out of a job and I started back. Ran out of water and lived
-five days on the juice of a bulbous plant--la Flora Morada. Each bulb
-has a few drops.
-
-"On the Mojave I ran out of water again. Finally saw a mangy old camel
-drinking at a pool. I had enough sense left to know there were no camels
-around and went on till I flopped. A fellow picked me up. I told him I'd
-been so goofy I'd seen a camel and water, but I knew it was just a
-mirage. 'You damned fool,' he said. 'It was a camel and you saw water.
-Hi Jolly turned that camel loose.'"
-
-Shorty reached Tintic, Utah, and from there walked over a waterless
-desert to the Johnnie mine, where he was given shelter, food, and
-clothing.
-
-Bishop Cannon of the Mormon Church sent him into the Panamint to
-monument a gold claim. "I was the only fool they could find to cross
-Death Valley in mid summer. I found the claim but it proved to be
-patented land."
-
-Shorty was recuperating from his last operation at my home when he came
-into the house one morning with fire in his eyes and a paper in his
-hand. "Read that and let's get going." (It has been erroneously stated
-that Shorty couldn't read. Though he had little schooling and a cataract
-impaired his sight, he could read to the end.)
-
-The paper announced a strike in Tuba Canyon near Ballarat. "Why, I know
-a place nobody ever saw but me and a few eagles...." His losses
-increased from a thousand to a million dollars a day because he wasn't
-on the job, and in May we started for Ballarat by the longer route
-through Death Valley.
-
-When we reached Jim Dayton's grave, he asked me to stop and getting out
-of the car, he walked into the brush, returning with a few yellow and
-blue wild flowers, laid them on Dayton's grave. "God bless you, old
-fellow. You'll have to move over soon and make room for me."
-
-Then turning to me, he said: "When I die bury me beside old Jim."
-Raising his hand and moving his finger as if he were writing the words,
-he added: "Above me write, 'Here lies Shorty Harris, a single blanket
-jackass prospector.'"
-
-It was his way of saying he had played his game--not by riding over the
-desert with a deluxe camping outfit, but the hard way--with beans and a
-single blanket. He was also saying, I think, goodbye to the Death Valley
-that he loved; its golden dunes, its creeping canyons and pots of gold.
-
-About one o'clock in the morning, Sunday, November 11, 1934, the phone
-awakened me. At the other end of the line was Charles Brown. Shorty
-Harris lay dead at Big Pine. "He just went to sleep and didn't wake up,"
-Charlie said.
-
-Shorty had died Saturday morning, November 10, and Charlie had arranged
-for the remains to be brought down into Death Valley and buried beside
-James Dayton Sunday afternoon.
-
-Out of Los Angeles, out of towns and settlements, canyons, and hills
-came the largest crowd that had ever assembled in Death Valley, to wait
-at Furnace Creek Ranch for the hearse that would come nearly 200 miles
-over the mountains from Big Pine. It was delayed at every village and by
-burro-men along the road, who wanted a last look upon the face of
-Shorty.
-
-At one o'clock the caravan arrived and then began the procession down
-the valley. The sun was setting and the shadows of the Panamint lay
-halfway across the valley when the grave was reached. Brown had sent
-Ernest Huhn from Shoshone the night previous, a distance of about 60
-miles, to dig the grave.
-
-On the desert a man dies and gets his measure of earth--often with not
-so much as a tarpaulin. With this in mind Ernie had made the hole to fit
-the man, but with the coffin it was a foot too short. While waiting for
-the grave to be lengthened, the casket was opened and in the fading
-twilight Shorty's friends passed in file about the casket, while the
-Indians, silhouetted against the brush paid silent tribute to him whom
-their fathers and now their children knew as "Short Man."
-
-So began the first funeral ever held in the bottom of Death Valley.
-Drama, packed into a few moments of a dying day. No discordant ballyhoo.
-No persiflage.... "The Lord is my shepherd. I shall not want...." A
-bugler stepped beside the grave and silvered notes of taps went over the
-valley. The casket was lowered into the grave as the stars came out, and
-he was covered with the earth he loved. Thoughtful women placed wreaths
-of athol and desert holly and, with his face toward his desert stars,
-Shorty Harris holed-in forever.
-
-Going back to Shoshone with the Browns, I told Charlie of the time I had
-stopped at Jim Dayton's grave with Shorty. "I made up my mind then that
-I would do something about his last wish. There's no liar like a
-tombstone, but Shorty deserves a marker."
-
-"I'll join you," Charlie said.
-
-Charlie consulted Park officials and they approved. Chosen to write the
-epitaph, I knew from the moment the task was assigned to me what it
-would be. In order to get the reaction of others to the use of the word
-"jackass" on the monument, I decided to try it out on the Browns. "This
-epitaph," I said, "may be unconventional, but unless I am mistaken it
-will be quoted around the world."
-
-I read it. "It's all right," Mrs. Brown laughed. Charlie approved. The
-epitaph, as predicted has been quoted and pictures of the plaque
-published around the world.
-
-It has been stated that the Pacific Coast Borax Company paid for the
-monument. Actually it was provided by the Park Service. I had the bronze
-tablet made in Pomona, California, and Charlie Brown insisted that he
-pay for it. "Shorty left a little money," he said. "Whatever is lacking,
-I will pay myself."
-
-On March 14, 1936, the monument was dedicated. Streamers of dust rolled
-along every road that led into the Big Sink trailing cars that were
-bringing friends from all walks of life to pay tribute to Shorty. At the
-grave the rich and the famous stood beside the tottering prospector, the
-husky miner, the silent, stoic Indian. Brown was master of ceremonies.
-Telegrams were read from John Hays Hammond and other distinguished
-friends. Old timers, whose memories spanned 30 years, one after another
-wedged through the crowd to tell a funny story that Shorty had told or
-some homely incident of his career.
-
-One was revealing: "We had the no-'countest, low-downest hooch drinking
-loafer on the desert at Ballarat. We called him Tarfinger. He came over
-to Shorty's cabin one day and said he was hungry. Shorty loaned him
-$5.00. When I heard about it I went over. I said, 'You know he's a
-no-good loafing thief.' I figured I was doing Shorty a favor. Instead,
-he blew up. 'Well, he can get as hungry as an honest man, can't he?'"
-
-They understood what O. Henry meant when he sang:
-
- "Test the man if his heart be
- In accord with the ultimate plan,
- That he be not to his marring,
- Always and utterly man."
-
-The epitaph Shorty Harris wanted seemed fitting: "_Above me write, 'Here
-lies Shorty Harris, a single blanket jackass prospector.'_"
-
-As I turned away I thought of the monuments erected to dead Caesars who
-had left trails of blood and ruin. Shorty Harris simply followed a
-jackass into far horizons, and by leaving a smile at every water hole, a
-pleasant memory on every trail, attained a fame which will last as long
-as the annals of Death Valley.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XVIII
- A Million Dollar Poker Game
-
-
-Herman Jones, young Texan with keen blue eyes and a guileless grin,
-dropped off the train at Johnnie, a railroad siding, named for the
-nearby Johnnie mine. At the ripe age of 21 he had been through a
-shooting war between New Mexico cattle men, and needing money to marry
-the prettiest girl in the territory, he had come for gold.
-
-Finding it lonesome on his first night he sought the diversion of a
-poker game in a saloon and gambling house. He bought a stack of chips,
-sat down facing the bar and a moment later another stranger entered,
-inquired if he could join the game.
-
-Told that $20 would get a seat, the stranger standing with his back to
-the bar was reaching for his purse when Herman saw the bartender pick up
-a six-gun. With his elbows on the bar and his pistol in two hands, he
-aimed the gun at the back of the stranger's head and pulled the trigger.
-
-The victim dropped instantly to the floor, his brains scattered on the
-players. The poker session adjourned and Jones was standing outside a
-few moments later when he was tapped on the shoulder. "Come on," he was
-told. "We're giving that fellow a floater." Herman didn't know what a
-floater was, but decided it was best to obey orders and followed the
-leader into the saloon.
-
-Approaching the bartender, the spokesman pulled out his watch. "Bob," he
-said quietly. "It's six o'clock. It won't be healthy around here after
-6:30." He set a canteen on the bar and walked out.
-
-Without a word, the bartender pulled off his coat, gathered up the cash,
-called the painted lady attached to his fortune and said, "Sell out for
-what you can get. I'll let you know where I am." Picking up his hat he
-left. No one ever learned the cause of the murder or the identity of the
-dead.
-
-With no luck in the Johnnie district or at Greenwater, Herman left the
-latter place on a prospecting trip in partnership with another luckless
-youngster previously mentioned--Harry Oakes.
-
-On a hill overlooking the dry bed of the Amargosa River about four miles
-north of Shoshone, he saw a red outcropping on a hill so steep he
-decided nothing that walked had ever reached the summit, and for that
-reason he might find treasure overlooked.
-
-Herman, being lean and agile, climbed up to investigate. Oakes remained
-under a bush below. Jones returned with a piece of ore showing color. A
-popular song of the period was called "Red Wing" and because he liked
-sentimental ballads, Herman named it for the song. Camp was made at the
-bottom of the hill. Oakes assumed the dish washing job to offset an
-extra hour which Herman agreed to give to work on the trail. Somebody
-told Oakes how to bake bread and while Herman was wheeling muck to the
-dump, Harry experimented with his cookery. The bread turned out to be
-excellent and Oakes took the day off to show it to friends.
-
-"That's the sort of fellow Harry was," Herman says. "You just couldn't
-take him seriously."
-
-The Red Wing didn't pay and when abandoned, all they had to show for
-their labor was a stack of bills. On borrowed money, Oakes left the
-country. Herman remained to pay the bills.
-
-
-A few miles east of Shoshone is Chicago Valley, which began in a
-startling swindle, and ended in fame and fortune for one defrauded
-victim.
-
-A convincing crook from the Windy City found government land open to
-entry and called it Chicago Valley. It was a desolate area and the only
-living thing to be seen was an occasional coyote skulking across or a
-vulture flying over. The promoter needed no capital other than a good
-front, glib tongue, and the ability to lie without the flicker of a
-lash.
-
-A few weeks later Chicago widows with meager endowments, scrub women
-with savings, and some who coughed too much from long hours in sweat
-shops began to receive beautifully illustrated pamphlets that described
-a tropical Eden with lush fields, cooling lakes, and more to the point,
-riches almost overnight. For $100 anyone concerned would be located.
-
-Soon people began to swing off The Goose, as the dinky train serving
-Shoshone was called, and head for Chicago Valley. Among the victims was
-a widow named Holmes with a family of attractive, intelligent children.
-One of these was a vivacious, beautiful teen-ager named Helen.
-
-The Holmes were handicapped because of tuberculosis in the family. This
-in fact had induced the widow to invest her savings.
-
-Herman Jones used to ride by the Holmes' place en route to the Pahrump
-Ranch on hunting trips and owning several burros, he thought the Holmes'
-children would like to have one. Taking the donkey over, he told Helen,
-"You can use him to work the ranch too. Better and faster than a
-hoe...." He brought a harness and a cultivator, showed her how to use
-the implement.
-
-It was inevitable that investors in Chicago Valley would lose their
-time, labor, and money.
-
-Thus when Helen Holmes returned the burro to Herman one day, Herman was
-not surprised when she told him she was on her way to Los Angeles to
-look for a job.
-
-"But what can you do?"
-
-"I wish I knew. I can get a job washing dishes or waiting on table."
-
-Shortly afterward he heard from her--just a little note saying she was a
-hello girl on a switchboard. "Knew she'd land on her feet," Herman
-grinned, and having a bottle handy he gurgled a toast to Helen. He had
-to tell the news of course and with each telling he produced the bottle.
-
-So he was in a pleasant mood when somebody suggested a spot of poker. To
-mention poker in Shoshone is to have a game and in a little while Dad
-Fairbanks, Dan Modine, deputy sheriff, Herman, and two or three others
-were shuffling chips over in the Mesquite Club.
-
-Herman had the luck and quit with $700. "Fellows," he said as he folded
-his money, "take a last look at this roll. You won't see it again."
-
-"Oh, you'll be back," Fairbanks said.
-
-But Herman didn't come back. Instead he went to Los Angeles, found Helen
-at the switchboard. She confided excitedly that she had a chance to get
-into the movies as soon as she could get some nice clothes.
-
-"Fine," Herman said. "When can I see you?" He made a date for dinner,
-had a few more drinks and when he met her he had a comfortable binge and
-a grand idea. "... Listen Helen. You wouldn't get mad at a fool like me
-if I meant well, would you?"
-
-"Why Herman--you know I wouldn't," she laughed.
-
-"I'm a little likkered and it's kinda personal...."
-
-"But you're a gentleman, Herman--drunk or sober...."
-
-"I've been thinking of this picture business. I nicked Dad Fairbanks in
-a poker game. You know how I am. Lose it all one way or another. You
-take it and buy what you need and it'll do us both some good."
-
-The refusal was quick. "It's sweet of you Herman, but not that. I just
-couldn't."
-
-"You can borrow it, can't you ... so I won't drink it up?"
-
-The argument won and soon theater goers all over the world were
-clutching their palms as they watched the hair-raising escapes from
-death that pictured "The Perils of Pauline"--the serial that made Helen
-Holmes one of the immortals of the silent films. She died at 58, on July
-8, 1950.
-
-When Charlie Brown became Supervisor in charge of Death Valley roads, he
-wanted a foreman who knew the country. Herman Jones had hunted game,
-treasure, fossils, artifacts of ancient Indians all over Death Valley
-and knew the water courses, the location of subterranean ooze, the dry
-washes which when filled by cloudbursts were a menace. Brown made him
-foreman of the road crew.
-
-At Shoshone, Herman Jones, grey now, was tinkering with a battered Ford
-when a big Rolls-Royce stopped. He looked around at the slam of the
-door, stared a moment at the man approaching, dropped his tools, wiped
-his hands on a greasy rag. "Well, I'll be--" he laughed. "Harry
-Oakes--where've you been all these years?"
-
-"Oh, knocking around," grinned Oakes. "Wanted to see this country
-again."
-
-They sat in the shade of a mesquite, talked over Greenwater days and the
-homely memories that leap out of nowhere at such a time.
-
-Oakes noticed Herman's Ford. Then he pointed to the $20,000 worth of
-long, sleek Rolls-Royce. "Herman, I'm going back to New York in a plane.
-I want to make you a present of that car."
-
-Herman Jones, dumbfounded for a moment, looked at his Ford, smiled, and
-shook his head. "Thanks just the same, Harry. That old jalopy's plenty
-good for me." No amount of persuasion could make him accept it.
-
-Knowing that Herman Jones could use any part of $20,000, I marvelled
-that he didn't accept the proffered gift. Then I remembered that the
-Redwing had produced only sweat and debts and Jones had paid the debts
-through the bitter years.
-
-In the little town of Swastika in the province of Ontario, Canada, you
-will be told that Oakes was booted off the train there because he was
-dead-beating his way. The country had been prospected, pronounced
-worthless and nobody believed there was pay dirt except a Chinaman.
-
-Harry Oakes had an ear for anybody's tale of gold and listened to the
-Chinaman. He was 38 years old. Lady Luck had always slammed the door in
-his face but this time, (January, 1912) she flung it open. Eleven years
-later Oakes was rich.
-
-He had always talked on a grand scale even when broke at Shoshone. With
-a taste for luxury he began to gratify it. He bought a palatial home at
-Niagara Falls and served his guests on gold platters. As his fortune
-increased he gave largely to charities and welfare projects such as city
-parks, playgrounds, hospitals. These gifts lead one to believe that the
-belated payment of $300 borrowed from Dad Fairbanks was a calculated
-delay so that Harry Oakes could enjoy the little act he put on at Baker.
-
-During World War I he gave $500,000 to a London hospital, was knighted
-by King George V in 1939. He became a friend of the Duke of Windsor and
-at his Nassau residence was often the host to the Duke and his Duchess,
-the amazing Wallis Warfield, Baltimore girl who went from a boarding
-house to wed a British king.
-
-Sir Harry Oakes was murdered in the palatial Nassau home, July 7, 1943,
-allegedly by a titled son-in-law who was later acquitted--a verdict
-denounced by many.
-
-_In connection with the story of Helen Holmes told above, it should be
-explained that the original title was "Hazards of Helen" and following
-an old Hollywood custom, Pathe produced a new version called "Perils of
-Pauline." In this the heroine's part was taken by Pearl White._
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIX
- Death Valley Scotty
-
-
-A strictly factual thumbnail sketch of Walter Scott would contain the
-following incidents:
-
-He ran away from his Kentucky home to join his brother, Warner, as a cow
-hand on the ranch of John Sparks--afterward governor of Nevada. He
-worked as a teamster for Borax Smith at Columbus Marsh. He had a similar
-job at Old Harmony Borax Works.
-
-In the Nineties he went to work with Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show. He
-married Josephine Millius, a candy clerk on Broadway, New York, and
-brought her to Nevada.
-
-He became guide, friend, companion, and major domo for Albert
-Johnson--Chicago millionaire who had come to the desert for his health.
-He did some prospecting in the early part of the century, but never
-found a mine of value.
-
-America was mining-mad following the Tonopah and Goldfield strikes and
-Scotty went East in search of a grubstake. He obtained one from Julian
-Gerard, Vice President of the Knickerbocker Trust Company and a brother
-of James W. Gerard who had married the daughter of Marcus Daly, Montana
-copper king and who was later U.S. Ambassador to Germany.
-
-Scotty staked a claim near Hidden Spring and named it The Knickerbocker.
-He gave Gerard glowing reports of a mine so rich its location must be
-kept secret.
-
-Scotty appeared in Los Angeles unheard of, in a ten gallon hat and a
-flaming necktie and with the natural showman's skill, tossed money
-around in lavish tips or into the street for urchins to scramble over.
-
-This was the well-staged prelude to the charter of the famed Scotty
-Special for a record-breaking run from Los Angeles to Chicago. Though
-Scotty stoutly denies it, he was lifted to fame by a big and talented
-sorrel-headed sports editor and reporter on the Los Angeles Examiner,
-named Charles Van Loan, and John J. Byrnes, passenger agent of the Santa
-Fe railroad. Scotty meant nothing to either of these men, but the
-publicity Byrnes saw for the Santa Fe did, and the red necktie, the big
-hat, the scattering of coins, and the secret mine made the sort of story
-Van Loan liked.
-
-Here Scotty's trail is lost in the fantastic stories of writers, press
-agents, and promoters. Several years afterward when his yarns began to
-backfire, Scotty swore in a Los Angeles court that E. Burt Gaylord, a
-New York man, furnished $10,000 for the Scotty Special's spectacular
-dash across the continent--the object being to promote the sale of stock
-in the "secret mine."
-
-More remarkable than any yarn Scotty ever told is the fact that although
-headlines made Scotty, headlines have failed to kill the Scotty legend.
-
-You may toss our heroes into the ash can, but we dust them off and put
-them back. Likable, ingratiating, Scotty will brush aside any attack
-with a funny story and let it go at that.
-
-In a law suit for an accounting against Scotty, Julian Gerard asserted
-he was to have 22-1/2% of any treasure Scotty found. Judge Ben Harrison
-decided in Gerard's favor, but the only claim found in Scotty's name was
-the utterly worthless Knickerbocker and Gerard got nothing. The claim
-showed little sign of ever having been worked. A few broken rocks. A few
-holes which could be filled with a shovel within a few moments.
-
-Passing the claim once, I stopped to talk with a native: "This is the
-scene of the Battle of Wingate Pass," he told me. "In case you never
-heard of it, it was fought for liberty, Scotty's liberty--that is.
-Gerard got suspicious about Scotty's mine and decided to send his own
-engineers out to investigate. He ordered Scotty to meet them at Barstow
-and show them something or else. It worried Scotty a little, not long.
-He'd learned about Indian fighting with Buffalo Bill and met the fellows
-as ordered. When he led them to his wagon waiting behind the depot, the
-Easterners took a look at the wagon, another look at Scotty and one at
-each other. The wagon had boiler plate on the sides, rifles stacked army
-fashion alongside. Outriders with six-guns holstered on their belts and
-Winchesters cradled in their arms.
-
-"'Don't let it worry you,' Scotty said. 'Piutes on the warpath. Old
-Dripping Knife, their Chief claims my gold belongs to them. Dry-gulched
-a couple of my best men last week.'
-
-"The Easterners turned white and Scotty gave 'em another jolt.
-'Butchered my boys and fed 'em to their pigs. But we are fixed for 'em
-this trip. They sent word they aim to exterminate us. Maybe try it, but
-I've got lookouts planted all along. Let's go....' He shunted them
-aboard, shaking in their knees and headed out of Barstow.
-
-"The party had reached that hill you see when suddenly out of the brush
-and the gulches and from behind the rocks came a horde of 'redskins,'
-yelling and shooting. Scotty's men leaped from their saddles and the
-battle was on. The Easterners jumped out of the wagon and hit the ground
-running for the nearest dry wash and that was the closest they ever got
-to Scotty's mine. You've got to hand it to Scotty."
-
-The story made front page from coast to coast and it was several days
-before the hoax was revealed. Unexplained though undenied, was the
-statement that Albert Johnson was in Scotty's party listed as "Doctor
-Jones." It is assumed that he had no guilty knowledge of the hoax.
-
-The most astounding achievement of Scotty's career was attained when he
-interested in an imaginary Death Valley mine, Al Myers, a hard-bitten
-prospector and mining man who had made the discovery strike at
-Goldfield; Rol King, of Los Angeles, bon vivant and manager of the
-popular Hollenbeck Hotel, and Sidney Norman who as mining editor of the
-Los Angeles Times knew mines and mining men.
-
-These were certainly not the gullible type. But with a yarn of gold,
-Scotty induced them to hazard a trip into Death Valley in mid-summer
-when the temperature was 124 degrees.
-
-Scotty may have missed the acquisition of a good mine when he failed to
-find one lost by Bob Black. While hunting sheep in the Avawatz Range,
-Bob found some rich float. "Honest," Bob said, "I knocked off the quartz
-and had pure gold." He tried to locate the ledge but he couldn't match
-his specimen. Later he returned with Scotty, but a cloudburst had mauled
-the country. They found the corners of Bob's tepee, but not the ledge.
-They made several later attempts to find it, but failed.
-
-Bob always declared that some day he would uncover the ledge and might
-have succeeded if he hadn't met Ash Meadows Jack Longstreet one day when
-both were full of desert likker. Bob passed the lie. Jack drew first.
-Taps for Bob.
-
-
-All kinds of stories have been told to explain Albert Johnson's
-connection with Scotty. The first and the true one is that Johnson,
-coming to the desert for his health, hired Scotty as a guide, liked his
-yarns and his camping craft and kept him around to yank a laugh out of
-the grim solitude.
-
-But that version didn't appeal to the old burro men. They could believe
-in the hydrophobic skunks or the Black Bottle kept in the county
-hospital to get rid of the old and useless, but not in a Santa Claus
-like Albert Johnson. "It just don't make sense--handing that sort of
-money to a potbellied loafer like Scotty...."
-
-Albert Johnson was able to afford any expenditure to make his life in a
-difficult country less lonely. He could have searched the world over and
-found no better investment for that purpose than Scotty.
-
-Genial, resourceful, and never at a loss for a yarn that would fit his
-audience, Scotty was cast in a perfect role. As a matter of fact,
-whatever it cost Johnson for Scotty's flings in Hollywood, or alimony
-for Scotty's wife, it probably came back in the dollar admissions that
-tourists paid to pass the portals of the Castle for a look at Scotty. Of
-course they seldom saw Scotty--never in later years. Mrs. Johnson was an
-intensely religious woman and didn't like liquor and that disqualified
-Scotty.
-
-"This is Scotty's room," the attendant would say. "And that's his bed."
-
-"Oh, isn't he here?"
-
-"Not today. Scotty's a little under the weather. Went over to his shack
-so he wouldn't be disturbed...."
-
-Mrs. Johnson was killed in an auto driven by her husband in Towne's Pass
-when, to avoid going over a precipice, he headed the machine into the
-wall of a cut.
-
-In 1939 Albert Johnson testified that he first met Scotty in Johnson's
-Chicago office when a wealthy friend appeared with Scotty, who was
-looking for a grubstake. Johnson said he gave Scotty "something between
-$1000 and $5000." When the attorney asked him to be more definite,
-Johnson replied that at the time, his income was between one-half
-million and two million dollars a year and the exact amount consequently
-was of no importance then. "Since then," Johnson testified, "I have
-given him $117,000 in cash and about the same in grubstakes, mules,
-food, and equipment."
-
-They went together into the mountains as Johnson explained, "because I
-was all hepped up with his ... claims." Further explaining his
-connection with Scotty, he said: "I was crippled in a railroad accident.
-My back was broken. I was paralyzed from the hips down. Through the
-years I got to have a great fondness for him."
-
-Albert Johnson, whose fortune came from the National Insurance Company,
-died in 1948, leaving a will that contained no mention of Scotty.
-
-But one laurel none can deny Walter Scott. He did more to put Death
-Valley on the must list of the American tourists than all the histories
-and all the millions spent for books, pamphlets, and radio broadcasts.
-
-
-The almost incredible case of Jack and Myra Benson proves that P. T.
-Barnum was not wholly wrong in his dictum regarding the birthrate of
-suckers.
-
-Newly married in Montana they loaded their car and set out to seek
-fortune in the West. "We didn't know anything about gold," Jack
-confided. "If anyone had told us to throw a forked stick up a hillside
-and dig where it fell, we would have done it."
-
-Near Parker, Arizona, they were having supper in camp when another
-traveler stopped and asked permission to erect his tent nearby. Myra
-invited him to share their supper and during the meal the stranger told
-them he was a chemist and that he had prospected over most of the West.
-He had found a clay that cured meningitis, he said, and this had led to
-fortune. In one town he had found the entire population, including
-doctors and nurses down and out. The clay had cured them within a week.
-Among the cured, was the son of a rich woman who had given him $5000.
-
-Grateful for the fate that had brought this man into their lives, the
-Bensons confided that they had hoped to reach the California gold
-fields, but car trouble had depleted their cash and asked if he knew of
-any place where they could pan gold.
-
-"Go to Silver Lake, in San Bernardino County, California," he advised
-them, "and your troubles will be over. On the edges of the lake is a
-thick mud. Get some tanks and boil it. You'll have a residue of gold."
-
-Jack and Myra set out over the Colorado Desert; then climbed the
-Providence Mountains to worry through the deep blow sand of the Devil's
-Playground. After three gruelling weeks they reached the lake. There
-they boiled the mud. Then an old prospector became curious about their
-unusual performance. The world slipped out from under the Bensons when
-he told them they were the victims of a liar.
-
-With $5.00 they headed for Death Valley; found themselves broke and
-gasless at Cave Spring. Jack knocked upon the door of a shack he saw
-there. The woman who opened the door was Jack's former school teacher,
-Mrs. Ira Sweatman, who was keeping house for her cousin, Adrian
-Egbert--there for his health.
-
-Those who traveled the Death Valley road by way of Yermo and Cave Spring
-will remember that every five miles tacked to stake or bush were signs
-that read: "Water and oil." This was Adrian Egbert's fine and practical
-way of aiding the fellow in trouble.
-
-Myra and Jack later acquired a claim near Rhodes Spring, a short
-distance from Salsbury Pass road into Death Valley and moved there to
-develop it. I had been away from Shoshone with no contacts and returning
-was surprised to find Myra there. I inquired about Jack.
-
-"Why, haven't you heard?" she asked, and from the expression in her eyes
-I knew that Jack was dead.
-
-As best I could, I expressed my condolence, knowing how deeply she had
-loved.
-
-She said: "He went up to the tunnel to set off three blasts. I heard
-only two. He was to come after the third blast. I knew something was
-wrong and went up. Bigod, Mr. Caruthers, Jack's head was blown off to
-hellangone...."
-
-Myra's language failed to mask the grief her welling eyes disclosed.
-
-Only once in her long, helpful life did Myra ever stoop to deception.
-The old age pension law was passed and Myra was entitled to and needed
-its benefits, but Myra wouldn't sign the application. She made one
-excuse after another, but finally Stella Brown got at the bottom of her
-refusal. Myra had been married to Jack for 40 years and just didn't want
-him to find out that she was a year older than he. Mrs. Brown at last
-persuaded her to put aside her vanity.
-
-"Hell--" Jack grinned when told about it. "I knew her age when I married
-her."
-
-On cold winter nights Myra could always be found in the Snake House
-where a chair beside the stove was reserved for her. One night I said
-jestingly: "You never play poker. What are you doing here?"
-
-She whispered: "Wood's hard to get. I'm saving mine."
-
-Then came one of those mornings when one's soul tingles with the feel of
-a perfect desert day and Myra was up early. She came to the store.
-
-"What got you up at this hour?" Bernice asked.
-
-"I felt too dam' good to stay indoors...."
-
-There were a few old timers in the store and these surrounded
-her--because she was the kind who could tell you that it was hotter than
-hell, in a thrilling way. She bought a few groceries and started back to
-her cabin. Friendly eyes followed her passage along a path across the
-playground of the little school. Children sliding down the chute or
-riding teeter boards, waved affectionately. Myra was seen to falter in
-her step, then sag to the sand. The children ran to her aid and in a
-moment Shoshone was gathering about her. Myra Benson was dead.
-
-Sam Flake, nearing 80, on the fringe of the crowd paid his simple
-tribute in a voice a bit shaky, but in language hard as the rock in the
-hills: "Dam' her old hide--us boys are going to miss Myra...." He turned
-aside, his hand pulling at the bandana in his hip pocket and Shoshone
-understood.
-
-Though she was buried 500 miles away, every man, woman, and child in
-Shoshone wanted a token of love to attend her and about the grave that
-received her casket was a wilderness of flowers.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XX
- Odd But Interesting Characters
-
-
-In these pages the reader has seen familiar names--the favored of Lady
-Luck--but what of those who failed--the patient, plodding kind of whom
-you hear only on the scene? They too followed jackasses into hidden
-hills; made trails that led others to fortunes which built cities,
-industries, railroad; endowed colleges and made science function for a
-better world. To these humbler actors we owe more than we can repay.
-
-For nearly half a century John (Cranky) Casey roamed the deserts of
-California and Nevada looking for gold. His luck was consistently bad.
-Grim, tall, erect, with a deep slow voice, he was noted for picturesque
-speech which gained emphasis from an utterly humorless face.
-Congenitally he was an autocrat--his speech biting.
-
-A prospector whom Casey didn't like died and friends were discussing the
-disposition of the remains. "Chop his feet off," suggested Casey, "and
-drive him into the ground with a doublejack...."
-
-From others one could always hear tales of fortunes made or missed; of
-veins of gold wide as a barn door. But no trick of memory ever turned
-Casey's bull quartz into picture rock. "Never found enough gold to fill
-a tooth," he would say.
-
-Casey's leisure hours were spent over books and magazines, chiefly
-highbrow--particularly books and journals of science.
-
-A tenderfoot was brought in unconscious from Pahrump Valley. A city
-doctor happened to be passing through and after an examination of the
-victim, turned to the men in overalls and hobnail shoes, who'd brought
-him in: "He's suffering from a derangement of the hypothalamus."
-
-"Why in the hell don't you say he had a heat stroke?" Casey barked.
-
-A notorious promoter had a city victim ready for the dotted line.
-"Double your money in no time.... Samples show $200 to the ton...."
-Assuming all prospectors were crooked he called to Casey sitting nearby:
-"Casey, you know the Indian Tom claim?" "Yes, I know it," Casey
-thundered. "Not a fleck of gold in the whole dam' hill."
-
-In the thick silence that followed, the beaten rascal flushed, looked
-belligerently at Casey but Casey's big, hard fists he knew, could almost
-dent boiler plate and the long arms wrapped about a barrel, could crush
-it flat.
-
-In time Casey acquired an ancient flivver. Only his genius as a mechanic
-kept it going. There were lean years when it bore no license and he kept
-to little-traveled roads. The car, like Casey, was cranky and
-phlegmatic. One day as he was coming into Shoshone it balked in the
-middle of the road, coughed, shivered, and died. Inside the store it was
-120 degrees. Out on the road where Casey stopped it was probably 130.
-For two hours he patiently but vainly tried to coax it back to life.
-Finally he stood aside, wiped the grease from his gnarled hands, calmly
-stoked his pipe and shoved the car from the road. Then he gathered an
-armful of boulders and with a blasting of cussing that shook Shoshone he
-let go with a cannonade of stones that completed its ruin.
-
-At the age of ten Casey had been taken from the drift of a city's
-backwash and put in an orphanage. Nothing was known of his parentage or
-of relatives. He came to the desert after a colorful career as a
-conductor on the Santa Fe. The late E. W. Harriman, having gained
-control of the Southern Pacific system had his private car attached to a
-Santa Fe train for an inspection tour. At a siding on the Mojave Desert,
-Harriman wanted the train held a few moments. His messenger went to
-Casey, explaining that Harriman was the new boss of the Southern
-Pacific.
-
-"This is the Santa Fe," Casey bristled, looking at his watch. "I'm due
-in Barstow at 11:05 and bigod I'll be there."
-
-Aboard his train he was a despot and a stickler for the rules, demanding
-that even his superiors obey them. This finally was his downfall and he
-came to the desert.
-
-Elinor Glyn, who made the best seller list with "Three Weeks" in the
-early part of the century, came to Rawhide and Tex Rickard, spectacular
-gambler undertook to show her a bit of life a la Rawhide. He took her to
-the Stingaree district and later to a reception in his own place. The
-state's notables were presented to the lady along with Nat Goodwin,
-Julian Hawthorne, and others internationally known.
-
-Tex saw Casey standing alone at the end of the bar and knowing he was a
-voracious reader he went to Casey: "Come on and meet the author of Three
-Weeks...."
-
-"I've read it," Casey said. "They've hung folks for less."
-
-Casey's method of getting a job when his grub ran out was unique and
-unfailing. He would storm into the store and turn loose on Charlie, in
-charge of the roads and long his friend. "Who's keeping up these roads?
-Chuck holes in 'em big as the Grand Canyon ... disgrace--"
-
-"Been waiting for you to come in," Charlie would say with a sober face.
-"Get a shovel and fix 'em."
-
-A good conscientious worker, Casey would put the road in shape, pay his
-debts and again head into the horizon.
-
-You who spin through Death Valley or along its approaches owe much to
-Casey, who made many of the original road beds the hard way--with pick
-and shovel.
-
-At last Casey got the old age pension and his latter years were the
-best. His home, a dugout in the bank of a wash near Tecopa. With no
-rent, with books and magazines and the solitude he loved, he lived
-happily. "When I croak," he often said, "just put me in my dugout. Toss
-a stick of dynamite in after me. Shut the door and cave in the goddam'
-hill."
-
-One night he went to Tecopa. Friends were doing a spot of drinking and
-far behind in his score with the years, Casey joined them. There was
-nothing out of line. Just yarns and memories and Casey had a lot of
-these. Tonopah. Goldfield. Rawhide. Ely. Foundling days.
-
-"... They put me in a religious school. Had no relatives. In those days
-they whaled hell outa you just to see you squirm. 'Casey,' the teacher
-would ask, 'who swallowed the whale?' How did I know? Then he'd drag me
-off by the ear and blister my bottom. I shoved off one night. Been on
-the loose ever since."
-
-As he drank from his bottle of beer he suddenly slumped--and died
-instantly. Because of the intense heat, Maury Sorrells, now Supervisor
-but then Coroner, ordered immediate burial.
-
-Someone recalled Casey's wish to be put in the dugout and the hill blown
-up and started for the dynamite. But Whitey Bill McGarn warned that it
-would violate the law. One-eyed Casey--no relation, but long a friend,
-suggested a wake until the grave was dug. "It will be daylight then and
-we'll plant him in the wash right in front of his dugout."
-
-This was done as the sun came over the hills and I like to think that
-somewhere in the after life, all is well with Casey.
-
-
-Ben Brandt, previously mentioned, was a big blond man with child-like
-blue eyes, huge gnarled hands and the strength of an ox. He wore
-enormous boots, but when he bought new ones he always complained that
-they lacked traction and would go immediately to the dump, salvage an
-old tire casing and add two inches of reinforcement to the soles, with
-half a pound of hobnails. Ben then was ready for travel--provided he
-could find his burros.
-
-Near remote Quail Springs Ben dug a 4x4 mine shaft 75 feet deep, without
-aid. Descending by ladder he would fill a 10 gallon bucket with dirt,
-climb out and bring it to the surface. Day after day, month after month
-Ben applied the power of two strong arms and two strong legs. "With an
-engine you could do it in half the time," Ben was told. "I've got plenty
-of time," Ben drawled.
-
-Ben disdained gold in quartz formation. "I like placer. It's a poor
-man's game. If you find gold you put it in your poke and you've got
-spending money."
-
-Ben kept five burros and being industrious, never lacked a grubstake. He
-avoided argument except upon one subject, and that was burros versus
-Fords in prospecting. "I can get anywhere with my burros. I find stalled
-flivvers all over the desert and my burros drag 'em in."
-
-Ben believed that a burro had at least some of the intellectual powers
-of man. "Read a clock good as you," he said. "I worked my burro,
-Solomon, on a hoist. He didn't like it. I got up every morning at
-daylight, by an alarm clock. Slept out and kept the clock on a boulder
-at my head and got up when the alarm went off. One morning I woke up
-with the sun shining straight down in my eyes. It was noon. That burro
-had sneaked up and taken that clock down the canyon a mile away. Don't
-tell me they can't think! I sold him. Too smart."
-
-I asked Ben once what he would do if he suddenly found a million dollar
-claim. "I would build a monument a thousand feet high on top of
-Telescope Peak and dedicate it to burros."
-
-Such a monument would inadequately express the debt today's world owes
-that little beast. Here are some of the things that link your life to
-the burro:
-
-The springs and the mattress in the bed you were born on. The talc that
-powdered you. The soap that bathed you. The ring you slipped on the
-finger of the girl you love. The paint on your house. The glass in your
-windows. The tile in your bathroom. The enamel ware in your kitchen. The
-prescription your druggist fills. The fillings the dentist puts into
-your teeth. The coin and the currency you spend. The auto you ride in
-and finally the casket in which you leave this world.
-
-Wars have been won or lost and the credit of nations stabilized because
-a burro carried a prospector's grub into faraway hills.
-
-Ben's burros strayed and he'd just returned with them after a two days'
-hunt. He was sitting on the bench mopping his brow when Louise Grantham,
-the girl with the mine in the Panamint, came up. She needed pack animals
-to get the ore down to the road. She'd tried before, to trade her Ford
-pickup for Ben's burros, but he'd never shown a flicker of interest. In
-a voice pitched for Ben's ears, she said to Ernie Huhn: "If Ben didn't
-waste so much time hunting those jacks, he might find a mine."
-
-Ben cocked an ear, but made no comment.
-
-"Now take that Quail Springs hole," Louise went on. "If he had my pickup
-he could take off a wheel, put on a belt and haul up the muck in one
-tenth the time, and instead of hoofing it in the sun he could ride in a
-cool cab and haul his supplies in."
-
-There comes a weak moment in everyone's life and this was Ben's. He
-traded the burros for the Ford and one of the best prospectors on the
-desert was ruined forever.
-
-Ben had a mortal fear of women and nothing could convince him that any
-unattached woman wasn't always lying in wait for any loose man.
-
-Ben went into the Johnnie country to prospect and passing through I
-looked him up. He was living in a tin shack in the canyon leading to the
-old Johnnie Mine. I asked Ben about his luck.
-
-"Last prospecting I did was right out there." He pointed to the slope in
-front of his house. "Good placer ground too."
-
-"Why did you quit?"
-
-"Woman," Ben grumbled. "Don't know yet what come over me, but I took a
-woman for a partner." He pointed to a boulder a few hundred yards away.
-"There's where I wanted to start digging. It's rich dirt. She wanted to
-start up there near her shack."
-
-"Well, what difference did it make?" I asked.
-
-"I see you don't know women. I hadn't been working up there by her house
-no time before she called me to get her a bucket of water. Bucket was
-half full. Next day she wanted a board in the kitchen floor nailed down.
-Didn't need any nail. 'There's some fresh apple pie on the table,' she
-says. I told her I didn't like pie. I'm crazy about pie but I knew her
-game. She calculated if I ate with her two--three times I'd be a dead
-pigeon. So I told her she could have the claim and walked off."
-
-Ben struck a happier note when he informed me that he didn't need to
-work any more and at last had attained the one ambition of his life.
-"Come inside and I'll show you." Beaming as only a man can when he sits
-on top of the world, he approached a table and it flashed over me that I
-would see a certified check for a fortune.
-
-There was a cloth over the table and he carefully wiped his big hands
-before touching it. He wet his big, broad thumb and forefinger and gave
-them an extra wipe on the sides of his shirt, a wide smile on his face
-and I had a vicarious thrill that a man who could barely read and write
-had at last achieved that which he most wanted in life. He started to
-remove the cloth, but paused. "Always said if I ever struck it rich,
-first money I spent would be for one of these dinkuses."
-
-He flipped the cloth aside. I stared incredulous. It was a portable
-typewriter.
-
-He replaced the cover with the gentle care of a mother putting her baby
-to bed and I left him, sure that God was in his heaven with an eye on
-Ben.
-
-
-Contemporary with Ben was Joe Volmer, who lived in a dugout in Dublin
-Gulch. I had seen royalty from afar and once I had dined with a sultan
-on horsemeat and fried bananas, but no king ever attained the majesty of
-Joe. He was tall, erect, wore a white sailor's hat and carried a cane.
-His mustache was always waxed to a needle point, after the manner of
-Kaiser Wilhelm. Though he increased his small pension by selling home
-brew, he always managed to give the impression that he was descending to
-your level when he accepted the two bits you left on his table.
-
-He was neat as he was lordly and forever scrubbing his pots and pans. He
-kept the dugout immaculate and when I first saw him standing on the
-ledge in front of his door, calmly surveying the valley below, he posed
-like an Alexander the Great, with the world conquered and trussed at his
-feet.
-
-I had never seen him until one day a tourist came into the store and
-asked Charlie for a stop-watch. Charlie told him he didn't carry
-stop-watches. Shortly after the tourist had gone, Joe came in for a
-stop-watch. "Don't keep 'em," Charlie said. "Helluva store," Joe barked
-and strode out.
-
-"A curious coincidence," I said. "Two calls for a stop-watch in the same
-day away out here."
-
-"It's no coincidence," Charlie said. "Just Joe Volmer. He's in every day
-asking for something he knows I haven't got."
-
-After Joe left, Jack Crowley came for his mail. Brown was in the cage
-set apart for the post office. He had just received several sheets of
-six-cent stamps--twice as many as he needed. "Jack," he said, "when you
-see Joe tell him I'm out of six-cent stamps." Within an hour Joe shoved
-a five dollar bill through the window. "Give me five dollars' worth of
-six-cent stamps," he ordered. Brown picked up the bill, filled the order
-and never again did Joe ask for merchandise not in stock.
-
-Joe sold a claim and decided he needed a refrigerator to keep the beer
-cold. So he picked up a Monkey Ward catalogue and ordered a big white
-enamel number large enough for a hotel. Joe thought a refrigerator was
-just a refrigerator and he strutted around telling everybody. He had to
-widen the dugout door and waiting customers were more than eager to help
-him get the machine in place. He loaded the shelves and told them to
-come back in a couple of hours and cool their innards.
-
-They came with their tongues hanging out. Joe set out the glasses and
-passed the bottles. Herman Jones picked one up and shook it. The cork
-hit the ceiling. "Hotter'n hell," Herman said. "What sort of cooler is
-that?" He went over and looked. "Gas. You dam' fool. Nearest gas is
-Barstow."
-
-Until Joe's death he used the refrigerator to store pots and pans.
-
-Discovered in his dugout in a serious condition, Joe was rushed to Death
-Valley Junction 28 miles away, where the Pacific Coast Borax Company
-maintained a hospital which was in charge of Dr. Shrum, who was rather
-realistic and somewhat cold blooded.
-
-Just as they had gotten Joe in the doctor's office, another patient was
-brought in. Dr. Shrum looked at the new comer and then at Joe. "Take Joe
-out," he ordered. "He's going to die anyway."
-
-Joe was wheeled outside and a moment later was dead.
-
-
-George Williams, a Spanish American war veteran, retired to Shoshone on
-a pension of $50. Since food was cheap, George had more money than he
-knew what to do with. He kept five burros. He never prospected, but
-roamed the country and thought nothing of taking a 300 mile trip across
-the roughest terrain in the region. After spending his summers in the
-high country, he would return to Shoshone in winter. There he had a five
-acre ranch fenced in and a neat cabin.
-
-Every day George would come to the store and buy a pound of chocolates.
-"I've got a sweet tooth," he would explain.
-
-Charlie, sure that no one could eat as much chocolate as George bought,
-was a bit curious as to what George did with it and trailed him one day
-through the mesquite to find George feeding the candy to his burros.
-
-George was not a drinker, but on one occasion he joined a party and went
-on a bender. He awoke next morning with a horrible hangover and was so
-humiliated that he left Shoshone and never returned. He went over to
-Sandy and died in the '30s.
-
-One day George started to tell me a story as we sat on the bench. His
-burros were grazing in the nearby salt grass. Every time he reached the
-climax of his yarn, he would jump up to go after a straying burro. When
-he retrieved that one, another would wander off and George would leave
-me again.
-
-For one entire summer I listened to the beginning of that yarn and every
-morning would remind him of it.
-
-"Where was I?" he'd say. "Oh, yes, I was telling you about the girl
-climbing out of the fellow's window just before daylight. Well, she
-went--"
-
-Then George would jump up and start for a burro, and I never learned
-what happened to the torrid romance after the girl crawled out of her
-lover's window.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXI
- Roads. Cracker Box Signs
-
-
-Any resemblance that a Death Valley highway bore to a road was a
-coincidence prior to 1926, and few tourists traveled over them unless
-two cars were along. "Just follow the wheel tracks and keep your eyes
-peeled for the cracker box signs along the road," was the usual advice
-to the novice who didn't know that tracks left by Mormons' wagons nearly
-a century before may be seen today.
-
-One of these led me to the bank of a mile-wide gash made by cloudbursts.
-To locate the missing link I climbed the nearest mountain and on a
-lonely mesa came at last upon a piece of shook nailed to a stake and
-stuck into the ground. But it had nothing to do with roads. A crude
-inscription read:
-
-
- Montana Jim
- July 1888
- A dam good pal
-
-
-Reverently I stepped aside. Never again would I see a finer tribute to
-man. A few rocks bleached white in the sun outlined a sunken grave.
-Crossed upon it were Jim's pick and shovel. It was not difficult to
-recreate what had happened there. Jim and his friend looking for gold.
-Jim's faltering and the sun beating him down. Jim's partner knowing that
-Jim's moniker would identify him better than a surname to anyone who
-passed that way interested in Jim. Out in the desert 100 miles from
-human habitation he couldn't call an undertaker, so he dug a hole,
-wrapped Jim in his canvas, rolled him in and hoped that God would reach
-down for Jim.
-
-At that period it was not an uncommon experience for the early tourist
-to lose his way by doing the natural thing at a crossroads and take the
-one which showed the sign of most travel. Often he would find later that
-he had followed a trail to a mine miles away. Often too, it led to
-disaster.
-
-
-The story of roads begins at Shoshone with Brown. In his trips in and
-around the valley, he erected signs to prevent the traveler from losing
-his way and his life. "I would like to see Death Valley country," people
-would say to him, "but everyone tells me to stay out."
-
-Inyo county had little revenue and that was used in the more populous
-Owens Valley 150 miles west. The east side (the Shoshone area) was
-totally neglected. Letters and petitions protesting the unfair
-distribution of county funds were tossed into the waste basket. "Roads
-in that cauldron? Who would use 'em? Nobody ever goes there but a few
-old prospectors."
-
-This was true but it was also true that on Owens Valley's west side the
-lakes and forests of the High Sierras were attracting a paying crop of
-vacationists and the supervisors knew it would be political suicide to
-divert this traffic from its towns and resorts. The county-wide opinion
-as to chance for relief was expressed in the slang of the day by a
-loafer on the bench at Shoshone: "About as much as a wax mouse would
-have against an asbestos cat in a race through hell. They have the votes
-and elect the supervisors."
-
-The east side had never had a member on the board. In the Shoshone
-precinct were less than 40 voters. In Death Valley a few prospectors who
-would have battered down the gates of hell if they thought gold lay
-beyond, poked around in its canyons. A few Indians. A few workmen for
-the Borax Company. In 1924 Brown put his suitcase in his car, filled the
-tank and said to those about: "Fellows, I'm running for Supervisor."
-"You'll be the mouse," quipped a friend.
-
-"I'll let 'em know somebody lives over here anyway...."
-
-Skirting the urban strongholds of the gentlemen in office Brown knocked
-at every door in the district. He berated none nor claimed he had all
-the answers to an obviously difficult problem. "... Roads built there
-will lead here. Everybody will gain...." Then to the next cabin and the
-next canyon until he'd seen every voter.
-
-Before the opposition knew he had been around, he was back in Shoshone
-selling bacon and beans.
-
-When the votes were counted the overlords of the west side gasped. "Who
-the hell's this Brown? Didn't even know he was running...."
-
-Taking office January 1, 1925, he found that the beaten incumbent had
-spent all the money allocated for road maintenance in his own bailiwick
-before retiring. Nevertheless, Brown convinced the new board his
-election proved that the people of the entire county agreed with him
-that the Death Valley area could no longer be neglected and managed to
-get a niggardly appropriation which would not have built a mile of
-decent mountain road, and his district had three challenging mountain
-ranges to cross.
-
-With this appropriation he was expected to care for a mileage four times
-greater than that of the west side and was thus responsible for not only
-eastern approaches but maintenance of 150 miles of road from Darwin, all
-roads in the valley and those which furnished the north and south
-approaches. He managed to get $5000 after two years. With this he
-procured road machinery on a rental basis and succeeded in making a fair
-desert road. Then he began a one-man crusade to exploit Death Valley as
-a tourist attraction. "We need only roads a tourist can travel."
-
-He worked just as diligently for all of Inyo's roads. "We have one of
-the world's best vacation lands," he told the west-siders. "You have an
-abundance of beautiful lakes and streams in a setting of mountains
-impressive as any in the world. On our side we offer the appeal of the
-Panamint, the Funeral Range, and spectacular Death Valley. Tourists will
-come to both of us if we give them a chance and they will be our best
-crop."
-
-By 1926 his crusade for roads had spread beyond Inyo county lines. San
-Bernardino county, through which passes Highway 66, a main
-transcontinental artery, joins Inyo on the south. Its board of
-supervisors was in session one day when Brown strode in. Most of them he
-knew. He wanted their advice, he told them. "Your county and mine need
-more roads to bring more people. The easiest way into Death Valley is
-through your county from Baker. The distance from Baker to the Inyo
-county line is 45 miles. If you will build the road to the Inyo line, I
-will build it from that point to Furnace Creek, 71 miles. Such a road
-would open Death Valley to the public and the tourists who will travel
-will spend enough money in your towns to pay your share of the cost."
-
-San Bernardino supervisors agreed to consider it but were not
-enthusiastic. One of America's largest counties, San Bernardino had also
-one of its largest road problems.
-
-Brown kept plugging, arranging meetings, convincing residents that the
-county's portion of the road would be over flat country and over roads
-already passable, and its construction inexpensive.
-
-Finally San Bernardino county supervisors agreed and by April, 1929, he
-had 71 miles of passable road. The result was that Death Valley was no
-longer remote as the Congo and tourists began to come.
-
-To Shoshone it meant a few more windshields to wipe; a few more cars to
-crawl under. Another soft answer to frame for the sightseer cursing the
-desolation. Another shed for the store that started on the kitchen
-table.
-
-In 1932 Brown went before the State Highway Commission and urged that
-all the roads he had built in Death Valley be taken over by the state.
-The law was passed.
-
-Death Valley became a National Monument February 11, 1933, by order of
-President Franklin Roosevelt. At that time America was groping its way
-through depression, worrying about its dinner and its debts as a result
-of the stock market crash of 1929.
-
-In the nation's hobo jungles the seasoned "bindle stiff" made room for
-the newcomer who had always lived on the right side of the tracks.
-Freight trains carried a new kind of bum when the adolescent female
-crawled into a car alongside an adolescent male, vainly seeking work
-anywhere at anything.
-
-To save them and others like them C.C.C. camps were organized and one of
-these recruited largely from New York City's Bowery, was sent to Death
-Valley with headquarters at Cow Creek, a few miles north of Furnace
-Creek Inn.
-
-The new park was under the supervision of Col. John R. White, later
-superintendent of the entire National Park System and to Ray Goodwin,
-assistant superintendent was assigned the task of building additional
-roads and trails to points of interest to connect with the State System
-which Brown had built.
-
-Then began in earnest the flow of tourist traffic to the "God-forsaken
-hole" for which Brown had worked for 14 long and difficult years. But he
-soon found that to the problems of a small desert community he had added
-those of a whole county. They were the aftermath of what has since been
-called in a marvelous understatement by Morrow Mayo, historian of Los
-Angeles, "The Rape of Owens Valley."
-
-In the early part of the century, the city of Los Angeles had secretly
-acquired nearly all sources of water in Inyo and Mono counties. An
-amazed world applauded the engineering feat by which water was siphoned
-over mountain ranges to flow through ditches and tunnels, a distance of
-259 miles.
-
-The enterprise was announced by its promoters as the answer to the
-desperate need for water. It is now known that this need was only a mask
-to hide a scheme to make Los Angeles pay the cost of bringing water to
-108,000 acres of waterless land in San Fernando valley so that the
-owners could make a profit of a hundred million dollars through its
-subdivision and sale. This they did.
-
-The shameful story glorifies by comparison the cattle wars of the early
-West when one side hired its Billy the Kids to kill off the other--the
-only difference being that in the Owens Valley feud the Billy the Kids
-were the Big Names of Los Angeles who used unscrupulous politicians and
-laws cunningly passed instead of six-guns.
-
-As a consequence, Los Angeles owns the towns, ranches, and cattle ranges
-so that merchants, householders, ranchers, and renters have no title
-except in a relatively few instances, to the land upon which they live
-or to the house or store they occupy. Los Angeles could sell or lease or
-refuse to sell or lease land to cattlemen, homes to residents or stores
-to merchants and sell or refuse to sell water to those who had lived all
-their lives and would die on the devastated land.
-
-As a result, the relations between the city and the Displaced Persons of
-the two counties were those of victor and vanquished.
-
-In 1935 the city succeeded in getting an act passed by the legislature
-which prevented any town from becoming incorporated without the consent
-of 60 per cent of the property owners. The purpose of the act seemed
-fair enough when it was announced that it was designed to save the towns
-from both political demagogues and crackpots running amuck in California
-and it became a law.
-
-But there was more than the eye could see. Its real object had been to
-strengthen the strangle hold of the Los Angeles Water and Power board
-upon Owens Valley. Since it owned the towns it could now prevent their
-incorporation. There had been some feeling of security under a
-resolution of the Water and Power Board which had declared that
-merchants, cattlemen, and residents--all of them lessees, would be given
-preference in new leases and renewals of old ones.
-
-In 1942 the resolution became a scrap of paper, and ranchers, cattle men
-and householders were advised that their leases would hereafter be
-renewed by a method of secret bidding.
-
-Thus the residents of Owens Valley learned that the labor of years had
-brought no security. As one beaten old timer told me, "We've been kicked
-around so much I'm used to it. I helped blow those ditches two-three
-times, to turn that water loose on the desert. I know when I'm licked."
-
-Resentment in Mono county, which provided more of the water taken by Los
-Angeles than Inyo, was even more aroused and smoldering hatreds were
-ready again to blow up a ditch. The two counties constitute the 28th
-Senatorial district.
-
-Brown's success in the Assembly had not gone unnoticed in the
-neighboring county of Mono. "We need that fellow Brown," a prominent
-citizen said, and others repeated it.
-
-Again Charlie put his suitcase in his car, filled the tank. "We've never
-had anybody from this side at Sacramento," he told a friend standing by.
-"I'm running for the Senate."
-
-"Know anybody up there?"
-
-"I'm going and get acquainted," he said and headed across the valley.
-
-Most of Mono county is isolated by the High Sierras. Again the door to
-door technique. No torches. No brass bands. Just the old
-eye-to-eye-talk-it-over system. As always he let the voter do the
-talking and he listened, but when he slid into his car the voter was
-ready to tell his neighbor: "I like that fellow. Doesn't claim to know
-it all." He told his banker, his grocer, his butcher, baker, and barber.
-
-Result? I was in the Senate Chamber at Sacramento later, when I heard
-one of a group of men huddled nearby say, "This is an important bill
-that concerns everybody on the east side of the Sierras. We'd better see
-Charlie." I nudged the man reading a document at my side. "Those fellows
-want to see you, Senator."
-
-He had received the nomination of both the Democratic and Republican
-parties and had secured the passage of an act which denies a
-municipality holding more than 50 per cent of the property of another
-subdivision of the state, proprietary power over the security and
-stability of such subdivision. Moreover he was on the all-powerful Rules
-Committee, the Fish and Game, Local Government, Natural Resources,
-Social Welfare, and Election Committees, friend and frequent adviser of
-Governor Warren.
-
-Honeymooning Secretary Ickes was combining business with pleasure when
-he reached California and wanting to see how his Park System was
-functioning, he took his bride to see Death Valley. Besides, he had some
-plans affecting the Inyo area.
-
-The fight was having tough sledding in the legislature despite President
-Roosevelt's approval. Then he talked to people less biased. "You'd
-better see Charlie...."
-
-"Who the hell's Charlie?" asked Harold.
-
-"Senator from Death Valley...."
-
-With Ray Goodwin, Superintendent of the Death Valley Monument to guide
-him, he was taken to all the show places. "Now," said Mr. Ickes, "I want
-to see Brown."
-
-At Shoshone Charlie's toggery is strictly for work which includes
-tending the gas pump, stove repairing, plumbing, and what-have-you. He
-was flat on his back under the dripping oil of a balky car when Mr.
-Goodwin stepped from the limousine.
-
-"Charlie," Mr. Goodwin called, "Mr. Ickes is here to see you." Receiving
-no answer, he walked over to the car and added that Mr. Ickes was in a
-hurry. Still, no answer. "It's Secretary Ickes, Department of the
-Interior. This is important."
-
-"So's this," Brown grunted. When he'd finished, he crawled out and
-wiping the grime from his hands, joined Goodwin at the waiting car.
-After being introduced to the bride and the self-styled "Old Curmudgeon"
-the latter explained his plan to add certain lands in Charlie's
-district, to the Forest Reserve. "... You're opposing me. You're a
-Democrat, aren't you?"
-
-"I came from Georgia," Charlie drawled.
-
-"You're for Roosevelt, aren't you?"
-
-"Within reason," Charlie answered.
-
-Then Mr. Ickes, with the assurance of the perfectionist began to sell
-his idea.
-
-"Do you know of any reason why the area designated as Forest Reserve
-should not be protected as any other of our natural resources?" he
-concluded.
-
-"Just one," Charlie said.
-
-"What's that?" Ickes snapped.
-
-"Your forest is nearly all brush land without a tree on it big enough to
-shade a lizard."
-
-Charlie was similarly dressed when a well tailored and impatient tourist
-with a carload of friends whom he was evidently trying to impress, drove
-up for gas.
-
-Always unhurried, Charlie came to the pumps, slowly reached for the hose
-and as lazily checked the oil.
-
-"Say, fellow--" the tourist barked. "Senator Brown is a friend of mine.
-Get a move on or you'll be looking for a job."
-
-Without the flicker of an eyelid, Charlie quickened, jumped for a
-cleaning rag and briskly polished the windshield. When he brought the
-tourist's change he apologized for his slowness and begged him not to
-report it to Senator Brown. "Jobs are hard to get and I have a wife and
-ten children to support."
-
-Touched with remorse, the tourist looked at the change. "Just give it to
-the kids and forget it."
-
-When the Pacific Coast Borax Company built its swanky Furnace Creek Inn
-on the western slope of the Funeral Range overlooking Death Valley, it
-began to look about for places that would give the most spectacular and
-comprehensive view of the Big Sink as a means of entertaining guests,
-and far enough away to keep them from boredom.
-
-All the old timers who had wandered over the ranges were called in. Each
-suggested the place that had impressed him more than others. Each of
-these places was visited and after weeks of deliberation a spot on
-Chloride Cliff toward the northern end of Death Valley was chosen and
-the bigwigs started back to Los Angeles.
-
-When they stopped at Shoshone for gas and water, Clarence Rasor, an
-engineer of the company was still thinking of the chosen site and asked
-Brown, long his friend, if he knew of any view of the valley better than
-the one at Chloride Cliff.
-
-"I don't pay much attention to scenery," he told Rasor. "To me it's all
-just desert or mountain. But I know one view that made me stop and look.
-Kinda got me. The chances are most folks would rave over it."
-
-"Could you find it?"
-
-"Sure could...."
-
-Rasor called the others, repeated Charlie's story and added: "You're in
-a hurry, but knowing Charlie as I do, I believe we'd better turn around
-and go back if he'll guide us."
-
-Charlie agreed. It was a long, tortuous climb, even to the base of the
-peak. There Charlie went ahead and then beckoned them. Holding to bushes
-they walked or crawled to stand beside him; took one look and caught
-their breath. A mile below them lay the awesome Sink. White salt beds
-spread like a shroud over its silent desolation. Billowed dunes, gold
-against the dark of lava rock. Here a pastelled hill. There a brooding
-canyon. Beyond, the colorful Panamint under the golden glow of the sun.
-
-"This is the place," they said.
-
-"... You can tell 'em too," said Charlie pointing, "that right down
-there is Copper Canyon. If such stuff interests them, they can see the
-footprints of the camels and elephants and a lot of historic junk like
-that."
-
-So you who thrill at Dante's View may thank Charles Brown of Shoshone.
-
-When first elected to the senate, his colleagues were quick to see the
-qualities that had appealed to voters when they elected him supervisor.
-He had frequently been before that body in his fight for roads and tax
-reforms. They knew too that better schools for all rural areas either
-wholly or largely were the result of his efforts, and soon he was on the
-Rules Committee--a place usually assigned to those who come from the
-more populous districts of the state, because its five members through
-its power to appoint all standing and special committees, largely decide
-what legislation reaches the governor.
-
-In 1950 Brown announced his candidacy for reelection under the state law
-that enables a candidate to seek the nomination of two parties.
-
-The slot machine had been outlawed in California by the previous
-legislature and Brown had been largely instrumental in securing the
-passage of the law. Since the slot machine is a three billion dollar
-business in the nation, the gamblers opposed him as part of a general
-plan to secure repeal of the law and reinstate the one-arm bandits.
-
-Since Mono county adjoins Nevada, gambling interests of that state
-contributed without stint, to retire Brown to private life. He had been
-in office for 25 years and opposed by this powerful group, guided by
-both brains and cunning, the odds apparently were against him. While the
-opposition boasted that he was through, Brown was calling at cabins in
-the hills and gulches, meeting friends on busy village streets and again
-when the vote was counted, it was discovered that voters have memories.
-He had won the nomination of both the Democratic and Republican parties
-by almost two to one and under the law, was re-elected.
-
-Due to his priority standing and the retirement of older senators, the
-big fellow who walked 150 miles to get a job at Greenwater in order to
-save the fare to eat on, automatically shares with two men the power to
-control the legislation of the state.
-
-
-Hell, like gold, is where you find it--either in people or places. A
-lady of wealth and aristocratic background in route to Furnace Creek's
-luxury inn, stopped at Shoshone for gas. Worn out by the long drive over
-the corduroy road, she looked about her and then at Charlie in greasy
-overalls. "How on earth," she asked in genuine distress, "do you make a
-living in this God-forsaken-hole?"
-
-"It's hard ma'am," Charlie said gloomily. "But we get a few pennies from
-tourists, a little flour from mesquite beans, and stay alive one way or
-another, hoping to get out."
-
-The gracious lady opened her purse, thrust a five dollar bill into
-Charlie's hand and went her way.
-
-"It really made her happy," Charlie chuckled, "and I just didn't have
-the heart to give it back."
-
-What is it that man wants of these "God-forsaken-holes" on the desert? I
-sought the answer one day when Shoshone was having a holiday. George
-Ishmael, as native as an Indian, was chosen to barbecue the steer. A
-well-to-do tourist begged the job of digging the big pit. "Want to flex
-my muscles...." Another cut the wood. At a depth of four feet, water was
-struck and rose a foot over the bottom. "That's all right" George said.
-He tossed a dozen railroad ties into the hole, floated them into
-position, covered them with dirt, built the fire, lowered the carcass of
-the steer, covered it with green leaves and filled the hole. "An
-unforgettable feast," agreed the scores who had come from places 100
-miles away.
-
-Sitting beside me was a prominent Los Angeles attorney, eminent in the
-councils of the Democratic party in both state and nation. "Why," he
-asked, "will a man wear himself out in the city when he can really live
-in a little place like this?"
-
-"I thought of suicide at first," said Patsy, young matron with three
-healthy little stairsteps. "My husband said 'for heaven's sake, go out
-for a month and have a good time.' I went. Back in a week."
-
-A Vermont girl said she had come to escape a straightlaced code that
-constantly reminded her sin was everywhere. "Here I've got an even break
-with the devil...."
-
-All had found something that clicked with something inside of them which
-challenged something in civilization. Maybe it was expressed in the
-dogma of the Tennessee judge reared in the hill country of the
-Cumberland river. As he stepped from his plane on his annual vacation he
-was cornered by a reporter: "Judge, you're 94 years old. What do you
-think of this modern world?"
-
-"Best one I know about."
-
-"No criticism?"
-
-"None whatever. Maybe a few minor changes. Just now we are being
-educated out of common sense into ignorance; lawed out of patriotism;
-taxed into poverty; doctored to death and preached to hell...."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXII
- Lost Mines. The Breyfogle and Others
-
-
-The most famous lost mine in the Death Valley area is the Lost
-Breyfogle. There are many versions of the legend, but all agree that
-somewhere in the bowels of those rugged mountains is a colossal mass of
-gold, which Jacob Breyfogle found and lost.
-
-Jacob Breyfogle was a prospector who roamed the country around Pioche
-and Austin, Nevada, with infrequent excursions into the Death valley
-area. He traveled alone.
-
-Indian George, Hungry Bill, and Panamint Tom saw Breyfogle several times
-in the country around Stovepipe Wells, but they could never trace him to
-his claim. When followed, George said, Breyfogle would step off the
-trail and completely disappear. Once George told me about trailing him
-into the Funeral Range. He pointed to the bare mountain. "Him there, me
-see. Pretty quick--" He paused, puckered his lips. "Whoop--no see."
-
-Breyfogle left a crude map of his course. All lost mines must have a
-map. Conspicuous on this map are the Death Valley Buttes which are
-landmarks. Because he was seen so much here, it was assumed that his
-operations were in the low foothills. I have seen a rough copy of this
-map made from the original in possession of "Wildrose" Frank Kennedy's
-squaw, Lizzie.
-
-Breyfogle presumably coming from his mine, was accosted near Stovepipe
-Wells by Panamint Tom, Hungry Bill, and a young buck related to them,
-known as Johnny. Hungry Bill, from habit, begged for food. Breyfogle
-refused, explaining that he had but a morsel and several hard days'
-journey before him. On his burro he had a small sack of ore. When
-Breyfogle left, Hungry Bill said, "Him no good."
-
-Incited by Hungry Bill and possible loot, the Indians followed Breyfogle
-for three or four days across the range. Hungry Bill stopped en route,
-sent the younger Indians ahead. At Stump Springs east of Shoshone,
-Breyfogle was eating his dinner when the Indians sneaked out of the
-brush and scalped him, took what they wished of his possessions and left
-him for dead.
-
-Ash Meadows Charlie, a chief of the Indians in that area confided to
-Herman Jones that he had witnessed this assault. This happened on the
-Yundt Ranch, or as it is better known, the Manse Ranch. Yundt and Aaron
-Winters accidentally came upon Breyfogle unconscious on the ground. The
-scalp wound was fly-blown. They had a mule team and light wagon and
-hurried to San Bernardino with the wounded man. The ore, a chocolate
-quartz, was thrown into the wagon.
-
-"I saw some of it at Phi Lee's home, the Resting Spring Ranch," Shorty
-Harris said. "It was the richest ore I ever saw. Fifty pounds yielded
-nearly $6000."
-
-Breyfogle recovered, but thereafter was regarded as slightly "off." He
-returned to Austin, Nevada, and the story followed.
-
-Wildrose (Frank) Kennedy, an experienced mining man obtained a copy of
-Breyfogle's map and combed the country around the buttes in an effort to
-locate the mine. Kennedy had the aid of the Indians and was able to
-obtain, through his squaw Lizzie, such information as Indians had about
-the going and coming of the elusive Breyfogle.
-
-"Some believe the ore came from around Daylight Springs," Shorty said,
-"but old Lizzie's map had no mark to indicate Daylight Springs. But it
-does show the buttes and the only buttes in Death Valley are those above
-Stovepipe Wells.
-
-"Kennedy interested Henry E. Findley, an old time Colorado sheriff and
-Clarence Nyman, for years a prospector for Coleman and Smith (the
-Pacific Borax Company). They induced Mat Cullen, a rich Salt Lake mining
-man, to leave his business and come out. They made three trips into the
-valley, looking for that gold. It's there somewhere."
-
-At Austin, Breyfogle was outfitted several times to relocate the
-property, but when he reached the lower elevation of the valley, he
-seemed to suffer some aberration which would end the trip. His last
-grubstaker was not so considerate. He told Breyfogle that if he didn't
-find the mine promptly he'd make a sieve of him and was about to do it
-when a companion named Atchison intervened and saved his life. Shortly
-afterward, Breyfogle died from the old wound.
-
-Indian George, repeating a story told him by Panamint Tom, once told me
-that Tom had traced Breyfogle to the mine and after Breyfogle's death
-went back and secured some of the ore. Tom guarded his secret. He
-covered the opening with stone and leaving, walked backwards,
-obliterating his tracks with a greasewood brush. Later when Tom returned
-prepared to get the gold he found that a cloudburst had filled the
-canyon with boulders, gravel and silt, removing every landmark and
-Breyfogle's mine was lost again.
-
-"Some day maybe," George said, "big rain come and wash um out."
-
-Among the freighters of the early days was John Delameter who believed
-the Breyfogle was in the lower Panamint. Delameter operated a 20 mule
-team freighting service between Daggett and points in both Death Valley
-and Panamint Valley. He told me that he found Breyfogle down in the road
-about twenty-eight miles south of Ballarat with a wound in his leg.
-Breyfogle had come into the Panamint from Pioche, Nevada, and said he
-had been attacked by Indians, his horses stolen, while working on his
-claim which he located merely with a gesture toward the mountains.
-
-Subsequently Delameter made several vain efforts to locate the property,
-but like most lost mines it continues to be lost. But for years it was
-good bait for a grubstake and served both the convincing liar and the
-honest prospector.
-
-Nearly all old timers had a version of the Lost Breyfogle differing in
-details but all agreeing on the chocolate quartz and its richness.
-
-That Breyfogle really lost a valuable mine there can be little doubt,
-but since he is authentically traced from the northern end of Death
-Valley to the southern, and since the chocolate quartz is found in many
-places of that area, one who cares to look for it must cover a large
-territory.
-
-
-One mine that had never been found turned up in a way as amazing as most
-of them are lost.
-
-At Pioche, Nevada, an assayer was suspected of giving greater values to
-samples than they merited. It is known as the "come on."
-
-In order to trap the suspect, a prospector broke off a piece of old
-grindstone and ordered an assay. "If he gives that any value, it's proof
-enough he's a crook," he told his friends.
-
-Proof of guilt came with the assayer's report. The grindstone was
-incredibly rich in silver, it said.
-
-"We've got the goods on him now," the outraged prospector announced and
-it was decided to give the assayer a coat of tar and feathers. Wiser
-counsel was accepted, however, and it was decided to give him no more
-business. The fellow was faced with the alternative of starving or
-leaving the country, when he learned the reason of the boycott.
-Conscious of no error in his work, he made another and more careful
-assay. This time the samples yielded even higher values.
-
-It was agreed by all mining engineers of that day that rock like the
-samples never carried silver or gold. But the assayer knew his furnace
-hadn't lied and he couldn't believe grindstone makers were mixing silver
-with sand to make the stones. So he traced the grindstone to the quarry
-it came from. The result was the Silver King, one of the richest silver
-mines.
-
-
-THE LOST GUNSIGHT. The first lost mine in Death Valley, preceding that
-of Breyfogle's by four or five years, was the Gunsight.
-
-A survivor of the Jayhawkers or the Bennett-Arcane party of '49 (it is
-not clear to which he belonged) after escaping death in the valley, saw
-a deer or antelope and on the point of starvation, took his gun from its
-strap to shoot the animal. Seeing that the sight had been lost, he
-picked up a thin piece of shale and wedged it in the sight slot. Later
-he took the weapon to a gunsmith who removed the makeshift sight and
-upon examination found it to be almost pure silver. "Where I picked it
-up," said the owner, "there was a mountain of it."
-
-So begins the history of the Lost Gunsight and the story spread as
-stories will, until ten years later it reached the ears of Dr. Darwin
-French of Oroville, previously mentioned. The doctor became excited and
-in the spring of 1860 organized a party to locate the fabulous mountain
-of silver. Though he searched bravely he failed to find it. However, he
-brought back the first authentic account of what others with a flair for
-lost mines could expect in the way of weather, topography, Indians,
-edible game, vegetation, and water. On this trip, however, he discovered
-silver in the Coso Range.
-
-The following year, 1861, Dr. S. G. George who had been with the French
-party, decided he could find the Lost Gunsight and organized an
-expedition which crossed Panamint Valley, explored Wild Rose Canyon and
-reached the highest spot in Death Valley. But Dr. George's valiant
-efforts were no luckier than those of Dr. French.
-
-William Manly, author of "Death Valley in Forty-Nine" also tried but
-gained only another tragic experience and came nearer losing his life
-than he did with the Forty-Niners. Lost and without water and beaten to
-his knees, he was deserted by companions and escaped death by a miracle.
-How many have lost their lives trying to find the Gunsight no one knows.
-There are scores of sunken mounds on lonely mesas which an old timer
-will explain tersely: "He was looking for the Gunsight."
-
-Dr. French, after his failure, pursued another and even more intriguing
-lost mine. With a ready ear for tales of treasure, he heard of a tribe
-of Indians in the Death Valley area who were making bullets for their
-rifles out of gold. Accordingly he organized another party to find the
-gold.
-
-For eleven months Dr. French and his hand-picked comrades combed the
-country. The gold they found would have loaded no gun, but you may add
-the Lost Bullet to your list of lost mines. A member of this party was
-John Searles, for whom Searles' Lake is named.
-
-Because early prospectors searched for Breyfogle's lost mine throughout
-the region where he was found scalped, an interesting digression is not
-amiss.
-
-A few miles east of Shoshone, there is a Gunsight mine named, of course,
-by the discoverer in the hope that he'd found the one so long lost. It
-adjoins the Noonday and was a valuable property which belonged to Dr. L.
-D. Godshall of Victorville.
-
-The Noonday produced five million dollars and was operated until silver
-and lead took a price dive. A 12 mile railroad was built from Tecopa to
-haul the ore. The steel rails were later hauled away and the ties went
-into construction of desert homes, sheds, fences, and firewood. For
-years the two properties could have been bought for what-have-you.
-
-Then came Pearl Harbor and a young Kentuckian, Buford Davis, looking
-around for lead or any essential ores that Uncle Sam could use, dropped
-off at Shoshone. Charles Brown told him of the Gunsight and the Noonday.
-Davis inspected the properties, bought them for a relatively small down
-payment. He chose to begin operations on the Noonday and sent Ernie
-Huhn, an experienced miner to deepen the shaft.
-
-"Honest to God," Ernie told me, "I hadn't dug a foot when I turned up
-the prettiest vein of lead I'd ever seen."
-
-In the next six years the Noonday produced approximately a gross of nine
-million dollars and a net of probably six million dollars.
-
-These figures were given me by Don Kempfer, mining engineer and Shoshone
-resident, from estimates which he believed accurate.
-
-In 1947 with the rich rewards attained but as yet unenjoyed, Buford
-Davis made a hurried airplane trip to Salt Lake. Returning, he was only
-a few moments from a safe landing when the plane crashed and all aboard
-were killed.
-
-Today, (1950) the property belongs to Anaconda and is considered one of
-its most valuable mines.
-
-For those interested in lost mines I offer the list that follows. (The
-names are my own.)
-
-
-THE LOST CHINAMAN: When John Searles was struggling to make a living out
-of the ooze that is called Searles' Lake he had a mule skinner known as
-Salty Bill Parkinson--a fearless, hard-bitten individual who was the
-Paul Bunyan of Death Valley teamsters.
-
-While loading a wagon with borax, Salty Bill and Searles noticed a man
-staggering down from the Slate Range. They decided he was supercharged
-with desert likker and paid scant attention as he wobbled across the
-flat from the base of the range. A moment later he fell at their feet.
-They saw then that he was a Chinaman; that his tongue was swollen, his
-eyes red and sunken; that he clutched at his throat in a vain effort to
-speak. He could make no intelligible sound and lapsed into
-unconsciousness. They thought he had died and was left on their hands
-for burial.
-
-Salty Bill afterwards stated that he'd said to Searles: "'Fremont,
-Carson, or the Mormons old Bill Williams, for whom Bill Williams River,
-Bill Williams Mountain, and the town of Williams, Arizona, are named was
-at Resting Springs. He'll spoil in an hour. I'll go for a shovel while
-you choose a place to plant him.' I'd actually turned to go when Searles
-called me back." Searles had seen some sign of life and after removing a
-canvas bag strapped to his body they took him to a nearby shed, gave him
-a few spoonfuls of water and eventually he was restored to
-consciousness. He lay in a semi-stupor all the afternoon and was
-obsessed with the idea that he was going to die. His chief concern was
-to get to Mojave so that he could take a stage for a seaport and die in
-China or failing, arrange for the burial of his bones with those of his
-ancestors.
-
-He had been working at Old Harmony Borax Works, picking cotton-ball
-borax with other Chinese employed by the company, but tiring of abuse by
-a tough boss, he'd asked for his wages and walked out. Some Piutes told
-him of a short cut across the Panamint and this he took.
-
-En route he picked up a piece of rich float, stuck it into his bag.
-Farther on his journey he ran out of water and became hopelessly lost.
-He managed to reach the Slate Range, however, and from the summit saw
-Searles' Lake. Though in no condition to stand the rough trip to Mojave
-he begged to be sent there and yielding finally, Salty Bill, ready to
-leave with his load, threw the Chinaman on his wagon and started on his
-trip.
-
-Before reaching Mojave, the Chinaman's condition became worse and Salty
-Bill stopped the team in answer to his yells. The canvas sack lay
-alongside the stricken Chinaman and reaching for it, he brought out a
-lump of ore.
-
-"Never in my life," said Salty Bill, "have I seen ore like that."
-
-The Chinaman gave the ore to Salty, thanked him for his friendly
-treatment, told him that at a place in the Panamint where "the Big
-Timber pitches down into a steep canyon," he had found the float. Again
-he expressed his belief that he was going to die and exacted a promise
-from Salty that if death came before reaching Mojave, Salty would see
-that his remains be shipped to China, adding that any Chinaman in Mojave
-would provide money if needed. "You find the gold and keep it," he told
-Salty. "For me--no good. No can...."
-
-The journey was completed and Salty learned that the Chinaman did die at
-Mojave and that a countryman there saw that the remains were sent to the
-Flowery Kingdom.
-
-Salty Bill showed the ore to John Searles and Searles, usually
-indifferent to yarns of hidden ledges, was even more excited than Salty.
-For four or five years the two men made trips in search of the place
-where Big Timber pitches into a canyon. After these, other tireless
-prospectors sought the elusive ledge but the Lost Chinaman is still
-lost.
-
-
-THE LOST WAGON. Jim Hurley went to Parker, Arizona. Broke, he wanted
-quick money and was looking for placer. The storekeeper was a friend of
-Jim and had previously staked him.
-
-"I'm looking for a place to wash out some gold, but I've no money and no
-grub...."
-
-Jim was told of a butte on the Colorado Desert. "It's good placer ground
-and you ought to pan a few dollars without much trouble...." He provided
-Jim with bacon and beans and feed for his burros.
-
-Jim set out, found the butte, but no gold and decided to try a new
-location. On the way out he saw behind some bushes an old wagon that
-seemed to be half buried in blow sand. Thinking it would be a good
-feeding place for his burros, he went over. On the ground nearby he saw
-the bleached skeleton of a man. He threw aside a half-rotted tarpaulin
-in the wagon bed and discovered fifteen sacks of ore.
-
-It was obvious that the wagon had stood there for a long time. He
-examined the ore and saw that it was rich and of a peculiar color. He
-loaded the ore on his burros, returned to Parker and sent it to the
-smelter. He received in return, $1800. Losing no time, Jim returned to
-find the source of the ore and though for the next five years he looked
-at intervals for a quartz to match that found in the wagon, he could
-find nothing that even resembled it. Where it came from no prospector on
-the desert would even venture an opinion, but all declared they had seen
-no quartz of that peculiar color and all of them knew the country from
-Mexico to Nevada.
-
-But Jim added to his store an adventure and a memory and there is no
-treasure in this life richer than a memory.
-
-
-THE LOST GOLLER. This, I believe, is a lost mine that really exists and
-though the location has been prospected from the days of Dr. Darwin
-French in 1860, none have looked for it except the one who lost it in
-1850. He was John Goller, who came to California with the Jayhawkers.
-
-Goller was a blacksmith and wagon maker and was the first American to
-establish such a business in the pueblo of Los Angeles. After convincing
-the native Californian that his spoke-wheel wagon would function as
-effectively as the rounded slabs of wood, the only vehicles then used,
-he made a comfortable fortune and no one in the pueblo had a reputation
-for better character.
-
-Crossing the Panamint, Goller, though strong and husky, became separated
-from his companions and barely escaped with his life. Coming down a
-Panamint canyon he found some gold nuggets and filled his pockets with
-them. After crossing Panamint Valley and the Slate Range, he was found
-by Mexican vaqueros of Don Ignacio del Valle, owner of the great Camulos
-Rancho. After his recovery he proceeded to Los Angeles. In showing the
-nuggets to friends he said, "I could have filled a wagon with them."
-
-Goller, because of his means was soon able to take vacations which were
-devoted to looking for the lost location, and though he searched for
-years he found no more nuggets. Finally he found a canyon which he
-believed might have been the site, but no wagon load of nuggets.
-
-John Goller was a solid, clear-thinking man--not the type to chase the
-rainbow. Gold is known to exist in the canyon and some mines have been
-operated with varying success, but none have been outstanding. It is
-quite possible that cloudbursts for which the Panamint is noted washed
-Goller's gold away or buried it under an avalanche of rock, dirt, and
-gravel. Manly, with his forgivable inclination to error refers to Goller
-as Galler and discounts the story.
-
-"Some day," said Dr. Samuel Slocum, a man who made a fortune in gold,
-"somebody will find a fabulously rich mine in that canyon." It is
-located about 12 miles south of Ballarat and is called Goler canyon--one
-of the l's in Goller's name having been dropped.
-
-
-THE LOST SPOOK. A spiritualist with tuberculosis came to Ballarat and
-employed an Indian known as Joe Button as packer and guide. He told Joe
-to lead him to the driest spot in the country. Joe took him into the
-Cottonwood Range and left him. The invalid remained for several weeks,
-returned to Ballarat en route to San Bernardino, presumably for
-supplies. He was reticent as to his luck but he had several small sacks
-filled with ore and in his haste to catch the stage, dropped a piece of
-quartz from a loosely tied sack. It was almost solid gold and weighed
-eight ounces.
-
-While in San Bernardino he died. His relatives sold the remaining ore,
-which yielded $7200. They tried to find the claim but failed.
-
-Shorty Harris heard of it months afterward and looked up Joe Button.
-With his own burros, Joe's pack horses, and an Indian known as Ignacio,
-he set out. Cloudbursts had washed out the previous trails, filled
-gulches, levelled hills and so transformed the country that the Indian
-was unable to find any trace of his previous course; gave up the hunt
-and turned back.
-
-Shorty cached his supplies and with the meager description Joe could
-give him, searched for weeks. At last he came upon a camp where he
-discovered a collection of pamphlets dealing with the occult, but no
-trails. It was apparent that these had been destroyed by floods and for
-two months Shorty searched for the diggings. A brush pile aroused his
-suspicions and removing it, he found the hole. "The ore had Uncle Sam's
-eagle all over it," Shorty said, "and the world was mine."
-
-"I returned to my camp, started spending the money. A million dollars
-for a rest home for old worn-out prospectors. Fifty thousand a year for
-all my pals...."
-
-Shorty ate his supper, spread his blankets and went to sleep with his
-dream. In the middle of the night he awoke. Something was running over
-his blanket. He raised up and in the moonlight recognized the only thing
-on earth he was afraid of--the "hydrophobic skunk."
-
-"I started packing right now," Shorty said, "and walked out. There's a
-mine there and whoever wants it can have it. I don't."
-
-
-THE LOST CANYON has some evidence of reality. Jack Allen, a miner and
-prospector of almost superhuman endurance, got drunk at Skidoo and
-filled with remorse and shame the morning after, decided to leave and
-seek a job at the Keane Wonder Mine, about 40 miles northeast across
-Death Valley. To save distance, Allen took a short cut over Sheep
-Mountain and in going through a canyon he picked up a piece of quartz
-and seeing a fleck of color, he broke it. Excited by its apparent
-richness he filled his pockets, noted his bearings and went on his way.
-When he reached the Keane Wonder he took the ore to Joe McGilliland, the
-company's assayer, who became more excited than the finder. "I'll put it
-in the button for half," Joe said.
-
-Allen agreed. The assay showed values as high as $20,000 to the ton. He
-closed his office and ran out to find Jack working in the mine. "Chuck
-this job," he cried. "Go back to that claim quick as you can. Get your
-monuments up and record the notices."
-
-Jack Allen bought a burro, loaded his supplies and went back only to
-discover that a cloudburst had destroyed all his landmarks.
-
-Both Shorty Harris and "Bob" Eichbaum, who established Stove Pipe Wells
-resort, considered this the best chance among all the legends of lost
-mines. It is wild, rough, and largely virgin country and because of that
-the hardiest prospectors always passed it by.
-
-
-THE LOST JOHNNIE. An Indian known as Johnnie used to come into York's
-store at Ballarat about once a month with gold in bullion form. He would
-sell it to York or trade it for supplies. Frequently he had credits
-amounting to a thousand or more dollars.
-
-Other Indians soon learned of Johnnie's mine and would trail him when he
-left town, but none were able to outsmart him. That it was near Arastre
-Spring was generally believed. Upon one occasion Johnnie was seen
-leaving the old arastre and disappear in the canyon. Immediately
-evidence that the arastre had been used within the hour was discovered.
-For years no prospector worked in that region without keeping his eyes
-peeled for Johnnie's bonanza.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXIII
- Panamint City. Genial Crooks
-
-
-The first search for gold in Death Valley country was in Panamint
-Valley.
-
-From the summit of the Slate Range on the road from Trona, one comes
-suddenly upon an enchanting and unforgettable view of the Panamint. If
-you are one who thrills at breath taking scenery you will not speak. You
-will stand and look and think. Your thoughts will be of dead worlds; of
-the silence spread like a shroud over all that you see.
-
-Below, a yellow road twists in and out of hidden dry washes, around
-jutting hills to end in the green mesquite that hides the ghost town of
-Ballarat. There the Panamint lifts two miles--its gored sides a riot of
-pastelled colors.
-
-If you have coached yourself with trivia of history it will require
-imagination's aid to accept the fact that from this wasteland came
-fortunes and industries of world-wide fame. From New York to San
-Francisco on envied social thrones, sit the children and grandchildren
-of those who with pick and shovel, here dug the family fortune in ragged
-overalls.
-
-Only recently a descendant of one of these, living in a city far
-removed, informed me her mansion was for sale, "because the neighborhood
-is being ruined...." A sheep herder newly rich on war profits, was
-moving in.
-
-Eleven miles north of Ballarat, Surprise Canyon, which leads to Panamint
-City, opens on a broad, alluvial fan that tilts sharply to the valley
-floor.
-
-In April, 1873, W. T. Henderson, whose first trip into Death Valley
-country was made to find the Lost Gunsight, came again with R. B.
-Stewart and R. C. Jacobs. In Surprise Canyon they discovered silver
-which ran as high as $4000 a ton and filed more than 80 location
-notices.
-
-Henderson was an adventurer of uncertain character who had roamed
-western deserts like a nomad. During the Indian war that threatened
-extermination of the white settlers in Inyo county, Thieving Charlie, a
-Piute, was induced by outnumbered whites to approach his warring
-tribesmen under a flag of truce and succeeded in getting eleven of them
-to return with him to Camp Independence for a peace talk. Henderson,
-with two companions waylaid and murdered them.
-
-He had been a member of the posse organized by Harry Love to shoot on
-sight California's most famous bandit--Joaquin Murietta and boasted that
-he fired the bullet which killed the glamorous Joaquin. It was he who
-cut off and pickled the bandit's head as evidence to get the reward. At
-the same time he pickled the hand of Three Fingered Jack Garcia,
-Joaquin's chief lieutenant, and the bloodiest monster the West ever saw.
-Garcia had an odd habit of cutting off the ears of his victims and
-stringing them for a saddle ornament. The slaying of Joaquin was not a
-pretty adventure and as the details came out, Henderson renounced the
-honor.
-
-The grewsome vouchers which obtained the reward became the attraction
-for the morbid on a San Francisco street and there above the din of
-traffic one heard a spieler chant the thrills it gave "for only two
-measly bits...." The exhibit was destroyed in the San Francisco fire and
-earthquake of 1906.
-
-In his book, "On the Old West Coast" Major Horace Bell states that
-Henderson confided to him there was never a day nor night that Joaquin
-Murietta did not come to him and though headless, would demand the
-return of his head; that Henderson was never frightened by the
-apparition, which would vanish after Henderson explained why he couldn't
-return the head and his excuse for cutting it off.
-
-Bell quotes Henderson: "I would never have cut Joaquin's head off except
-for the excitement of the chase and the orders of Harry Love."
-
-To give credence to the ghost story he says of Henderson, "He was for
-several years my neighbor and a more genial and generous fellow I never
-met...." Major Bell, it is known, was not always strictly factual.
-
-Following the Surprise Canyon strike, Panamint City was quickly built
-and quickly filled with thugs who lived by their guns; gamblers and
-painted girls who lived by their wits.
-
-An engaging sidewalk promoter known as E. P. Raines, who possessed a
-good front and gall in abundance, but no money, assured the owners of
-the Panamint claims that he could raise the capital necessary for
-development. He set out for the city, registered at the leading hotel,
-attached the title of Colonel to his name; exchanged a worthless check
-for $25 and made for the barroom. It was no mere coincidence that Mr.
-Raines before ordering his drink, parked himself alongside a group of
-the town's richest citizens and began to toy with an incredibly rich
-sample of ore. It was natural that members of the group should notice
-it. Particularly the multimillionaire, Senator John P. Jones, Nevada
-silver king.
-
-Soon the charming crook was the life of the party. His $25 spent, he
-actually borrowed $1000 from Jones. Having drunk his guests under the
-table, Mr. Raines went forth for further celebration and landed broke in
-the hoosegow. Hearing of his misadventure, his new friends promptly went
-to his rescue. "... Outrage ... biggest night this town ever had...."
-
-To make amends for the city's inhospitable blunder, Raines was taken to
-his hostelry, given a champagne bracer and made the honor guest at
-breakfast. "Where's the Senator?" he asked. Informed that Senator Jones
-had taken a train for Washington, Raines quickened "Why, he was
-expecting me to go with him...." He jumped up, fumbled through his
-pockets in a pretended search for money. "Heavens--my purse is gone!"
-Instantly a half dozen hands reached for the hip and Mr. Raines was on
-his way.
-
-It required but a few moments to get $15,000 from the Senator and his
-partner, Senator William R. Stewart, for the Panamint claims. He also
-sold Jones the idea of a railroad from a seaport at Los Angeles to his
-mines and this was partially built. The project ended in Cajon Pass. The
-scars of the tunnel started may still be seen.
-
-Jones and Stewart organized the Panamint Mining Company with a capital
-of $2,000,000. Other claims were bought but immediate development was
-delayed by difficulties in obtaining title because many of the owners
-were outlaws, difficult to find. A few were located in the penitentiary
-and there received payment. For some of the claims the promoters paid
-$350,000.
-
-On June 29, 1875, the first mill began to crush ore from the Jacobs
-Wonder mine. Panamint City became one of the toughest and most colorful
-camps of the West. It was strung for a mile up and down narrow Surprise
-Canyon. It was believed that here was a mass of silver greater than that
-on the Comstock and shares were active on the markets.
-
-The most pretentious saloon in the town was that of Dave Nagle, who
-later as the bodyguard of U. S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen J. Field,
-killed Judge David Terry, distinguished jurist, but stormy petrel of
-California Vigilante days. Judge Terry had represented, then married his
-client, the Rose of Sharon--Sarah Althea Hill--in her suit to determine
-whether she was wife or mistress of Senator Sharon, Comstock
-millionaire. Feuding had resulted with Field, the trial judge. Meeting
-in a railroad dining room, Judge Terry slapped Justice Field's face and
-Nagle promptly killed Terry.
-
-Poker at Panamint City was never a piker's game. Bets of $10,000 on two
-pair attracted but little comment. Gunning was regarded as a minor
-nuisance, but funerals worried the town's butcher. He had the only wagon
-that had survived the steep canyon road into the camp. "I bought it," he
-complained, "to haul fresh meat, but since there's no hearse I never
-know when I'll have to unload a quarter of beef to haul a stiff to
-Sourdough Canyon."
-
-Panamint City attained an estimated population of 3,000. Harris and
-Rhine, merchants, having the only safe in the town permitted patrons to
-deposit money for safe keeping and often had large sums. On one occasion
-they had the $10,000 payroll of the Hemlock mine.
-
-A clerk arriving early at the store, suddenly faced two gentlemen who
-directed him to open the safe and pass out the money. "Just as well
-count it as you fork it over," one ordered. The clerk had counted $4000
-when he was told to stop. "This'll do for the present," the spokesman
-said. "We'll come back and get the rest."
-
-"Yeh," added his partner. "Too damned many thugs in this town."
-
-They sallied forth on a spending spree. The down-and-out along the
-mile-long street received generous portions of the loot and a widow
-whose husband had been killed in a mine explosion, received $500.
-
-These bandits, Small and McDonald, thereafter became incredibly popular
-and the legend follows that what they stole from those who had, they
-shared with those who hadn't.
-
-Wells-Fargo and Company offered a reward of $1000 for their capture, but
-their arrest was never accomplished. Invariably they were apprised of
-the approach of pursuers and simply retired to some convenient canyon.
-The bandits further endeared themselves to the citizenry when Stewart
-and Jones arranged for the importation of a hundred Chinese laborers.
-
-This aroused the ire of the white miners and a meeting was called to
-protest. "This is a white man's town," was the cry of labor.
-
-Small and McDonald agreed. "Just leave it to us," they told the leaders.
-"No use in a lotta fellows getting hurt." They stationed themselves at
-the mouth of the canyon and when the coolies arrived, a sudden volley
-from the bandits' six-guns brought the caravan to a halt. The frightened
-Chinamen leaped from the hacks and fled in panic across the desert and
-Panamint remained a white man's town.
-
-Engaged at work around their hideout, Hungry Bill stopped to beg for
-food. They told the Indian to wait until they finished their task. His
-sullen impatience angered Small who booted him down the trail. Hungry
-Bill left cursing and told a prospector whom he met that he would return
-shortly with his tribesmen and assassinate the entire population.
-
-Panamint City was warned but Small and McDonald declared that since they
-had started the trouble, they alone should end it. Accordingly, they set
-out for Hungry Bill's ranch to stop the attack before it started. But
-near Hungry Bill's stone corral they were ambushed by the Indians. The
-bandits shot their way into the corral and barricading themselves,
-killed and wounded about half of the renegades, after which the
-remainder fled.
-
-Panamint City harbored a hoard of unsung assassins who merely lay in
-wait, shot the unwary victim down, took his poke, rolled the body into a
-ravine, went up town to spend the money.
-
-One killer who came decided to dominate the field and with that in view
-he set forth to establish himself quickly as a gunman not to be trifled
-with. He chose to display his prowess upon an inoffensive, quiet faro
-dealer known as Jimmy Bruce, who, it was easy to see, "was just a
-chicken-livered punk." The publicity of a well-done murder in such a
-setting would give prestige.
-
-Armed with two guns, the bully contrived to start an argument with
-Bruce. The indoor white of the gambler seemed to grow whiter as the rage
-of his towering tormenter reached the climax. The players moved out of
-range. The bartenders ducked under the counter. Patrons helpless to
-intervene, fled from the kill.
-
-A shot rang out. Cautiously, the bartenders lifted their heads. On the
-floor lay the bad man. Mr. Bruce was calmly lighting a cigar.
-
-There was consternation among the killers. They swore vengeance. After
-five of them had fallen before Bruce's gun, he was let alone.
-
-The silent faro dealer, it was learned too late, was surpassingly quick
-on the trigger.
-
-A spot somewhat distant from the regular cemetery was chosen for the
-burial place and it became known as Jim Bruce's private graveyard.
-
-Remi Nadeau, a French Canadian, was the first to haul freight into
-Panamint City. Nadeau was a genius of transportation. There was no
-country too rough, too remote, too wild for him. He came to Los Angeles
-in 1861 from Utah and teamed as far east as Montana.
-
-The Cerro Gordo mine, on the eastern side of Owens Lake in Inyo County
-began to ship ore in 1869 and Nadeau obtained a contract to haul the ore
-to Wilmington where it was shipped by boat to San Francisco. He soon had
-to increase his equipment to 32 teams, using more than 500 animals. For
-his return trip he bought such commodities as he could peddle or leave
-for sale at stations he built along the route.
-
-In 1872, the contract having expired, Judson and Belshaw, owners of the
-mine, received a lower bid and Nadeau was left with 500 horses on his
-hands and heavily in debt. He wanted to dispose of his outfit for the
-benefit of his creditors but they had confidence in him and persuaded
-him to "carry on." Borax discovered in Nevada saved him. Meanwhile the
-lower bidder on the Cerro Gordo job proved unsatisfactory and Judson and
-Belshaw asked Nadeau to take the old job back. But now Nadeau informed
-them they would have to buy a half interest in his outfit and advance
-$150,000 to construct relay stations at Mud Springs, Mojave, Lang's
-Springs, Red Rock, Little Lake, Cartago, and other points. They gladly
-agreed.
-
-Shortly after Nadeau began hauling across the desert, he picked up a man
-suffering from gunshot and crazed from thirst. Taking the victim to his
-nearest station, he left instructions that he be cared for.
-
-Sometime afterward, one of Nadeau's competitors whose trains had been
-held up several times by outlaws, wondered why none of Nadeau's teams or
-stations had been molested. At the time, Nadeau himself didn't know that
-the fellow whom he'd picked up on the desert was Tiburcio Vasquez, the
-bandit terror.
-
-Vasquez naively condoned his banditry. It disgusted him at dances he
-said, to see the senoritas of his race favor the interloping Americans.
-He had a singular power over women. When Sheriff William Rowland
-effected his capture, women of Los Angeles filled his cell with flowers.
-He was hanged at San Jose.
-
-Nadeau was now hauling ore from the Minnietta and the Modoc mines in the
-Argus Range on the west side of Panamint Valley. The Modoc was the
-property of George Hearst, the father of the publisher, William Randolph
-Hearst. These mines were directly across the valley from Panamint City
-and because of Nadeau's record for building roads in places no other
-dared to go, Jones and Stewart engaged him to haul out of Surprise
-Canyon, which was barely wide enough in places for a burro with a pack.
-
-On a hill, locally known as "Seventeen"--that being the per cent of
-grade, located on the old highway between Ballarat and Trona, one may
-see the dim outline of a road pitching down precipitously to the valley
-floor. This road was built by Nadeau and one marvels that anything short
-of steam power could move a load from bottom to top.
-
-Acquiring a fortune, Nadeau built the first three-story building in Los
-Angeles and the Nadeau Hotel, long the city's finest, retained favor
-among many wealthy pioneer patrons long after the more glamorous Angelus
-and Alexandria were built in the early 1900's.
-
-The first ore from the Panamint mines was shipped to England and because
-of its richness showed a profit, but difficulties arose in recovery
-processes which they did not know how to overcome. The mines would have
-paid fabulously under present day processes.
-
-Finis was written to the story of Panamint after two hectic years and in
-1877 Jones and Stewart had lost $2,000,000 and quit. It would be more
-factual to state that since they had received from the public $2,000,000
-to put into it, who lost what is a guess.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXIV
- Indian George. Legend of the Panamint
-
-
-The previous chapter records accepted history of the silver discovery at
-Panamint City. Indian George Hansen had another version which he told me
-at his ranch 11 miles north of Ballarat. It fits the period and the
-people then in the country.
-
-George, when a youngster lived in the Coso Range. East of the Coso there
-was no white man for 100 miles and renegades fleeing from their crimes
-and deserters from the Union army sought hideouts in the Panamint. Thus
-George was employed as a guide by three outlaws to lead them to safe
-refuge.
-
-George, a Shoshone, had both friends and relatives among the Shoshones
-and the Piutes and took the bandits into Surprise Canyon where a camp
-for the night was chosen. While staking out his pack animals, George
-discovered a ledge of silver ore. Breaking off a chunk, he stuck it into
-his pocket, saying nothing about it until they were out of the locality.
-Then he showed the specimen and to promote a deal, gave one of them a
-sample. They wanted to see the ledge but George refused to disclose it.
-Then George said the three fellows stepped aside and after talking in
-whispers told him they didn't like the country and returning with him to
-the Coso Range, went on their way. Two or three months later they were
-back to bargain.
-
-George had traded with the white man before. They had always given him a
-few dollars and a rosy promise. "Now me pretty foxy. So I say, 'no want
-money. Maybe lose.' Him say, 'what hell you want?'
-
-"'Heap good job all time I live.'
-
-"'Okay,' him say. 'We give you job.'
-
-"I show claim." George paused, a look of smoldering hate in his dark
-eyes, then added: "I get job. Two weeks. Him say, 'you fired.' I get
-$50."
-
-All Indians and many of the old timers believe that the ledge George
-found was that for which Jones and Stewart paid $2,000,000.
-
-George made another deal worthy of mention. The town of Trona on
-Searles' Lake needed the water owned by George's relative, Mabel, who
-herded 500 goats and sold them to butchers at Skidoo, Goldfield, and
-Rhyolite where they became veal steak or lamb chops. Trona offered $30 a
-month for the use of the water. Mabel consulted George as head man of
-the Shoshones and advised Trona that the sum would not be considered. It
-must pay $27.50 or do without. A superstition regarding numbers
-accounted for the price George fixed for the water.
-
-My acquaintance with Indian George began on my first trip to Ballarat
-with Shorty Harris and was the result of a stomach ache Shorty had. I
-suggested a trip to a doctor at Trona instead.
-
-"No, sir. I'll see old Indian George. If these doctors knew as much as
-these old Indians, there wouldn't be any cemeteries."
-
-I asked what evidence he had of George's skill.
-
-"Plenty. You know Sparkplug (Michael Sherlock)? He was in a bad way.
-Fred Gray put a mattress in his pickup, laid Sparkplug on it and hauled
-him over to Trona. Nurses took him inside. Doctor looked him over and
-came out and asked Fred if he knew where old Sparkplug wanted to be
-buried. 'Why, Ballarat, I reckon,' Fred said.
-
-"Well, you take him back quick. He'll be dead when you get there. Better
-hurry. He'll spoil on you this hot weather.'
-
-"Fred raced back, taking curves on Seventeen with two wheels hanging
-over the gorge, but he made it; stopped in front of Sparkplug's shack,
-jumped out and called to me to bring a pick and shovel. Then he ran over
-to Bob Warnack's shack for help to make a coffin. Indian George happened
-to ride by the pickup and saw Sparkplug's feet sticking out. He crawled
-off his cayuse, took a look, lifted Sparkplug's eyelids and leaving his
-horse ground-hitched, he went out in the brush and yanked up some roots
-here and there. Then he went up to Hungry Hattie's and came back with a
-handful of chicken guts and rabbit pellets; brewed 'em in a tomato can
-and when he got through he funneled it down Sparkplug's throat and in no
-time at all Sparkplug was up and packing his flivver to go prospecting.
-If you don't believe me, there's Sparkplug right over there tinkering
-with his car."
-
-George's age has been a favorite topic of writers of Death Valley
-history for the last 30 years.
-
-I stopped for water once at the little stream flumed out of Hall's
-Canyon to supply the ranch. He was irrigating his alfalfa in a
-temperature of 122 degrees. I had brought him three or four dozen
-oranges and suggested that Mabel would like some of the fruit.
-
-"Heavy work for a man of your age," I said.
-
-He bit into an orange, eating both peeling and pulp. "Me papoose. Me
-only 107 years old."
-
-There were less than a dozen oranges left when I began to cast about for
-a tactful way to preserve a few for Mabel. Seeing her chopping wood in
-the scorching sun I said, "I'll bet Mabel would like an orange just now.
-Shall I call her?"
-
-"No--no--" George grunted. "Oranges heap bad for squaw," and speeding up
-his eating, he removed the last menace to Mabel.
-
-Once George told me of watching the sufferings of the Jayhawkers and
-Bennett-Arcane party:
-
-"Me little boy, first time I see white man. Whiskers make me think him
-devil. I run. I see some of Bennett party die. When all dead, we go
-down. First time Indians ever see flour. Squaws think it what make white
-men white and put it on their faces."
-
-I asked George why he didn't go down and aid the whites. "Why?" he
-asked, "to get shot?"
-
-"How many Shoshones are left?" I asked George.
-
-He counted them on his fingers. "Nineteen. Soon, none."
-
-George died in 1944 and it is safe I believe, to say that for 110 years
-he had baffled every agency of death on America's worst desert. Because
-his ranch was a landmark and the water that came from the mountains was
-good, it was a natural stopping place and he was known to thousands.
-Following a curious custom of Indians George adopted the Swedish name
-Hansen because it had euphony he liked.
-
-
-The Panamint is the locale of the legend of Swamper Ike, first told I
-believe by Old Ranger over a nation-wide hookup, while he was M.C. of
-the program "Death Valley Days."
-
-A daring, but foolhardy youngster, with wife and baby, undertook to
-cross the range. Unacquainted with the country and scornful of its
-perils, he reached the crest, but there ran out of water. He left his
-wife and the baby on the trail, comfortably protected in the shade of a
-bluff and started down the Death Valley side of the range to find water.
-
-After a thorough search of the canyons about, he climbed to a higher
-level, scanned the floor of the valley. Seeing a lake that reflected the
-peaks of the Funeral Range he made for it under a withering sun. He
-learned too late that it was a mirage and exhausted, started back only
-to be beaten down and die.
-
-After waiting through a night of terror, the young mother prepared a
-comfortable place for her baby and went in search of her husband. She
-too saw the blue lake and made for it, saw it vanish as he had. Then she
-discovered his tracks and undertook to follow him, but she also was
-beaten down and fell dead within a few feet of his lifeless body.
-
-A band of wandering Cocopah Indians crossing the range, found the baby.
-They took the child to their own habitation on the Colorado river and
-named him Joe Salsuepuedes, which is Indian for "Get-out-if-you-can."
-
-Joe grew up as Indian, burned dark by the desert sun. But he had an idea
-he wasn't Indian. Learning that he was a foundling, picked up in the
-Panamint, he set out for Death Valley, possessed of a singular faith
-that somehow he would discover evidence that he was a white man.
-
-He obtained a job as swamper for the Borax Company. When he gave his
-name the boss said, "Too many Joe's working here. We'll call you Ike."
-
-Early Indians, as you may see in Dead Man's Canyon, the Valley of Fire,
-and numerous canyons in the western desert had a habit of scratching
-stories of adventure or signs to inform other Indians of unusual
-features of a locality on the canyon walls--often coloring the tracing
-with dyes from herbs or roots. Knowing this, Swamper Ike was always
-alert for these hieroglyphs on any boulder he passed or in any canyon he
-entered.
-
-One day Swamper Ike went out to look for a piece of onyx that he could
-polish and give to the girl he loved. While seeking the onyx he noticed
-a flat slab of travertine and on it the picture story of
-"Get-out-if-you-can."
-
-Swamper Ike had justified his faith.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXV
- Ballarat. Ghost Town
-
-
-In the early 1890's gold discovered on the west side of the Panamint in
-Pleasant Canyon caused the rush responsible for Ballarat. For more than
-20 years the district had been combed by prospectors holed in at Post
-Office Spring, about one half mile south of the site upon which Ballarat
-was subsequently built. Here the government had a small army post and
-here soldiers, outlaws, and adventurers received their mail from a box
-wired in the crotch of a mesquite tree.
-
-The Radcliffe, which was the discovery mine was a profitable producer.
-The timbers and machinery were hauled from Randsburg over the Slate
-Range and across Panamint Valley, to the mouth of the canyon. There,
-under the direction of Oscar Rogers, it was packed on burros and taken
-up the steep grade to the mine site.
-
-Copperstain Joe, a noted half-breed Indian made the next strike. With a
-specimen, he went to Mojave where he showed it to Jim Cooper. For five
-dollars and a gallon of whiskey he led Cooper to the site.
-
-But his deal with Cooper interested me less than the cunning of his
-burro, Slick. Copperstain strode into a hardware store and asked for a
-lock. "It's for Slick's chain. Picks a lock soon as I turn my back--dam'
-him."
-
-The merchant showed him a lock of intricate mechanism, "He won't pick
-this. Costs more, but worth it."
-
-"I don't care what it costs," Copperstain said and bought it. Later he
-looped the chain around the burro's feet, fastened the links with the
-lock and tethered Slick to a stake. "That'll hold you--" he said
-defiantly.
-
-The next morning he was back in the store, belligerent. "Helluva lock
-you sold me. Slick picked it in no time."
-
-"Impossible."
-
-"The burro's gone, ain't he?" Copperstain bristled, and reaching into
-his pocket, produced the lock. "See that nail in the keyhole? I didn't
-put it there. Slick just found a nail--that's all."
-
-The future of Pleasant Canyon seemed assured and it was decided to move
-the two saloons and grocery to the flats below, where a town would have
-room to grow.
-
-When citizens met to choose a name, George Riggins, a young Australian
-suggested the new town be given a name identified with gold the world
-over. Ballarat in his native country met the requirement and its name
-was adopted.
-
-Shorty Harris discovered The Star, The Elephant, the World Beater, The
-St. Patrick. In Tuba, Jail, Surprise, and Goler Canyons more strikes
-were made. It is curious that none were made in Happy Canyon.
-
-The production figures of early mines are rarely dependable and the
-yield is often confused with that obtained by swindlers from outright
-sale or stock promotion. My friend, Oscar Rogers, superintendent, told
-me the Radcliffe produced a net profit of approximately $500,000. Less
-authentic are figures attributed to the following:
-
-The O. B. Joyful in Tuba Canyon, $250,000; The Gem in Jail Canyon,
-$150,000; and Shorty Harris' World Beater, $200,000.
-
-Among the noted of Ballarat residents was John LeMoyne, a Frenchman. He
-discovered a silver mine in Death Valley but the best service he gave
-the desert was a recipe for coffee. He walked into Ballarat one day and
-had lunch. The lady who owned the cafe asked if everything suited. "All
-but the coffee," John said.
-
-"How do you make your coffee?" she asked.
-
-"Madame, there's no trick about making good coffee. Plenty coffee. Dam'
-little water."
-
-From one end of Death Valley country to the other, coffee is judged by
-John LeMoyne's standard. You may not always get it, but mention it and
-the waiter will know.
-
-For years LeMoyne held his silver claim in spite of offers far beyond
-its value, which he believed was $5,000,000. But once when the urge to
-return to his beloved France was strong and Goldfield, Tonopah, and
-Rhyolite excited the nation, he weakened and decided to accept an offer
-said to have been $200,000. "But," he told the buyers, "it must be
-cash."
-
-After a huddle, John's demand was met and a check offered. John brushed
-it aside. "But this eez not cash," he complained. No, he wouldn't go to
-town to get the cash. He had work to do. "You get eet."
-
-Disgusted, the buyers left and John LeMoyne continued to wear his rags,
-eat his beans, and dream of La Belle France.
-
-A young Shoshone Indian came into Keeler excited as an Indian ever gets,
-looked up Shorty Harris and said: "Short Man, your friend go out. No
-come back. Maybe him sick." It was midsummer, but LeMoyne had undertaken
-to reach his claim.
-
-In the bottom of the valley, Shorty identified LeMoyne's tracks by a
-peculiar hobnail which LeMoyne used in his shoes. He followed the tracks
-to Cottonwood Spring and there found an old French pistol which he knew
-had belonged to LeMoyne. Convinced he was on the right trail, he went on
-and after a mile or two met Death Valley Scotty.
-
-"I know why you're here," Scotty said. "I've just found his body."
-
-LeMoyne was partially eaten by coyotes and nearby were his dead burros.
-Though tethered to the mesquite with slender cotton cords which they
-could easily have broken, the patient asses had elected to die beside
-him.
-
-And there ended the dream of the glory trail back to the France he
-loved. Those who believe in the jinx will find something to sustain
-their faith in the record of John LeMoyne's mine.
-
-After LeMoyne's death, Wild Bill Corcoran who had made and lost fortunes
-in the lush days of Rhyolite, set out from Owens Valley to relocate it.
-Never a ranting prohibitionist, Bill believed that the best remedy for
-snake bite was likker in the blood when the snake bit. When he reached
-Darwin he was not feeling well and stopped long enough for a nip with
-friends and to get a youngster to drive his car and help at the camp.
-
-It was midsummer, with record temperature but Bill wanted John LeMoyne's
-mine. Becoming worse in the valley he stopped in Emigrant Canyon and
-sent the boy back for a doctor. Bill crawled into an old shack under the
-hill. When the boy and the doctor came, they found Bill Corcoran on the
-floor, his hand stretched toward a bottle of bootleg liquor. His soul
-had gone over the hill.
-
-One after another, five others followed Bill to file on LeMoyne's claim
-and each in turn joined Bill over the hill.
-
-LeMoyne's Christian name was Jean. His surname has been spelled both
-Lemoigne and Lemoine. The claim from which Indians had formerly taken
-lead was filed upon by LeMoyne in 1882.
-
-Joe Gorsline, a graduate of Columbia, with a background of wealth, came
-to Ballarat during the rush, looked over the town. "Wouldn't spend
-another day in this dump for all the gold in the mint," he announced. He
-had a few drinks, heard a few yarns, eyed a few girls in the honkies. It
-was all new to Joe, but something about the informalities of life
-appealed to him and in a little while he was renamed Joe Goose.
-
-Then the town's constable shot its Judge and Ballarat chose him to
-succeed the deceased. Not liking the laws of the code, he made a batch
-of his own, which were never questioned. While watching the flow of time
-and liquor, he "went desert" and put aside the things that might have
-been for the more alluring things-as-they-are.
-
-When Ballarat became a ghost town, Joe Gorsline took his body to the
-city, but his soul remained and years afterward when he died, a hearse
-came down the mountain and in it was Joe Gorsline, home again. He is
-buried in a little cemetery out on the flat and in the spring the golden
-sun cups, grow all around and you walk on them to get to his grave.
-
-Adding a cultural touch to Ballarat was an English nobleman who "going
-desert" tossed his title out of the window, donned overalls and brogans
-and promptly earned the approving verdict, "An all right guy." Soon he
-was drinking with the toper and dancing with the demimonde. Like others,
-he did his own cooking and washing. He lived in a 'dobe cabin which,
-because it was on the main street, had its window shades always down.
-
-But there was one little custom of his British routine he never
-abandoned and this was discovered by accident. He stopped in John
-Lambert's saloon one evening before going to his cabin for dinner. He
-left his watch on the bar and had gone before Lambert noticed it. An
-hour later Lambert, having an opportunity to get away, took the watch to
-the cabin. John thus reported what he saw: "He was eating his dinner and
-bigod--he had on a white shirt, wing collar, and swallow tail."
-
-Ballarat chuckled but no one suggested a lynching party. They knew how
-deep grow the roots in the soil one loves. "Maybe," said Lambert,
-"that's why John Bull always wins the last battle. They give up
-nothing."
-
-A familiar figure throughout Death Valley country was
-Johnny-Behind-the-Gun--small and wiry and as much a part of the land as
-the lizard. His moniker was acquired from his habit of settling disputes
-without cluttering up the courts. Johnny, whose name was Cyte, accounted
-for three or four sizable fortunes. Having sold a claim for $35,000 he
-once bought a saloon and gambling hall in Rhyolite, forswearing
-prospecting forever.
-
-Johnny advertised his whiskey by drinking it and the squareness of his
-game, by sitting in it. One night the gentleman opposite was overwhelmed
-with luck and his pockets bulged with $30,000 of Johnny's money. Having
-lost his last chip, Johnny said, "I'll put up dis place. Ve play vun
-hand and quit."
-
-Johnny lost. He got up, reached for his hat. "Vell, my lucky friend,
-I'll take a last drink mit you." He tossed the liquor, lighted a cigar.
-"Goodnight, chentlemen," he said. "I go find me anudder mine."
-
-Johnny had several claims near the Keane Wonder in the Funeral
-Mountains, held by a sufferance not uncommon among old timers, who
-respected a notice regardless of legal formalities.
-
-Senator William M. Stewart, Nevada mining magnate, had employed Kyle
-Smith, a young mining engineer to go into the locality and see what he
-could find. Smith, a capable and likable chap, in working over the
-districts, located several claims open for filing by reason of Johnny's
-failure to do his assessment work.
-
-It is not altogether clear what happened between Johnny and Smith, but
-Smith's body was found after it had lain in the desert sun all day.
-There being no witnesses the only fact produced by sheriff and coroner
-was that Smith was dead. Johnny went free. Other escapades with
-Johnny-Behind-the-Gun occurred with such frequency that he was finally
-removed from the desert for awhile as the guest of the state.
-
-In a deal with Tom Kelly, Johnny was hesitant about signing some papers
-according to an understanding. His trigger quickness was explained to
-Kelly who was not impressed. He went to Johnny and asked him to sign up.
-Johnny refused. Kelly said calmly, "Johnny, do you see that telephone
-pole?"
-
-"Yes, I see. Vot about?"
-
-"If you don't sign, you're going to climb it." Johnny signed. He put his
-gun away when he acquired a lodging house at Beatty, where he died in
-1944.
-
-Reminiscing one day in the old saloon he had owned, Chris Wichts slapped
-the bar: "I've taken as much as $65,000 over this old bar in one month."
-He had none of it now but in a little cabin in Surprise Canyon with a
-stream running by his door, and a memory that retained only the laughs
-of his life, he didn't need $65,000.
-
-"A city fellow came into the cafe one day. Snooty sort. I told him we
-had some nice tender burro steaks. He flew off the handle. Said he
-wanted porterhouse or nothing. I served him. When he finished he
-apologized for being rude and said his porterhouse was good as he ever
-ate. I went into the kitchen and came back with a burro shank, shoved it
-in his face and said, 'Mister, you ate the meat off this burro leg.' I
-thought he'd murder me."
-
-One day when Ballarat travel was heavy, a dapper passenger dropped off
-the stage, entered the saloon, bought a drink and paid for it with a $20
-gold piece, getting $19.50 in change. When he'd gone, Shorty Harris
-standing by said: "Chris, that money doesn't sound right."
-
-Chris examined it. The gold piece had been split, hollowed out and
-filled with alloy. Chris worried awhile, then brightened when he noticed
-his place was full of loafers playing solitaire; pulling at soggy pipes;
-waiting for a "live one." "Boys," said Chris, "old Whiskers ain't
-getting much play. Let's go down and see him."
-
-Whiskers was his competitor down the street.
-
-A few moments later the bat-wing doors of Whiskers' place flew open and
-Chris and his bums swarmed in. Chris laid an arm on the bar. "What'll it
-be fellows?" Then he turned to the loafers along the walk "Line up, you
-guys and have a drink."
-
-They did and when the drinks were downed, Chris laid the phony gold
-piece on the bar, received his change and with his crowd returned to his
-bar. An hour later he was still laughing to himself over the trick he'd
-played on Whiskers when his own sawed-off doors flapped open and
-Whiskers barged in, followed by his own mob of moochers. Whiskers
-ordered for the house and laid down the $20. Chris gulped and gave the
-change.
-
-That coin circulated in every store and saloon in Ballarat for more than
-a year. Everybody knew it was phony, but accepted it without question
-and came to regard it with something akin to affection. Then one day a
-gentleman in spats came along and the $20 gold piece left forever.
-
-Billy Heider, a slim, genial fellow who had been a hat salesman in a
-smart toggery shop in Los Angeles came not for gold but to escape
-alimony. His easy smile masked a stubbornness that nothing could
-conquer. "... she got a smart lawyer and dated the Judge," Billy said.
-
-He hung his bench-made suit on a peg, slipped into overalls, cut off one
-sleeve of his tuxedo to cover a canteen, spread the rest on the floor
-beside his bed to step on in the morning and so--transition. Eventually
-he began to prospect, kept at it for 20 years; found nothing, but he
-beat alimony.
-
-Usually mines were "salted" in shaft or tunnel to separate the sucker
-from his money, but it remained for a Ballarat woman to find a simpler
-way.
-
-Michael Sherlock, known as Sparkplug, because of continual trouble with
-that feature of his automobile, gave me her formula: "She owned a claim
-in Pleasant Canyon that had a showing of gold. She wanted $10,000 for
-it. A rich auto dealer came along to look at it. He was worth at least
-$5,000,000. She told him to take his mining engineer and get his own
-samples and when he got back she'd have a chicken dinner waiting.
-
-"They got the samples, came down, parked the car in front of her house,
-got their bellies full of chicken and went back to the city. A couple of
-days later the millionaire was back. Couldn't get his money into her
-hands quick enough. Word went out there would be work enough for all
-comers and we figured on boom times. But he couldn't find ore to match
-her samples."
-
-"What happened?" I asked.
-
-"While he was eating chicken dinner that night, her Indian hired man
-went out to his auto and switched samples."
-
-I asked Sparkplug why he didn't sue her.
-
-"If you had $5,000,000 would you want the whole dam' state laughing at
-you?"
-
-
-Randsburg, which boomed in the early Eighties as a result of gold
-strikes in the Yellow Aster, the King Solomon, and later the Kelly
-silver mine, soon became one of the principal eastern gateways to the
-Panamint and to Death Valley by way of Granite Wells and Wingate Pass.
-
-A curious story of a man haunted by his conscience is that of William
-Dooley and told to me by Dr. Samuel Slocum, who had come to Randsburg
-from Arizona after making a fortune in gold.
-
-A howling blizzard had driven everyone from the streets and the campers
-in Fiddlers' Gulch into Billy Hevron's saloon. Dr. Slocum, lost in the
-blinding snow and stumbling along the street, felt with his hands for
-walls he couldn't see, while a barroom noise guided him to the door.
-
-At the bar he saw William Paddock, mining engineer. "Bill, you're the
-man I'm looking for. I can't find anyone who can tell me how to get to
-Goler Canyon in Panamint Valley. You've been there and I want you to
-draw me a map."
-
-Paddock, finishing a drink ordered one for Slocum and introduced him to
-a man at his side: "This is Mr. Dooley," Paddock said, and the doctor
-saw a great hulk of a man with black whiskers, small eyes, and an uneasy
-look. Before a word was spoken Slocum sensed Dooley's instant dislike of
-him.
-
-Slocum ordered a round of drinks. Dooley refused and walked to the
-farther end of the bar.
-
-Paddock followed Dooley after a moment, talked with him and returned to
-his drink. He said to Slocum: "I'm in a curious situation. I don't know
-much about Dooley, but down in Mexico he saved my life. Now it's my turn
-to save his. He just killed a man in Arizona and came here to hide out.
-I'm taking him to Goler Canyon soon as this blizzard is over. He thinks
-you are a deputy U. S. Marshal and claims that he has seen you before
-and that you are no doctor."
-
-"He may have seen me in Arizona at Gold Hill," Slocum said.
-
-"The best way I can help you," Paddock continued, "is to sign the road
-as I go and after a day or two you can follow us."
-
-On the day following Paddock's departure Doctor Slocum set out. The next
-day he came upon a newly-made grave, outlined with stone. On a redwood
-board used for the marker was carved this inscription:
-
- _"Here lies Bill Dooley who died by giving Wm. Paddock the dam' lie."_
-
-With no reason to shed tears, the Doctor following Paddock's signs,
-reached Goler Canyon, made camp and knowing that Paddock intended to
-occupy a stone cabin farther up the gulch, he started up the trail. He'd
-gone only a short distance when he saw Paddock approaching, waving his
-arms in a signal for Slocum to go back. The Doctor stopped.
-
-When Paddock came down he said, "For God's sake, Doc, get back to your
-camp. Dooley is behind that big boulder above us with a Winchester
-trained on you."
-
-"Why, I thought he was dead...."
-
-"No," Paddock smiled grimly. "He worked all night digging that grave.
-Said it would throw you off his trail. I can't get it out of his head
-you're a marshal."
-
-Slocum had made a gruelling trip to free and open country and he had no
-intention of being driven out. "I'll go up and talk to him," he said.
-Paddock warned him that it would be useless and might be fatal, but
-Slocum insisted and they went up the trail, Paddock going in front to
-shield him.
-
-Dooley was outside the cabin with a rifle in the crook of his arm, his
-finger on the trigger.
-
-Slocum was unarmed. He calmly assured Dooley he was not an officer; that
-he had no intention of disclosing Dooley's whereabouts, "But this is
-free country and I intend to stay."
-
-Dooley's reaction was a noncommittal grunt. However, violence was
-avoided. When the Doctor returned to his camp, Paddock decided it would
-be best to accompany him as a measure of safety. Explaining to Dooley
-that he would remain with the Doctor to inspect a claim, he remained as
-a body-guard for three days. On the fourth he went up to the stone cabin
-and discovered Dooley had loaded his wagon with all the camp equipment
-and supplies, including a green water keg and left for parts unknown.
-
-Just across the range was Hungry Bill's country. A year or so afterward
-Doctor Slocum, crossing the mountains into Death Valley, stopped at
-Hungry Bill's Six Spring Canyon Ranch and noticed a green cask. Hungry
-Bill said that he had found the keg floating on the ooze near Badwater.
-"Somewhere under that ooze," Doctor Slocum said, "lies Bill Dooley, his
-team, his wagon, and its load."
-
-
-An interesting character of this area was Toppy Johnson, who scouted for
-Senator George Hearst and later had charge of copper claims belonging to
-William Randolph Hearst, near Granite Wells.
-
-While there, Toppy employed Aunt Liza, a negro cook. Aunt Liza came from
-Randsburg with an enormous trunk. She was a good cook, but an awful
-thief and nearly everything Toppy owned except the furniture disappeared
-piece by piece. When his razor vanished he looked through the trunk and
-found the loot. He didn't want to lose Aunt Liza, so he removed a few of
-the more needed things, leaving the rest to be recovered by instalments.
-Thereafter it was a game of losing and retrieving.
-
-As strange a coincidence as I've ever heard attended the end of Toppy
-Johnson. Sent to Mexico when Pancho Villa was overrunning the country,
-he fled to Mazatlan when Pancho announced he would shoot on sight both
-native and foreigners who were not in sympathy with his marauding.
-
-All boats were crowded with refugees, both native and alien, but Toppy
-was permitted to join the hundreds willing to sleep on deck. Toppy
-unwittingly chose a spot over the saloon where drunken celebrants soon
-began shooting at the ceiling.
-
-A shot penetrated the flooring of the craft's deck and Toppy's abdomen.
-An American physician sleeping alongside was awakened by Toppy's groans,
-attended him, but saw there was no hope. The physician asked his name,
-the object being to notify the victim's relatives.
-
-"If my doctor were only here," Toppy moaned, "he could save me."
-
-"Who is your doctor?"
-
-"Dr. Samuel Slocum, of Pasadena," Toppy said, and died.
-
-The physician was Dr. Slocum's nephew.
-
-Thirty-four miles south of Ballarat at the end of a narrow canyon
-leading from Wingate Pass road into Death Valley, one comes upon a
-breath-taking riot of color. Pink hills. Blue hills. Hills of dazzling
-white, mottled with black and green. Yellow hills. Maroon and jade
-hills.
-
-A gentleman of fine fancy and fluent tongue passed that way, learned
-that under the hills was a deposit of epsom salts. Then he went to
-Hollywood where salts met money. He talked convincingly of nature's drug
-store. "Just sink a shovel into the ground and up comes two dollars'
-worth of medicine recommended by every doctor in the country. No
-educating the public. Everybody knows epsom salts."
-
-There was no flaw in that argument and Hollywood dipped into its
-pockets. A mono rail was strung from Searles' Lake over the Slate Range
-through Wingate Pass and up the slopes to the pink hills. There rose
-Epsom City. For awhile the balanced cars scooted along that gleaming
-rail, bearing salts to market--dreams of wealth to Hollywood.
-
-But the world had enough salts, Epsom City failed. Nothing is left to
-remind one of the incredible folly but a few boards and a pile of bones.
-The bones are those of wild burros slaughtered by vandals who in a
-project as inhuman as ever excited lust for money, went through the
-country and killed the helpless animals, to be sold to manufacturers of
-chicken and dog food.
-
-A singular character known as Dad Smith, who had come to California with
-John C. Fremont was one of the earliest settlers at Post Office Springs.
-Smith had been a scout with Kit Carson in the Apache wars in Arizona and
-returned to the lower Panamint in 1860, to hunt gold in Butte Valley,
-where, nearing 90 he dug a tunnel 100 feet in length. Found there
-delirious, with pneumonia, by Dr. Samuel Slocum, he was removed to the
-Doctor's camp where Mrs. Slocum nursed him through his convalescence.
-When he recovered he decided to give Mrs. Slocum a token of his
-gratitude.
-
-At the time, Barstow and Daggett were the most convenient stations for
-prospectors in the southerly area. At Daggett they likkered at Mother
-Featherlegs'. At Barstow they bought at Judge Gooding's store or at Aunt
-Hannah's, and drank at Sloan and Hart's saloon. Dad's money, as was that
-of others, was left with them for safe keeping. So he walked every mile
-of a ten days' round trip to get a box of chocolates for Mrs. Slocum. A
-little chore like that made no difference to Dad. He encountered a
-desert rain and arrived at the Slocum cabin drenched. They persuaded him
-to remain overnight and led him to a tent.
-
-Seeing that water dripped from Dad's blankets, Dr. Slocum went for dry
-bedding. When he returned, Dad had his own bedding spread on the ground.
-"Here, Dad--take this dry bedding...."
-
-"Not on your life," Dad said as he crawled into his own. "I'd catch
-cold, sure as hell."
-
-Two noted athletes of the period went into the Panamint for a vacation.
-When they asked for a guide, they were told to get Dad, but after
-looking him over they decided he lacked stamina, but engaged him when
-they could find no one else. The route was over the Panamint into Death
-Valley and back through Redlands Canyon--a trip to test the hardiest.
-
-On the third day Dad returned alone. Asked about his companions, he
-grumbled: "They're down and out. Now I've got to haul 'em in."
-
-He took his burros, lashed the victims securely on the beasts and
-brought them in.
-
-Remembered by oldsters, was Archie McDermot, a big fellow of
-unbelievable strength who was an all-purpose employee of Dr. Slocum.
-
-While they were camped at Barstow one night, Archie went up town to pass
-a cheerful hour and during the course of the evening a brawl started and
-Archie suddenly found himself the object of a mass attack by five burly
-miners. Archie knocked them down as they came, threw them out and
-returned to his drinking. The constable went in to take Archie. Archie
-tossed him through the door. The officer didn't want to kill him, and
-collecting a posse of four brawny helpers, tried again. Archie pitched
-them out.
-
-Being a friend of Slocum, the constable now went to see the Doctor.
-"Doc, can't you come down and do something about Archie? Knowing how you
-need him, I don't want to kill him...."
-
-Doctor Slocum went, discovered that Archie, after throwing everybody out
-of the place, had seized the long heavy bar, turned it on its side and
-was sitting on the edge with a bottle in each hand. Doctor Slocum
-regarded the wreckage and then Archie. "Good Lord, Archie, what have you
-done?"
-
-"Nothing, Doc," Archie said. "Just having a nip. Take one on the
-house...."
-
-"What about this fight?"
-
-"Fight?" repeated Archie. "Oh, that--some fellows tried to start a
-little ruckus but I didn't pay much attention to it."
-
-But if Archie had no fear of a dozen live men, he was terrorized by a
-dead one.
-
-Doctor and Mrs. Slocum, with Archie, were leaving their camp in the
-Panamint. The thermometer under the canopy of the vehicle registered 135
-degrees--hot for an April day, even in Death Valley country. As they
-drove along, the Doctor noticed some clothing on a bush. "Seems
-strange," he said. "Let's look around."
-
-Archie skirmished through the bushes. Presently he returned, his face
-white, horror in his eyes. He grabbed the wagon wheel, his quivering
-bulk shaking the heavily loaded vehicle. "For God's sake, Doc. Go and
-look!"
-
-The Doctor saw a sight as pitiable as it is ever man's lot to see--a
-young fellow dying from thirst on the desert. His protruding tongue
-split in the middle. Unable to speak, though retaining a spark of life.
-The fingers of both hands worn to stubs.
-
-Kneeling, Doctor Slocum asked the victim where he came from; where he
-wished to go. No sign came from the staring eyes. Finally the Doctor
-said, "We want to help you. We have water. We're going to take you
-home." At the mention of home, a feeble smile came, and two tears, the
-last two drops in that wasted body, rolled down his cheeks and dried in
-the desert sun and then he died. There was nothing to do but bury the
-body.
-
-"You'll have to help me, Archie," the Doctor said.
-
-A look of terror came into Archie's eyes. "Doc," he pleaded, "ask me
-anything but that...."
-
-The man who'd cleaned up Barstow, quailed in superstitious fear at the
-thought of touching the dead.
-
-They looked around for a place to dig a grave. But the country was
-covered with malpai and lava rock and they couldn't dig in it. The
-Doctor wrapped the body in a piece of canvas and Mrs. Slocum aided in
-lifting it into the wagon. She drove the team while the Doctor and
-Archie walked along, looking for loose earth and finally found a spot.
-Archie dug the grave. The Doctor lowered the body and Archie with shut
-eyes, filled the grave.
-
-A press story of the finding brought a flood of letters from all parts
-of the country. Such stories always do. From mothers, wives,
-sweethearts--but none from men. It's always the woman who cares.
-
-Such deaths are due to inexperience. This boy had no canteen. Just
-around the corner of a jutting hill was Lone Willow Spring.
-
-Though scarcely a vestige remains, there was once a town at Lone Willow.
-Saloons and an enormous dance hall lured the Bad Boys and there the
-trail ended for scores reported as missing men.
-
-Cyclone Wilson, a nephew of Shady Myrick who built a sizable export
-trade in gem stones, and for whom Myrick Springs is named, was taking a
-wagon load of Chinese coolies to work at Old Harmony. All Chinamen
-looked alike to Cyclone and he didn't know that these were newcomers. It
-was his custom to discharge his passengers at the foot of a steep hill
-near Lone Willow and require them to walk to the top.
-
-As usual, upon reaching this grade he set his brakes and waited for the
-coolies to get out. None moved, then he ordered them out. The Chinamen
-sat in stony silence. He repeated the order with no result other than
-jabber among themselves. Angered, Cyclone reached for his long
-blacksnake whip. It had a "cracker" on the end of which was a buckshot.
-With unerring accuracy he aimed the whip at the nearest coolie and
-overboard he went. The others leaped out and drawing knives from their
-big loose sleeves, massed for assault.
-
-Cyclone reached for a pistol--always carried on the wagon seat, and
-started shooting. His toll was five Chinamen.
-
-The cause of the murders, it was later learned, was due entirely to the
-fact that none of the Chinamen had understood a word Cyclone had spoken.
-
-A Chinaman at Lone Willow, who spoke English made his countrymen bury
-the dead.
-
-
-Today Ballarat is a ghost town and soon every trace of it will be gone.
-Roofless walls lift like prayerful arms to gods that are deaf.
-
-In the late afternoon when the shadows of the Argus Range have crept
-across the valley, a few old timers come out of leaning dobes and stand
-bareheaded to look about. The afterglow of a sun is upon the peaks and
-the afterglow of dreams in their hearts. They people the empty streets
-with men long dead, some in unmarked graves in the little cemetery on
-the flat just beyond the town. Some on the trails, God only knows where.
-These dead they see pass in and out of the old saloons. These dead they
-hear again. Glasses tinkle, slippered feet dance again.
-
-Tomorrow? Their pale eyes lift to the canyons and though dimmed a
-little, they see one hundred billion dollars.
-
-
-What of Shoshone? It remains with changes of course. The shanties hauled
-from Greenwater have been hauled somewhere else. No longer do I step
-from my car as I have so often and call to those on the bench. "Move
-over, fellows" and hear their familiar greeting: "Where the hell _you_
-been?"
-
-Instead, I drive to an air conditioned cabin and stroll back to the
-former site of the bench, so long the social center. There I see a sign
-over a door which reads, "Crowbar" and I enter a dreamy cavern with
-dimmed, rosy lights, hear the music of ice against glass and refuse to
-believe the startling sight of an honest-to-goodness old timer tending
-bar in a clean white shirt.
-
-Likewise I balk at the white lines I walk between as I cross the asphalt
-road to the store.
-
-But above Shoshone the same blue skies stretch without end over a world
-apart, and under them are the same uncrowded trails; the same far
-horizons for the vagabond's foot and the peace "which passeth all
-understanding."
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
- A
- Amargosa River, 96
- American Potash and Chemical Co., 33
- Archilette Spring, 95
- Augerreberry, Pete, 58
-
-
- B
- Ballarat, 175
- Ballarat Mines, production figures, 176
- Beatty, Monte, 53, 77
- Benson, Myra, 68, 133-134-135
- Benson, Jack, 133-134-135
- Bennett, Bellerin' Teck, 23
- Bennett, Charles, freighter, 31
- Bennett's Well, 21
- Black Mountain, story of, 20, 60-61
- Bodie, toughest of the Gold Towns, 74
- Borax, discovery of, 26
- Bradbury Well, 76
- Bowers, Sandy, gets a fortune for a board bill, 74
- Brannan, Sam, Mormon leader, 95
- Brandt, "Arkansas" Ben, 71, 83, 138
- Breyfogle, Jacob; stories of, 154
- Brown, Charles, Deputy Sheriff at Greenwater; store at Shoshone;
- road builder, supervisor, superintendent of Lila C. Mine
- at Dale; elected to senate; Chap. XV, 102
- Brown (nee Fairbanks) Stella, 69, 71, 104-105, 107, 116, 135
- Brougher Wils, at Tonopah, 49
- Bruce, Jimmy, private graveyard, 168
- Bullfrog Mine, discovered, 53-54-55
- Butler, James, discoverer of Tonopah silver, 48-49-50, 59
- Bulette, Julia, famed madam of Virginia City, 74
-
-
- C
- Cahill, Washington, Borax Co. official, 35-36
- Calico Mountains, 15
- Calico, stories of, 15, 16
- Carrillo, Jose Antonio, 97
- Carson, Kit, guide and scout in Shoshone country, 20, 93-94-95
- Casey, John "Cranky," noted desert character, 136, 137-138
- Cave Spring, 134
- Cazaurang, Jean, wealthy miser, death of, 100-101
- China Ranch, stories of, 80, 94
- Clark, W. A., 60
- Clark, "Patsy," 60
- Coleman, W. T., 27-28, 30
- Comstock, "Pancake," famous lode named for; buys a woman; suicide,
- 48, 74
- Corcoran, "Wild Bill," famous prospector; death of, 58, 177
- Counterfeit gold piece, 179-180
- Cross, Ed, partner and co-discoverer of Bullfrog Mine, 53
-
-
- D
- Dayton, James, superintendent Furnace Creek Ranch, death of,
- 35-36, 122
- Dante's View, 151
- Davis, Buford, buys Noonday Mine; death of, 158
- Death Valley, cause of; history of, geology, temperatures; first
- settlers, 19
- Decker, Judge, convivial Ballarat Justice of Peace, murdered, 62
- Delameter, John, early freighter, 156
- Diamond Tooth Lil, glamorous madam, 62-63
- Dooley, William, bad man, 181-182-183
- Driscoll, Dan, partner of Shorty Harris, 91, 120
- Dublin Gulch, 69
- Dumont, Eleanor, (Madame Moustache), charmer of the Forty Niners,
- 74
-
-
- E
- Eichbaum, Bob, toll road, 21
- Egbert, Adrian, at Cave Spring, 134
- Epsom City, salts deposit; mono rail, 184
-
-
- F
- Fairbanks, Ralph Jacobus, at Ash Meadows; at Greenwater; at
- Shoshone, stories of; death; Ch. XVI, 104-105, 108,
- 110-111
- Fairbanks, Celestia Abigail, 105
- Fennimore, James, "Old Virginny"; named Virginia City; swapped
- Ophir Mine for blind pony, 74
- Flake, Sam, old timer, poker student, death, 68, 78
- Fremont, John C., 93
- French, Dr. Darwin, seeks Lost Gunsight, names Darwin Falls and
- town of, 21
- Funston, General Frederick, identifies and names Death Valley
- flora, 24
-
-
- G
- Gayhart, W. C., assayer, part owner of Tonopah Discovery Mine,
- 49-50
- George, "Rocky Mountain," 76
- Godey, Alex, Fremont scout, fights Indians at Resting Springs, 94
- Goldfield, named, 50
- Goodwin, Ray, park official, 147, 149
- Gorsline, Joe, Ballarat Judge, 177-178
- Gower, Harry, Borax Co. official, mgr. Furnace Creek Ranch, 41
- Grandpa Springs, hole-in for old time prospectors, 50
- Grantham, Louise, girl prospector, 139
- Gray, Fred, Ballarat prospector, 116
- Gray, W. B., 77
- Greenwater, copper strike, stories of, 60, 63
- Gunsight Mine, 21-22, 157-158
-
-
- H
- "Happy Bandits" (Small and McDonald), 164-165, 167-168
- Harris, Frank "Shorty," Ch. XVII, 113
- Harrisburg, scene of gold strike, 57, 114
- Harmon, Pete, misses millions, 117
- Hellgate Pass, 64
- Heider, Billy, flees alimony, 180
- Heinze, August, Copper King, 60
- Henderson, W. T., names Telescope Peak, kills Joaquin Murietta,
- famous bandit, and pickles head; sees victim's ghost,
- 164-165
- Hilton, Frank, finds body of James Dayton, 36
- Hoagland George, burial of, 72-73
- Holmes, Helen, story of thriller, "Perils of Pauline," 127
- Hungry Hattie, Ballarat character, 119
- Huhn, Ernest (Siberian Red), diligent prospector, 68
- Hungry Bill, Panamint chief, 87
- Hunt, Capt. Jefferson, Mormon guide; prominent in California
- culture, 21
-
-
- I
- Ickes, Harold, visits Shoshone, 149-150
- Indians of the desert, conflicting opinions of, Ch. VII, 43
- Indian George Hansen, owner of Indian Ranch, discovered silver at
- Panamint City, 154, 155, 171-172-173
- Ishmael, George, 152
-
-
- J
- Johnnie Mine, 90
- Johnson, Albert, owner and builder of Scotty's Castle, 133
- Johnson, Bob, tamps friend's grave, 72-73
- Johnson, Toppy, supt. of desert mine of W. R. Hearst, 183
- Jones, Herman, discovered Red Wing Mine, road builder, 72, 142
- Jones, J. P., Nev. silver king at Panamint city, 23, 166, 170
- Johnny-Behind-the-Gun, 178-179
-
-
- K
- Kellogg, Lois, owner of Manse Ranch, 101
- Kempfer, Don, mining engineer, official of Sierra Talc. Co., 158
-
-
- L
- Lee, Philander, owner of Resting Springs Ranch, 97
- Lee, Cub, built first house at Shoshone, slays wife and son, 98
- Lee, John D., established Lee's Ferry; executed for massacre of
- emigrants at Mountain Meadows, 90
- Lee, "Shoemaker," 98
- Legend of Swamper Ike, 173-174
- Le Moyne, Jean, recipe for coffee, story of mine, death, 176-177
- Lone Willow, murders at, 186
- Longstreet, Jack, Ash Meadows bad man, 90
- Lost Mines, all of Ch. XXII, 154-163
-
-
- M
- Main, Eddie, 69, 78
- McDermot, Archie, Strong Man, 185
- McGarn, "Whitey Bill," 70, 78, 138
- Manly, William Lewis, 23, 157, 161
- Manse Ranch, 155
- Metbury Spring, first name of Shoshone, 72
- Myers, Al, discoverer of Gold Field, 50
- Modine, Dan, deputy sheriff, early owner of China Ranch, 63, 68,
- 84
- Montgomery, Bob, owner of Montgomery Shoshone Mine, buys Skidoo
- discovery claim on sight, 54-56
- Murray, Billy, saves John S. Cook Bank and Goldfield from "run,"
- 51
- Murietta, Joaquin, 95
- Myrick, Shady, exports gem stones, 186
-
-
- N
- Nadeau, Remi, genius of transportation, 169
- Nagle, Dave, 166
- Naylor, George, sheriff, treasurer, supervisor of Inyo Co., 102
- Nels, Dobe Charlie, at Bodie; at Shoshone, 74-75
- Noble, Levi, geologist, 39-40-41
-
-
- O
- Oakes, Sir Harry; in Alaska; at Greenwater; at Shoshone; makes
- strike in Canada; builds palace at Niagara Falls; knighted
- by King George V; slain by son-in-law, it is said--a
- renegade French count, in Bahamas, 105, 111-112
- Oddie, Tasker, mining tycoon, 49-50, 60
- Owens Valley, rape of, 147-148
-
-
- P
- Pacific Coast Borax Co., organized, 28-29
- Pahrump Ranch, 23
- Panamint City, 166-167-168
- Panamint Tom, story of, 23, 109
- Perry, J. W. S., supt. Borax Co., designer of 20 mule team wagons,
- 31
- Pietsch, Henry, shot Ballarat judge, 62
- Plato, Joe, on the Comstock Lode, 76
- Post Office Spring, early army post, 175
-
-
- R
- Radcliffe Mine, 175
- Raines, E. P., genial crook, 165-166
- Randsburg, gold discovered at, 181
- Rasor, Clarence, Borax Co. official, 151
- Resting Springs, named by Mormons, 96
- Rich, Charles, Mormon pioneer, 96
- Rickard, sports promoter, 51
- "Rocky Mountain" George, prospector, 76, 77
- Rogers, John, Bennett-Arcane party, 21
- Rosie, squaw, love life of, 88
- Ryan, Joe, desert philosopher, 70-71, 73, 82
- Rhyolite, discovery of gold, 54-55
-
-
- S
- Saratoga Springs, 93
- Schwab, Charles M., at Rhyolite; at Greenwater, 55, 60
- Scott, Bob, discoverer of Confidence Mine, 91
- Scott, Mary, squaw, 90
- Scott, Walter, "Death Valley Scotty," 69, Ch. XIX, 130
- Scrugham, James, Governor and U.S. Senator of Nevada, 77
- Searles, John, 32-33, 159
- Sherlock, Michael, "Sparkplug," 180
- Skidoo, gold strike, 55-56
- Slim, Death Valley, bad man, 102-103
- Slim, Jackass, Ch. II, 20; Ch. XI, 64-65
- Slocum, Dr. Samuel, 181-186
- Smith, Francis M. ("Borax Smith"), 29-33, 38
- Smith, "Dad," Old Man of the Mountains; came with Kit Carson, 184
- Smith, Pegleg, 97-98-99
- Snake House, 78
- Sorrells, Maury, 138
- Stewart, Wm. R., Nevada Senator, mines at Panamint City, 23, 170
- Stiles, Ed, first driver of 20 mule team, 31, 35, 37
- Stump Springs, 23
- Stovepipe Wells, 21
-
-
- T
- Teck, Bellowin', 23
- Tecopa Cap, Indian Chief, 78, 79
- Tecopa Hot Spring, 79
- Tecopa, John, discoverer of Johnnie Mine, 90
- Telescope Peak, 22, 93, 139
- Temperature in Death Valley, 41, 42
- Tonopah, discovery of silver, 50, 51
- Towne's Pass, named, 21
- Trona, 33
- Twenty-mule team, first driver, design of, 31
- Tule Hole, story of, 35, 36-37
-
-
- V
- Vasquez, Tiburcio, bandit terror, 169
- Volmer, Joe, 141
-
-
- W
- Wagons, 20 mule team, design of, 31
- Wamack, Bob, at Confidence Mine, 91
- Weed, Tom, noted Indian, death of, 89-90
- Wichts, Chris, noted Ballarat character, story of, 61, 179
- Williams, George, 142
- Williams, Bill, preacher and plunderer, 96-97
- Wilson, Cyclone, massacre of Chinamen at Lone Willow, 186, 187
- Wingfield, George, famous gambler, luck of, 51
- Winters, Aaron and Rosie, discovered borax in Death Valley, 26
- Wolfskill, 92
-
-
- Y
- Younger, Tillie, member of Jesse James guerrillas, dies at
- Shoshone, 73
- Yundt, John, Lee and Sam, owners of Manse Ranch, 99-100
-
-
-
-
- _The Author_
-
-
-Nearly every newspaperman looks forward to the time when he can get away
-from the pressure of his journalistic job and retire to a little cottage
-by the sea, or a cabin in the mountains, and write a book.
-
-The only difference between William Caruthers--Bill, to his friends--and
-a majority of the others is that he did write his book on the spot,
-preserved it and after retiring to his orange grove near Ontario,
-California he got around to the job of revision, which resulted in these
-pages.
-
-Born on the banks of the Cumberland River in Tennessee, Caruthers'
-career as a journalist began when he became editor of the local weekly
-paper at the age of 16. He took the job, he explains, because no one
-else wanted it.
-
-His family wanted him to be a lawyer, and in compliance with their
-wishes he returned to school and was admitted to the bar in Tennessee
-when he was 19. But he wanted to be a newspaperman, and vowed that when
-he won his first $2,000 fee he would quit law. Successful as a young
-lawyer, the time soon came when he won a tough case against a big
-insurance company--and that was his chance. He closed his law office
-forever.
-
-For a time he was editor of Illustrated Youth and Age, the largest
-monthly in the South. He wrote feature articles for the Nashville
-American, Nashville Banner, the old New York World, the Christian
-Science Monitor, fiction for Collier's Weekly and other important
-magazines. His writings have appeared in most Western magazines.
-
-After coming to California he first went to work on the Los Angeles
-Examiner, quitting that job to become a publisher and his little
-magazine, _The Bystander_ gained nationwide circulation. While editing
-this magazine he became editor of Los Angeles' first theatrical
-magazine, _The Rounder_, which was a "must" on the list of early movie
-stars and soon discovered that the most lucrative field for a journalist
-was in ghost writing. As a "ghost" he addressed big political
-conventions, assemblies of governors and mayors and in one instance, a
-jury as the prosecutor. One eastern industrialist paid him a fabulous
-fee when the address Caruthers wrote for him brought a great ovation.
-
-Finally his physician warned him to slow down. It was then--in
-1926--that he came to the desert, and, during the intervening 25 years,
-has spent much of his time in the Death Valley region. He has witnessed
-the transition of Death Valley from a prospector's hunting ground to a
-mecca for winter tourists. This is a book of the old days in Death
-Valley.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
---Corrected a few palpable typos.
-
---Added page numbers to plates (in roman numerals).
-
---Included a transcription of the text within some images.
-
---In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Loafing Along Death Valley Trails, by
-William Caruthers
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOAFING ALONG DEATH VALLEY TRAILS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 51899-8.txt or 51899-8.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/1/8/9/51899/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/51899-8.zip b/old/51899-8.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 19f945b..0000000
--- a/old/51899-8.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h.zip b/old/51899-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 0c4b410..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/51899-h.htm b/old/51899-h/51899-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 829b029..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/51899-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,8209 +0,0 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
-<head>
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
-<title>Death Valley Trails; A Personal Narrative of People and Places, by William Caruthers: a Project Gutenberg eBook</title>
-<link rel="schema.DC" href="http://dublincore.org/documents/1998/09/dces/" />
-<meta name="author" content="Caruthers, William (****-****)" />
-<meta name="DC.Creator" content="William Caruthers" />
-<meta name="DC.Title" content="Death Valley Trails; A Personal Narrative of People and Places" />
-<meta name="DC.Language" content="en" />
-<meta name="DC.Format" content="text/html" />
-<meta name="DC.Created" content="1951" />
-<meta name="pss.pubdate" content="1951" />
-<style type="text/css">
-large { font-size:125%; }
-sc { font-variant:small-caps; font-style: normal; }
-
-/* == GLOBAL MARKUP == */
-body, table.twocol tr td { margin-left:2em; margin-right:2em; } /* BODY */
-.box { border-style:double; margin-bottom:2em; max-width:30em; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; margin-top:2em; }
-.box p { margin-right:1em; margin-left:1em; }
-.box dl { margin-right:1em; margin-left:1em; }
-h1, h3, h5, h6, .titlepg p { text-align:center; clear:both; } /* HEADINGS */
-h2 { margin-top:1.5em; margin-bottom:1em; text-align:center; clear:both; font-family:sans-serif; }
-h2 .small { font-size:100%; }
-h1 { margin-top:3em; font-family:sans-serif; }
-div.box h1 { margin-top:1em; }
-h3 { margin-top:2.5em; }
-h4, h5 { font-size:100%; text-align:right; clear:right; }
-h6 { font-size:100%; }
-h6.var { font-size:80%; font-style:normal; }
-.titlepg { margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; border-style:double; clear:both; }
-span.chaptertitle { font-style:normal; display:block; text-align:center; font-size:150%; }
-.tblttl { text-align:center; }
-.tblsttl { text-align:center; font-variant:small-caps; }
-
-pre sub.ms { width:4em; letter-spacing:1em; }
-table.fmla { text-align:center; margin-top:0em; margin-bottom:0em; margin-left:0em; margin-right:0em; }
-table.inline, table.symbol { display: inline-table; vertical-align: middle; }
-td.cola { text-align:left; vertical-align:100%; }
-td.colb { text-align:justify; }
-
-p, blockquote, div.p, div.bq { text-align:justify; } /* PARAGRAPHS */
-div.p, div.bq { margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; }
-blockquote, .bq { margin-left:1em; margin-right:0em; }
-.verse { font-size:100%; }
-p.indent {text-indent:2em; text-align:left; }
-p.tb, p.tbcenter, verse.tb, blockquote.tb { margin-top:2em; }
-
-span.pb, div.pb, dt.pb, p.pb /* PAGE BREAKS */
-{ text-align:right; float:right; margin-right:0em; clear:right; }
-div.pb { display:inline; }
-.pb, dt.pb, dl.toc dt.pb, dl.tocl dt.pb, dl.index dt.pb, dl.undent dt.pb
- { text-align:right; float:right; margin-left: 1.5em;
- margin-top:.5em; margin-bottom:.5em; display:inline; text-indent:0;
- font-size:80%; font-style:normal; font-weight:bold;
- color:gray; border:1px solid gray;padding:1px 3px; }
-div.index .pb { display:block; }
-.bq div.pb, .bq span.pb { font-size:90%; margin-right:2em; }
-
-div.img, body a img {text-align:center; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:2em; clear:right; }
-
-sup, a.fn { font-size:75%; vertical-align:100%; line-height:50%; font-weight:normal; }
-h3 a.fn { font-size:65%; }
-sub { font-size:75%; }
-.center, .tbcenter, dt.center, dl.undent dt.center { text-align:center; clear:both; } /* TEXTUAL MARKUP */
-span.center { display:block; }
-table.center { clear:both; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; }
-table.center tr td.l {text-align:left; margin-left:0em; }
-table.center tr td.t {text-align:left; text-indent:1em; }
-table.center tr td.t2 {text-align:left; text-indent:2em; }
-table.center tr td.r {text-align:right; }
-table.center tr th {vertical-align:bottom; }
-table.center tr td {vertical-align:top; }
-table.inline, table.symbol { display: inline-table; vertical-align: middle; }
-
-p { clear:left; }
-.small, .lsmall { font-size:85%; }
-.smaller { font-size:80%; }
-.smallest { font-size:67%; }
-.larger { font-size:150%; }
-.large { font-size:125%; }
-.xlarge { font-size:200%; line-height:60%; }
-.xxlarge { font-size:200%; line-height:60%; }
-.gs { letter-spacing:1em; }
-.gs3 { letter-spacing:2em; }
-.gslarge { letter-spacing:.3em; font-size:110%; }
-.sc { font-variant:small-caps; font-style:normal; }
-.unbold { font-weight:normal; }
-.xo { position:relative; left:-.3em; }
-.over, over { text-decoration: overline; display:inline; }
-.ss { font-family:sans-serif; }
-hr { width:20%; }
-.jl { text-align:left; }
-.jr { text-align:right; min-width:2em; display:inline-block; float:right; }
-.jr1 { text-align:right; margin-right:2em; }
-.ind1 { text-align:left; margin-left:2em; }
-.u { text-decoration:underline; }
-.hst { margin-left:2em; }
-.rubric { color:red; }
-ul li { text-align:justify; }
-
-dd.t { text-align:left; margin-left: 5.5em; }
-dl.toc { clear:both; margin-top:1em; } /* CONTENTS (.TOC) */
-.toc dt.center { text-align:center; clear:both; margin-top:3em; margin-bottom:1em;}
-.toc dt { text-align:right; clear:left; }
-.toc dd { text-align:right; clear:both; }
-.toc dd.ddt { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:4em; }
-.toc dd.ddt2 { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:5em; }
-.toc dd.ddt3 { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:6em; }
-.toc dd.ddt4 { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:7em; }
-.toc dd.ddt5 { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:8em; }
-.toc dd.note { text-align:justify; clear:both; margin-left:5em; text-indent:-1em; margin-right:3em; }
-.toc dt .xxxtest {width:17em; display:block; position:relative; left:4em; }
-.toc dt a span.cn, .toc dt span.cn { width:2.5em; text-align:right; margin-right:.7em; float:left; }
-.toc dt a,
-.toc dd a,
-.toc dt span.left,
-.toc dt span.lsmall,
-.toc dd span.left { text-align:left; clear:right; float:left; }
-.toc dt a span.cn { width:4em; text-align:right; margin-right:.7em; float:left; }
-.toc dt.sc { text-align:right; clear:both; }
-.toc dt.scl { text-align:left; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; }
-.toc dt.sct { text-align:right; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; margin-left:1em; }
-.toc dt.jl { text-align:left; clear:both; font-variant:normal; }
-.toc dt.scc { text-align:center; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; }
-.toc dt span.lj { text-align:left; display:block; float:left; }
-.toc dd.center { text-align:center; }
-dd.tocsummary {text-align:justify; margin-right:2em; margin-left:2em; }
-dd.center sc {display:block; text-align:center; }
-/* BOX CELL */
-td.top { border-top:1px solid; width:.5em; height:.8em; }
-td.bot { border-bottom:1px solid; width:.5em; height:.8em; }
-td.rb { border:1px solid; border-left:none; width:.5em; height:.8em; }
-td.lb { border:1px solid; border-right:none; width:.5em; height:.8em; }
-
-/* INDEX (.INDEX) */
-dl.index { clear:both; }
-.index dd { margin-left:6em; text-indent:-4em; text-align:left; }
-.index dt { margin-left:4em; text-indent:-4em; text-align:left; }
-.index dt.center {text-align:center; }
-
-.ab, .abl {
-font-weight:bold; text-decoration:none;
-border-style:solid; border-color:gray; border-width:1px;
-margin-right:0px; margin-top:5px; display:inline-block; text-align:center; }
-.ab { min-width:1em; }
-
- /* FOOTNOTE BLOCKS */
-div.notes p { margin-left:1em; text-indent:-1em; text-align:justify; }
-
-dl.undent dt { margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
-dl.undent dt.t { margin-left:3em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
- /* POETRY LINE NUMBER */
-.lnum { text-align:right; float:right; margin-left:.5em; display:inline; }
-
-.hymn { text-align:left; } /* HYMN AND VERSE: HTML */
-.verse { text-align:left; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:0em; font-style:italic; }
-.verse .sc { font-style:normal; }
-.versetb { text-align:left; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:0em; }
-.originc { text-align:center; }
-.subttl { text-align:center; font-size:80%; }
-.srcttl { text-align:center; font-size:80%; font-weight:bold; }
-p.t0, p.l { margin-left:4em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.lb { margin-left:4em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.tw, div.tw, .tw { margin-left:1em; text-indent:-1em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t, div.t, .t { margin-left:5em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t2, div.t2, .t2 { margin-left:6em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t3, div.t3, .t3 { margin-left:7em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t4, div.t4, .t4 { margin-left:8em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t5, div.t5, .t5 { margin-left:9em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t6, div.t6, .t6 { margin-left:10em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t7, div.t7, .t7 { margin-left:11em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t8, div.t8, .t8 { margin-left:12em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t9, div.t9, .t9 { margin-left:13em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t10, div.t10,.t10 { margin-left:14em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t11, div.t11,.t11 { margin-left:15em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t12, div.t12,.t12 { margin-left:16em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t13, div.t13,.t13 { margin-left:17em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t14, div.t14,.t14 { margin-left:18em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t15, div.t15,.t15 { margin-left:19em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.lr, div.lr, span.lr { display:block; margin-left:0em; margin-right:1em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:right; }
-dt.lr { width:100%; margin-left:0em; margin-right:0em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-top:1em; text-align:right; }
-dl dt.lr a { text-align:left; clear:left; float:left; }
-
-.fnblock { margin-top:2em; }
-.fndef { text-align:justify; margin-top:1.5em; margin-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em; }
-.fndef p.fncont, .fndef dl { margin-left:0em; text-indent:0em; }
-dl.catalog dd { font-style:italic; }
-dl.catalog dt { margin-top:1em; }
-.author { text-align:right; margin-top:0em; margin-bottom:0em; display:block; }
-
-dl.biblio dt { margin-top:.6em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; clear:both; }
-dl.biblio dt div { display:block; float:left; margin-left:-6em; width:6em; clear:both; }
-dl.biblio dt.center { margin-left:0em; text-align:center; }
-dl.biblio dd { margin-top:.3em; margin-left:3em; text-align:justify; font-size:90%; }
-.clear { clear:both; }
-p.book { margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; }
-p.review { margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; font-size:80%; }
-div.img p.pcap { text-indent:0; text-align:center; font-size:90%;
- margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; max-width:50em; margin-top:0;
- font-style:italic; font-weight:bold; }
-div.img p { text-align:center; font-style:italic; }
-p.pcapxx { margin-left:auto; text-indent:0; margin-right:auto; max-width:25em; text-align:justify; }
-p.pcap .ss { font-size:80%; text-align:right; font-weight:bold; font-family:sans-serif; display:block; font-style:normal; }
-
-p.pcapc { margin-left:4.7em; text-indent:0em; text-align:justify; }
-span.pn { display:inline-block; width:4.7em; text-align:left; margin-left:0; text-indent:0; }</style>
-</head>
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's Loafing Along Death Valley Trails, by William Caruthers
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Loafing Along Death Valley Trails
- A Personal Narrative of People and Places
-
-Author: William Caruthers
-
-Release Date: April 30, 2016 [EBook #51899]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOAFING ALONG DEATH VALLEY TRAILS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Loafing Along Death Valley Trails; A Personal Narrative of People and Places" width="500" height="766" />
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1>LOAFING ALONG
-<br />DEATH VALLEY TRAILS</h1>
-<p class="center"><span class="ss">By WILLIAM CARUTHERS</span></p>
-<p class="center"><span class="large"><span class="ss">A Personal Narrative of People and Places</span></span></p>
-<p class="center smaller">COPYRIGHT 1951 BY WILLIAM CARUTHERS</p>
-<p class="center small">Printed in the U.S.A. by P-B Press, Inc., Pomona, Calif.
-<br />Published by Death Valley Publishing Co.
-<br />Ontario, California</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_5">5</div>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="small">DEDICATION</span></h2>
-<p>To one who, without complaint or previous experience
-with desert hardships, shared with me the difficult and often
-dangerous adventures in part recorded in this book, which
-but for her persistent urging, would never have reached the
-printed page. She is, of course, my wife&mdash;with me in a
-sense far broader than the words imply: <i>always&mdash;always</i>.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_7">7</div>
-<h2 class="center">CONTENTS</h2>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt><a href="#c1">Dedication</a> 5</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c2">This Book</a> 9</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c3"><span class="cn">I </span>A Foretaste of Things to Come</a> 11</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c4"><span class="cn">II </span>What Caused Death Valley</a> 19</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c5"><span class="cn">III </span>Aaron and Rosie Winters</a> 25</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c6"><span class="cn">IV </span>John Searles and His Lake of Ooze</a> 30</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c7"><span class="cn">V </span>But Where Was God?</a> 35</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c8"><span class="cn">VI </span>Death Valley Geology</a> 39</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c9"><span class="cn">VII </span>Indians of the Area</a> 43</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c10"><span class="cn">VIII </span>Desert Gold. Too Many Fractions</a> 48</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c11"><span class="cn">IX </span>Romance Strikes the Parson</a> 53</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c12"><span class="cn">X </span>Greenwater&mdash;Last of the Boom Towns</a> 60</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c13"><span class="cn">XI </span>The Amargosa Country</a> 64</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c14"><span class="cn">XII </span>A Hovel That Ought To Be a Shrine</a> 82</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c15"><span class="cn">XIII </span>Sex in Death Valley Country</a> 87</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c16"><span class="cn">XIV </span>Shoshone Country. Resting Springs</a> 92</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c17"><span class="cn">XV </span>The Story of Charles Brown</a> 102</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c18"><span class="cn">XVI </span>Long Man, Short Man</a> 109</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c19"><span class="cn">XVII </span>Shorty Frank Harris</a> 113</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c20"><span class="cn">XVIII </span>A Million Dollar Poker Game</a> 125</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c21"><span class="cn">XIX </span>Death Valley Scotty</a> 130</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c22"><span class="cn">XX </span>Odd But Interesting Characters</a> 136</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c23"><span class="cn">XXI </span>Roads. Cracker Box Signs</a> 144</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c24"><span class="cn">XXII </span>Lost Mines. The Breyfogle and Others</a> 154</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c25"><span class="cn">XXIII </span>Panamint City. Genial Crooks</a> 164</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c26"><span class="cn">XXIV </span>Indian George. Legend of the Panamint</a> 171</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c27"><span class="cn">XXV </span>Ballarat. Ghost Town</a> 175</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c28">Index</a> 189</dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
-<h2 id="c2"><span class="small">THIS BOOK</span></h2>
-<p>This book is a personal narrative of people and places in Panamint
-Valley, the Amargosa Desert, and the Big Sink at the bottom of America.
-Most of the places which excited a gold-crazed world in the early part
-of the century are now no more, or are going back to sage. Of the actors
-who made the history of the period, few remain.</p>
-<p>It was the writer&rsquo;s good fortune that many of these men were his
-friends. Some were or would become tycoons of mining or industry.
-Some would lucklessly follow jackasses all their lives, to find no gold
-but perhaps a finer treasure&mdash;a rainbow in the sky that would never fade.</p>
-<p>It is the romance, the comedy, the often stark tragedy these men
-left along the trail which you will find in the pages that follow.</p>
-<p>Necessarily the history of the region, often dull, is given first because
-it gives a clearer picture of the background and second, because
-that history is little known, being buried in the generally unread diaries
-of John C. Fremont, Kit Carson, Lt. Brewerton, Jedediah Smith, and
-the stories of early Mormon explorers.</p>
-<p>It is interesting to note that a map popular with adventurers of
-Fremont&rsquo;s time could list only six states west of the Mississippi River.
-These were Texas, Indian Territory, Missouri, Oregon, and Mexico&rsquo;s
-two possessions&mdash;New Mexico and Upper California. There was no
-Idaho, Utah, Nevada, Arizona, Washington, or either of the Dakotas.
-No Kansas. No Nebraska.</p>
-<p>Sources of material are given in the text and though careful research
-was made, it should be understood that the history of Death
-Valley country is argumentative and bold indeed is one who says,
-&ldquo;Here are the facts.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>With something more than mere formality, the writer wishes to
-thank those mentioned below:</p>
-<p>My longtime friend, Senator Charles Brown of Shoshone who has
-often given valuable time to make available research material which
-otherwise would have been almost impossible to obtain. Of more value,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_10">10</span>
-have been his personal recollections of Greenwater, Goldfield, and
-Tonopah, in all of which places he had lived in their hectic days.</p>
-<p>Mrs. Charles Brown, daughter of the noted pioneer, Ralph Jacobus
-(Dad) Fairbanks and her sister, Mrs. Bettie Lisle, of Baker, California.
-The voluminous scrapbooks of both, including one of their mother,
-Celestia Abigail Fairbanks, all containing information of priceless value
-were always at my disposal while preparing the manuscript.</p>
-<p>Dad Fairbanks, innumerable times my host, was a walking encyclopedia
-of men and events.</p>
-<p>One depository of source material deserves special mention. Nailed
-to the wall of Shorty Harris&rsquo; Ballarat cabin was a box two feet wide,
-four feet long, with four shelves. The box served as a cupboard and its
-calico curtains operated on a drawstring. On the top shelf, Shorty would
-toss any letter, clipping, record of mine production, map, or bulletin that
-the mails had brought, visitors had given, or friends had sent. And there
-they gathered the dust of years.</p>
-<p>Wishing to locate the address of Peter B. Kyne, author of The Parson
-of Panamint, whose host Shorty had been, I removed these documents
-and discovered that the catch-all shelf was a veritable treasure of little-known
-facts about the Panamint of earlier days.</p>
-<p>There were maps, reports of geologic surveys, and bulletins now out
-of print; newspapers of the early years and scores of letters with valuable
-material bearing the names of men internationally known.</p>
-<p>It is with a sense of futility that I attempt to express my indebtedness
-to my wife, who with a patience I cannot comprehend, kept me searching
-for the facts whenever and wherever the facts were to be found;
-typing and re-typing the manuscript in its entirety many times to make
-it, if possible, a worthwhile book.</p>
-<p><span class="lr">Ontario, California, December 22, 1950</span></p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_11">11</div>
-<h2 id="c3"><span class="small">Chapter I</span>
-<br />A Foretaste of Things to Come</h2>
-<p>In the newspaper office where the writer worked, was a constant
-parade of adventurers. Talented press agents; promoters; moguls of
-mining and prospectors who, having struck it rich, now lived grandly
-in palatial homes, luxurious hotels or impressive clubs. In their wake,
-of course, was an engaging breed of liars, and an occasional adventuress
-who by luck or love had left a boom town crib to live thereafter &ldquo;in
-marble halls with vassals&rdquo; at her command. All brought arresting yarns
-of Death Valley.</p>
-<p>For 76 years this Big Sink at the bottom of America had been a
-land of mystery and romantic legend, but there had been little travel
-through it since the white man&rsquo;s first crossing. &ldquo;I would have starved
-to death on tourists&rsquo; trade,&rdquo; said the pioneer Ralph (Dad) Fairbanks.</p>
-<p>More than 3,000,000 people lived within a day&rsquo;s journey in 1925,
-but excepting a few, who lived in bordering villages and settlements,
-those who had actually been in Death Valley could be counted on one&rsquo;s
-fingers and toes. The reasons were practical. It was the hottest region
-in America, with few water holes and these far apart. There were no
-roads&mdash;only makeshift trails left by the wagons that had hauled borax
-in the Eighties. Now they were little more than twisting scars through
-brush, over dry washes and dunes, though listed on the maps as roads.
-For the novice it was a foolhardy gamble with death. &ldquo;There are easier
-ways of committing suicide,&rdquo; a seasoned desert man advised.</p>
-<p>I had been up and down the world more perhaps than the average
-person and this seemed to be a challenge to one with a vagabond&rsquo;s foot
-and a passion for remote places. So one day I set out for Death Valley.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<p>At the last outpost of civilization, a two-cabin resort, the sign over
-a sand-blasted, false-fronted building stressed: &ldquo;Free Information. Cabins.
-Eats. Gas. Oil. Refreshments.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Needing all these items, I parked my car and walked into a foretaste
-of things-to-come. The owner, a big, genial fellow, was behind the
-counter using his teeth to remove the cork from a bottle labeled
-&ldquo;Bourbon&rdquo;&mdash;a task he deftly accomplished by twisting on the bottle
-instead of the cork. &ldquo;I want a cabin for the night,&rdquo; I told him, &ldquo;and when
-you have time, all the free information I can get.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve come to headquarters,&rdquo; he beamed as he set the bottle on
-the table, glanced at me, then at the liquor and added: &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t know
-your drinking sentiments but if you&rsquo;d like to wet your whistle, take one
-on the house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>While he was getting glasses from a cabinet behind the counter, a
-slender, wiry man with baked skin, coal-black eyes and hair came
-through a rear door, removed a knapsack strapped across his shoulders
-and set it in the farthest corner of the room. Two or three books rolled
-out and were replaced only after he had wiped them carefully with a
-red bandana kerchief. A sweat-stained khaki shirt and faded blue overalls
-did not affect an impression he gave of some outstanding quality. It may
-have been the air of self assurance, the calm of his keen eyes or the
-majesty of his stride as he crossed the floor.</p>
-<p>My host glanced at the newcomer and set another glass on the table,
-&ldquo;You&rsquo;re in luck,&rdquo; he said to me. &ldquo;Here comes a man who can tell you
-anything you want to know about this country.&rdquo; A moment later the
-newcomer was introduced as &ldquo;Blackie.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Whatever Blackie tells you is gospel. Knows every trail man or
-beast ever made in that hell-hole, from one end to the other. Ain&rsquo;t that
-right, Blackie?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Without answering, Blackie focused an eye on the bottle, picked it
-up, shook it, watched the beads a moment. &ldquo;Bourbon hell ... just
-plain tongue oil.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After the drink my host showed me to one of the cabins&mdash;a small,
-boxlike structure. Opening the door he waved me in. &ldquo;One fellow said
-he couldn&rsquo;t whip a cat in this cabin, but you haven&rsquo;t got a cat.&rdquo; He set
-my suitcase on a sagging bed, brought in a bucket of water, put a clean
-towel on the roller and wiped the dust from a water glass with two big
-fingers. &ldquo;When you get settled come down and loaf with us. Just call
-me Bill. Calico Bill, I&rsquo;m known as. Came up here from the Calico
-Mountains.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just one question,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you get lonesome in all this
-desolation?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Lonesome? Mister, there&rsquo;s something going on every minute. You&rsquo;d
-be surprised. Like what happened this morning. Did you meet a truck
-on your way up, with a husky young driver and a girl in a skimpy dress?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;At a gas station a hundred miles back, and the girl
-was a breath-taker.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You can say that again,&rdquo; Bill grinned. &ldquo;Prettiest gal I ever saw&mdash;bar
-none. She&rsquo;s just turned eighteen. Married to a fellow fifty-five if he&rsquo;s a
-day. He owns a truck and hauls for a mine near here at so much a load.
-Jealous sort. Won&rsquo;t let her out of his sight. You can&rsquo;t blame a young
-fellow for looking at a pretty girl. But this brute is so crazy jealous he
-took to locking her up in his cabin while he was at work. Fact is, she&rsquo;s
-a nice clean kid and if I&rsquo;d known about it, I&rsquo;d have chased him off. I
-reckon she was too ashamed to tell anybody.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course the young fellows found it out and just to worry him,
-two or three of &rsquo;em came over here to play a prank on him and a hell
-of a prank it was. They made a lot of tracks around his cabin doors and
-windows. He saw the tracks and figured she&rsquo;d been stepping out on him.
-So instead of locking her in as usual, he began to take her to work with
-him so he could keep his eyes on her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yesterday it happened. His truck broke down and this morning he
-left early to get parts, but he was smart enough to take her shoes with
-him. Then he nailed the doors and windows from the outside. Soon as
-he was out of hearing, somehow she busted out and came down to my
-store barefooted and asked me if I knew of any way she could get a ride
-out. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m leaving, if I have to walk,&rsquo; she says. Then she told me her story.
-He&rsquo;d bought her back in Oklahoma for $500. She is one of ten children.
-Her folks didn&rsquo;t have enough to feed &rsquo;em all. This old guy, who lived in
-their neighborhood and had money, talked her parents into the deal. &lsquo;I
-just couldn&rsquo;t see my little sisters go hungry,&rsquo; she said, and like a fool she
-married him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I reckon the Lord was with her. We see about three outside trucks
-a year around here, but I&rsquo;d no sooner fixed her up with a pair of shoes
-before one pulls up for gas. I asked the driver if he&rsquo;d give her a ride to
-Barstow. He took just one look. &lsquo;I sure will,&rsquo; he says and off they went.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You see what I mean,&rdquo; Bill said, concluding his story. &ldquo;Things like
-that. Of course we don&rsquo;t watch no parades but we also don&rsquo;t get pushed
-around and run over and tromped on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the last twelve words Bill expressed what hundreds have failed to
-explain in pages of flowered phrase&mdash;the appeal of the desert.</p>
-<p>Soon I was back at the store. Bill and Blackie, over a new bottle
-were swapping memories of noted desert characters who had highlighted
-the towns and camps from Tonopah to the last hell-roarer. The
-<span class="pb" id="Page_14">14</span>
-great, the humble, the odd and eccentric. Through their conversation
-ran such names as Fireball Fan; Mike Lane; Mother Featherlegs; Shorty
-Harris; Tiger Lil; Hungry Hattie; Cranky Casey; Johnny-Behind-the-Gun;
-Dad Fairbanks; Fraction Jack Stewart; the Indian, Hungry Bill;
-and innumerable Slims and Shortys featured in yarns of the wasteland.</p>
-<p>Blackie&rsquo;s chief interest in life, Bill told me was books. &ldquo;About all
-he does is read. Doesn&rsquo;t have to work. Of course, like everybody in this
-country, he&rsquo;s always going to find $2,000,000,000 this week or next.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Though only incidental, history was brought into their conversation
-when Bill, giving me &ldquo;free information&rdquo; as his sign announced, told me
-I would be able to see the place where Manly crossed the Panamint.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Manly never knew where he crossed,&rdquo; Blackie said. &ldquo;He tried to tell
-about it 40 years afterward and all he did was to start an argument that&rsquo;s
-going on yet. That&rsquo;s why I say you can write the known facts about
-Death Valley history on a postage stamp with the end of your thumb.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The tongue oil loosened Calico Bill&rsquo;s story of Indian George and his
-trained mountain sheep. &ldquo;George had the right idea about gold. Find it,
-then take it out as needed. One time an artist came to George&rsquo;s ranch and
-made a picture of the ram. When he had finished it he stepped behind
-his easel and was watching George eat a raw gopher snake when the
-goat came up. Rams are jealous and mistaking the picture for a rival, he
-charged like a thunderbolt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It didn&rsquo;t hurt the picture, but knocked the painter and George
-through both walls of George&rsquo;s shanty. George picked himself up. &lsquo;Heap
-good picture. Me want.&rsquo; The fellow gave it to him and for months George
-would tease that goat with the picture. One day he left it on a boulder
-while he went for his horse. When he got back, the boulder was split
-wide open and the picture was on top of a tree 50 feet away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Somebody told George about a steer in the Chicago packing house
-which led other steers to the slaughter pen and it gave George an idea.
-One day I found him and his goat in a Panamint canyon and asked why
-he brought the goat along. &lsquo;Me broke. Need gold.&rsquo; Since he didn&rsquo;t have
-pick, shovel, or dynamite, I asked how he expected to get gold.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Pick, shovel heap work,&rsquo; George said. &lsquo;Dynamite maybe kill. Sheep
-better. Me show you.&rsquo; He told me to move to a safe place and after
-scattering some grain around for the goat, George scaled the boulder. It
-was big as a house. A moment later I saw him unroll the picture and with
-strings attached, let it rest on one corner of the big rock. Then holding
-the strings, he disappeared into his blind higher up. Suddenly he made a
-hissing noise. The Big Horn stiffened, saw the picture, lowered his head
-and never in my life have I seen such a crash. Dust filled the air and
-fragments fell for 10 minutes. When I went over George was gathering
-<span class="pb" id="Page_15">15</span>
-nuggets big as goose eggs. &lsquo;White man heap dam&rsquo; fool,&rsquo; he grunted.
-&lsquo;Wants too much gold all same time. Maybe lose. Maybe somebody steal.
-No can steal boulder.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The &ldquo;tongue oil&rdquo; had been disposed of when Blackie suggested that
-we step over to his place, a short distance around the point of a hill.
-&ldquo;Plenty more there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bill had told me that as a penniless youngster Blackie had walked
-up Odessa Canyon one afternoon. Within three days he was rated as a
-millionaire. Within three months he was broke again. Later Blackie told
-me, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s somebody&rsquo;s dream. I got about $200,000 and decided I belonged
-up in the Big Banker group. They welcomed me and skinned me
-out of my money in no time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was Blackie who proved to my satisfaction that money has only a
-minor relation to happiness. His house was part dobe, part white tufa
-blocks. On his table was a student&rsquo;s lamp, a pipe, and can of tobacco. A
-book held open by a hand axe. Other books were shelved along the wall.
-He had an incongruous walnut cabinet with leaded glass doors. Inside, a
-well-filled decanter and a dozen whiskey glasses and a pleasant aroma of
-bourbon came from a keg covered with a gunny sack and set on a stool
-in the corner.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This country&rsquo;s hard on the throat,&rdquo; he explained.</p>
-<p>Blackie&rsquo;s kingdom seemed to have extended from the morning star
-to the setting sun. He had been in the Yukon, in New Zealand, South
-Africa, and the Argentine. Gold, hemp, sugar, and ships had tossed
-fortunes at him which were promptly lost or spent.</p>
-<p>For a man who had found compensation for such luck, there is no
-defeat. Certainly his philosophy seemed to meet his needs and that is the
-function of philosophy.</p>
-<p>It was cool in the late evening and he made a fire, chucked one end
-of an eight-foot log into the stove and put a chair under the protruding
-end. Bill asked why he didn&rsquo;t cut the log. &ldquo;Listen,&rdquo; Blackie said, &ldquo;you&rsquo;re
-one of 100 million reasons why this country is misgoverned. Why should
-I sweat over that log when a fire will do the job?... That book?
-Just some fellow&rsquo;s plan for a perfect world. I hope I&rsquo;ll not be around
-when they have it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The town of Calico? It was a live one. When John McBryde and
-Lowery Silver discovered the white metal there, a lot of us desert rats got
-in the big money. In the first seven years of the Eighties it was bonanza
-and in the eighth the town was dead.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But the stories of fortunes made in Mule and Odessa Canyons were
-of less importance to him than a habit of the town judge. &ldquo;Chewed
-tobacco all the time and swallowed the juice, &lsquo;If a fellow&rsquo;s guts can&rsquo;t
-<span class="pb" id="Page_16">16</span>
-stand it,&rsquo; he would say, &lsquo;he ought to quit,&rsquo; and he&rsquo;d clap a fine on anybody
-who spat in his court.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Never knew Jack Dent, did you? Englishman. Now there was a
-drinking man. Said his only ambition was to die drunk. One pay day he
-got so cockeyed he couldn&rsquo;t stand, so his pals laid him on a pool table
-and went on with their drinking. Every time they ordered, Jack hollered
-for his and somebody would take it over and pour it down him. &lsquo;Keep
-&rsquo;em comin&rsquo;,&rsquo; he says. &lsquo;If I doze off, just pry my jaws open and pour it
-down.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The boys took him at his word. Every time they drank, they took a
-drink to Jack. When the last round came they took Jack a big one. They
-tried to pry his lips open but the lips didn&rsquo;t give. Jack Dent&rsquo;s funeral was
-the biggest ever held in the town.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bill was telling you I made a million there, and every now and then
-I hear of somebody telling somebody else I made a million in Africa.
-And another in the Yukon. The truth is, what little I&rsquo;ve got came out of
-a hole in a whiskey barrel instead of a mine shaft.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A few years back a strike was made down in the Avawatz that
-started a baby gold rush. I joined it. A fellow named Gypsum came in
-with a barrel of whiskey, thinking there&rsquo;d be a town, but it didn&rsquo;t turn
-out that way. Gypsum had no trouble disposing of his liquor and stayed
-around to do a little prospecting. One day when I was starting for Johannesburg,
-he asked me to deliver a message to a bartender there.
-Gypsum had a meat cleaver in his hand and was sharpening it on a
-butcher&rsquo;s steel to cut up a mountain sheep he&rsquo;d killed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Just ask for Klondike and tell him to send my stuff. He&rsquo;ll understand.
-Tell him if he doesn&rsquo;t send it, I&rsquo;m coming after it.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know at the time that Gypsum had killed three men in
-honest combat and that one of them had been dispatched with a meat
-cleaver.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I delivered the message verbatim. Klondike looked a bit worried.
-&lsquo;What&rsquo;s Gypsum doing?&rsquo; he asked. &lsquo;When I left,&rsquo; I said, &lsquo;he was sharpening
-a meat cleaver.&rsquo; Klondike turned white. &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll have it ready before
-you go.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When I called later, he told me he&rsquo;d put Gypsum&rsquo;s stuff in the back
-of my car. When I got back to camp and Gypsum came to my tent to
-ask about it, I told him to get it out of the car, which was parked a few
-feet away. Gypsum went for it and in a moment I heard him cussing. I
-looked out and he was trying to shoulder a heavy sack. Before I could
-get out to help him, the sack got away from him and burst at his feet.
-The ground was covered with nickles, dimes, quarters, halves. &lsquo;There&rsquo;s
-another sack.&rsquo; Gypsum said. &lsquo;The son of a bitch has sent me $2500 in
-chicken feed. Just for spite.&rsquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_17">17</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Because it was a nuisance, Gypsum loaned it to the fellows about,
-all of whom were his friends. They didn&rsquo;t want it but took it just to accommodate
-Gypsum. There was nothing to spend it for. Somebody started
-a poker game and I let &rsquo;em use my tent because it was the largest. I
-rigged up a table by sawing Gypsum&rsquo;s whiskey barrel in two and nailing
-planks over the open end. Every night after supper they started playing.
-I furnished light and likker and usually I set out grub. It didn&rsquo;t cost much
-but somebody suggested that in order to reimburse me, two bits should
-be taken out of every jackpot. A hole was slit in the top. It was a fast
-game and the stakes high. It ran for weeks every evening and the Saturday
-night session ended Monday morning.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course some were soon broke and they began to borrow from
-one another. Finally everybody was broke and all the money was in my
-kitty. I took the top off the barrel and loaned it to the players, taking
-I.O.U.&rsquo;s, I had to take the top off a dozen times and when it was finally
-decided there was no pay dirt in the Avawatz, I had a sack full of I.O.U.&rsquo;s.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Once I tried to figure out how many times that $2500 was loaned,
-but I gave up. I learned though, why these bankers pick up a pencil
-and start figuring the minute you start talking. They are on the right end
-of the pencil.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Early the next morning while Bill was servicing my car for the trip
-ahead, with some tactful mention of handy gadgets he had for sale, we
-noticed Blackie coming with a man who ran largely to whiskers. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s
-old Cloudburst Pete,&rdquo; Bill told me. &ldquo;Another old timer who has shuffled
-all over this country.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How did he get that moniker?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One time Pete came in here and was telling us fellows about a narrow
-escape he had from a cloudburst over in the Panamint. Pete said the
-cloud was just above him and about to burst and would have filled the
-canyon with a wall of water 90 feet high. A city fellow who had stopped
-for gas, asked Pete how come he didn&rsquo;t get drowned. Pete took a notion
-the fellow was trying to razz him. &lsquo;Well, Mister, if you must know, I
-lassoed the cloud, ground-hitched it and let it bust....&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After greeting Pete, Bill asked if he&rsquo;d been walking all night.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Naw,&rdquo; Pete said. &ldquo;Started around 11 o&rsquo;clock, I reckon. Not so bad
-before sunup. Be hell going back. But I didn&rsquo;t come here to growl about
-the weather. I want some powder so I can get started. Found color yesterday.
-Looks like I&rsquo;m in the big money.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fine,&rdquo; Bill said. &ldquo;I heard you&rsquo;ve been laid up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I broke a leg awhile back. Fell in a mine shaft. Didn&rsquo;t amount
-to much.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know about that, but didn&rsquo;t you get hurt in a blast since then?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_18">18</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh that&mdash;yeh. Got blowed out of a 20-foot hole. Three-four ribs
-busted, the doc said. Come to think of it, believe he mentioned a fractured
-collar bone. Wasn&rsquo;t half as bad as last week.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good Lord ... what happened last week?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That crazy Cyclone Thompson. You know him ... he pulled a
-stope gate and let five-six tons of muck down on me. Nobody knew it&mdash;not
-even Cyclone. Wore my fingers to the bone scratching out. Look at
-these hands....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Pete held up his mutilated hands. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll heal but bigod&mdash;that pair
-of brand new double-stitched overalls won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Bill chuckled, &ldquo;you know where the powder is. Go in and
-get it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bill and Blackie remained to see me off, each with a friendly word
-of advice. &ldquo;Just follow the wheel tracks,&rdquo; Bill said, as I climbed into
-my car and Blackie added: &ldquo;Keep your eyes peeled for the cracker box
-signs along the edge of the road. You&rsquo;ll see &rsquo;em nailed to a stake and
-stuck in the ground.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A moment later I was headed into a silence broken only by the whip
-of sage against the car. Ahead was the glimmer of a dry lake and in the
-distance a great mass of jumbled mountains that notched the pale skies.
-Beyond&mdash;what?</p>
-<p>I never dreamed then that for twenty-five years I would be poking
-around in those deceiving hills.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_19">19</div>
-<h2 id="c4"><span class="small">Chapter II</span>
-<br />What Caused Death Valley?</h2>
-<p>When you travel through the desolation of Death Valley along the
-Funeral Range, you may find it difficult to believe that several thousand
-feet above the top of your car was once a cool, inviting land with rivers
-and forests and lakes, and that hundreds of feet below you are the dry
-beds of seas that washed its shores.</p>
-<p>Scientists assert that all life&mdash;both animal and vegetable began in
-these buried seas&mdash;probably two and one-half billion years ago.</p>
-<p>It is certain that no life could have existed on the thin crust of earth
-covered as it was with deadly gases. Therefore, your remotest ancestors
-must have been sea creatures until they crawled out or were washed
-ashore in one of Nature&rsquo;s convulsions to become land dwellers.</p>
-<p>Since sea water contains more gold than has ever been found on the
-earth, it may be said that man on his way up from the lowest form of
-life was born in a solution of gold.</p>
-<p>That he survived, is due to two urges&mdash;the sex urge and the urge
-for food. Without either all life would cease.</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Note.</span> The author&rsquo;s book, <i>Life&rsquo;s Grand Stairway</i> soon to be published,
-contains a fast moving, factual story of man and his eternal quest
-for gold from the beginning of recorded time.</p>
-<p>Camping one night at Mesquite Spring, I heard a prospector cursing
-his burro. It wasn&rsquo;t a casual cursing, but a classic revelation of one who
-knew burros&mdash;the soul of them, from inquisitive eyes to deadly heels. A
-moment later he was feeding lumps of sugar to the beast and the feud
-ended on a pleasant note.</p>
-<p>We were sitting around the camp fire later when the prospector
-showed me a piece of quartz that glittered at twenty feet.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you have much?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_20">20</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got more than Carter had oats, and I&rsquo;m pulling out at daylight.
-Me and Thieving Jack.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; I said aimlessly, &ldquo;you&rsquo;ll retire to a life of luxury; have a
-palace, a housekeeper, and a French chef.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nope. Chinaman cook. Friend of mine struck it rich. He had a
-female cook. After that he couldn&rsquo;t call his soul his own. Me? First
-money I spend goes for pie. Never had my fill of pie. Next&mdash;&rdquo; He paused
-and looked affectionately at Thieving Jack. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to buy a ranch
-over at Lone Pine with a stream running smack through the middle.
-Snow water. I aim to build a fence head high all around it and pension
-that burro off. As for me&mdash;no mansion. Just a cottage with a screen
-porch all around. I&rsquo;m sick of horseflies and mosquitoes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He was off at sunrise and my thought was that God went with him
-and Thieving Jack.</p>
-<p>If you encounter scorching heat you will find little comfort in the
-fact that icebergs once floated in those ancient seas. It is almost certain
-that you will be curious about the disorderly jumble of gutted hills; the
-colorful canyons and strange formations and ask yourself what caused it.</p>
-<p>The answer is found on Black Mountain in the Funeral Range. Here
-occurred a convulsion of nature without any known parallel and the
-tops of nearby mountains became the bottom of America&mdash;an upheaval
-so violent that the oldest rocks were squeezed under pressure from the
-nethermost stratum of the earth to lie alongside the youngest on the
-surface.</p>
-<p>The seas and the fish vanished. The forests were buried. The prehistoric
-animals, the dinosaurs and elephants were trapped.</p>
-<p>The result, after undetermined ages, is today&rsquo;s Death Valley. A
-shorter explanation was that of my companion on my first trip to Black
-Mountain&mdash;a noted desert character&mdash;Jackass Slim. There we found a
-scientist who wished to enlighten us. To his conversation sprinkled with
-such words as Paleozoic and pre-Cambrian Slim listened raptly for an
-hour. Then the learned man asked Slim if he had made it plain.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure,&rdquo; Slim said. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been trying to say hell broke loose.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Indians, who saw Death Valley first, called it &ldquo;Tomesha,&rdquo; which
-means Ground Afire, and warned adventurers, explorers, and trappers
-that it was a vast sunken region, intolerant of life.</p>
-<p>The first white Americans known to have seen it, belonged to the
-party of explorers led by John C. Fremont and guided by Kit Carson.</p>
-<p>Death Valley ends on the south in the narrow opening between the
-terminus of the Panamint Range and that of the Black Mountains.
-Through this opening, though unaware of it, Fremont saw the dry stream
-bed of the Amargosa River, on April 27, 1844, flowing north and in the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_21">21</span>
-distance &ldquo;a high, snowy mountain.&rdquo; This mountain was Telescope Peak,
-11,045 feet high.</p>
-<p>Nearly six years later, impatient Forty Niners enroute to California
-gold fields, having heard that the shortest way was through this forbidden
-sink, demanded that their guide take them across it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will go to hell with you, but not through Death Valley,&rdquo; said the
-wise Mormon guide, Captain Jefferson Hunt.</p>
-<p>Scoffing Hunt&rsquo;s warning, the Bennett-Arcane party deserted and
-with the Jayhawkers became the first white Americans to cross Death
-Valley. The suffering of the deserters, widely advertised, gave the region
-an evil reputation that kept it practically untraveled, unexplored, and
-accursed for the next 75 years, or until Charles Brown of Shoshone succeeded
-in having wheel tracks replaced with roads.</p>
-<p>With the opening of the Eichbaum toll road from Lone Pine to
-Stovepipe Wells in 1926-7 a trickle of tourists began, but actually as
-late as 1932, Death Valley had fewer visitors than the Congo. A few
-prospectors, a few daring adventurers and a few ranchers had found in
-the areas adjoining, something in the great Wide Open that answered
-man&rsquo;s inherent craving for freedom and peace. &ldquo;The hills that shut this
-valley in,&rdquo; explained the old timer, &ldquo;also shut out the mess we left
-behind.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tales of treasure came in the wake of the Forty Niners but it was
-not until 1860 that the first prospecting party was organized by Dr.
-Darwin French at Oroville, California. In the fall of that year he set out
-to find the Lost Gunsight mine, the story of which is told in another
-chapter.</p>
-<p>On this trip Dr. French discovered and gave his name to Darwin
-Falls and Darwin Wash in the Panamint range. He named Bennett&rsquo;s
-Well on the floor of Death Valley to honor Asa (or Asabel) Bennett,
-a member of the Bennett-Arcane party. He gave the name of another
-member of that party to Towne&rsquo;s Pass, now a thrilling route into Death
-Valley but then a breath-taking challenge to death.</p>
-<p>He named Furnace Creek after finding there a crude furnace for
-reducing ore. He also named Panamint Valley and Panamint Range, but
-neither the origin of the word Panamint nor its significance is known.
-Indians found there said their tribe was called Panamint, but those
-around there are Shoshones and Piutes. (See <a href="#piute">note</a> at end of this chapter.)</p>
-<p>Also in 1860 William Lewis Manly who with John Rogers, a brave
-and husky Tennessean had rescued the survivors of the Bennett-Arcane
-party, returned to the valley he had named, to search for the Gunsight.
-Manly found nothing and reported later he was deserted by his companions
-and escaped death only when rescued by a wandering Indian.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_22">22</div>
-<p>In 1861 Lt. Ives on a surveying mission explored a part of the valley
-in connection with the California Boundary Commission. He used for
-pack animals some of the camels which had been provided by Jefferson
-Davis, Secretary of War, for transporting supplies across the western
-deserts.</p>
-<p>In 1861 Dr. S. G. George, who had been a member of French&rsquo;s
-party, organized one of his own and for the same reason&mdash;to find the
-Lost Gunsight. He made several locations of silver and gold, explored
-a portion of the Panamint Range. The first man ever to scale Telescope
-Peak was a member of the George party. He was W. T. Henderson, who
-had also been with Dr. French. Henderson named the mountain &ldquo;because,&rdquo;
-he said, &ldquo;I could see for 200 miles in all directions as clearly as
-through a telescope.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The most enduring accomplishment of the party was to bring back
-a name for the mountain range east of what is now known as Owens
-Valley, named for one of Fremont&rsquo;s party of explorers. From an Indian
-chief they learned this range was called Inyo and meant &ldquo;the home of a
-Great Spirit.&rdquo; Ultimately the name was given to the county in the southeast
-corner of which is Death Valley.</p>
-<p>Tragedy dogged all the early expeditions. July 21, 1871 the Wheeler
-expedition left Independence to explore Death Valley. This party of 60
-included geologists, botanists, naturalists, and soldiers. One detachment
-was under command of Lt. George Wheeler. Lt. Lyle led the other.
-Lyle&rsquo;s detachment was guided by C. F. R. Hahn and the third day out
-Hahn was sent ahead to locate water. John Koehler, a naturalist of the
-party is alleged to have said that he would kill Hahn if he didn&rsquo;t find
-water. Failing to return Hahn was abandoned to his fate and he was
-never seen again.</p>
-<p>William Eagan, guide of Wheeler&rsquo;s party was sent to Rose Springs
-for water. He also failed to return. What became of him is not known
-and the army officers were justly denounced for callous indifference. On
-the desert, inexcusable desertion of a companion brands the deserter as
-an outcast and has often resulted in his lynching.</p>
-<p>It is interesting to note that apart from a Government Land Survey
-in 1856, which proved to be utterly worthless, there is no authentic
-record of the white man in Death Valley between 1849 and 1860. However,
-during this decade the canyons on the west side of the Panamint
-harbored numerous renegades who had held up a Wells-Fargo stage or
-slit a miner&rsquo;s throat for his poke of gold. Some were absorbed into the
-life of the wasteland when the discovery of silver in Surprise Canyon
-brought a hectic mob of adventurers to create hell-roaring Panamint
-City.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_23">23</div>
-<p>When, in the middle Seventies Nevada silver kings, John P. Jones
-and Wm. R. Stewart, who were Fortune&rsquo;s children on the Comstock, decided
-$2,000,000 was enough to lose at Panamint City, many of the outlaws
-wandered over the mountain and down the canyon to cross Death
-Valley and settle wherever they thought they could survive on the eastern
-approaches.</p>
-<p>Soon Ash Meadows, Furnace Creek Ranch, Stump Springs, the
-Manse Ranch, Resting Springs, and Pahrump Ranch became landmarks.</p>
-<p>The first white man known to have settled in Death Valley was a
-person of some cunning and no conscience, known as Bellerin&rsquo; Teck,
-Bellowing Tex Bennett, and Bellowin&rsquo; Teck. He settled at Furnace Creek
-in 1870 and erected a shanty alongside the water where the Bennett-Arcane
-party had camped when driven from Ash Meadows by Indians
-whose gardens they had raided and whose squaws they had abused, according
-to a legend of the Indians and referred to with scant attention
-to details, by Manly. (Panamint Tom, famed Indian of the region, in
-speaking of this raid by the whites, told me that the head man of his
-tribe sent runners to Ash Meadows for reinforcements and that the recruits
-were marched in circles around boulders and in and out of ravines
-to give the impression of superior strength. This strategy deceived the
-whites, who then went on their way.)</p>
-<p>Teck claimed title to all the country in sight. Little is known of his
-past, but whites later understood that he chose the forbidding region to
-outsmart a sheriff. He brought water through an open ditch from its
-source in the nearby foothills and grew alfalfa and grain. He named his
-place Greenland Ranch and it was the beginning of the present Furnace
-Creek Ranch.</p>
-<p>There is a tradition that Teck supplemented his meager earnings
-from the ranch by selling half interests to wayfarers, subsequently driving
-them off.</p>
-<p>There remains a record of one such victim&mdash;a Mormon adventurer
-named Jackson. In part payment Teck took a pair of oxen, Jackson&rsquo;s
-money and his only weapon, a rifle. Shortly Teck began to show signs of
-dissatisfaction. His temper flared more frequently and Jackson became
-increasingly alarmed. When finally Teck came bellowing from his cabin,
-brandishing his gun, Jackson did the right thing at the right moment.
-He fled, glad to escape with his life.</p>
-<p>This became the pattern for the next wayfarer and the next. Teck
-always craftily demanded their weapons in the trade, but knowing that
-sooner or later some would take their troubles to a sheriff or return for
-revenge, Teck sold the ranch, left the country and no trace of his destiny
-remains.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div>
-<p>Before Aaron and Rosie Winters or Borax Smith ever saw Death
-Valley, one who was to attain fame greater than either listed more than
-2000 different plants that grew in the area.</p>
-<p>Notwithstanding this important contribution to knowledge of the
-valley&rsquo;s flora, only one or two historians have mentioned his name, and
-these in books or periodicals long out of print.</p>
-<p>Two decades later he was to become famous as Brigadier General
-Frederick Funston of the Spanish-American War&mdash;the only major war in
-America&rsquo;s history fought by an army which was composed entirely of
-volunteers without a single draftee.</p>
-<p>Of interest to this writer is the fact that he was my brigade commander
-and a soldier from the boots up. Not five feet tall, he was every
-inch a fighting man. I served with him while he captured Emilio Aguinaldo,
-famous <i>Filipino Insurrecto</i>.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_25">25</div>
-<h2 id="c5"><span class="small">Chapter III</span>
-<br />Aaron and Rosie Winters</h2>
-<p>While Bellerin&rsquo; Teck was selling half interests in the spectacular hills
-to the unwary, he actually walked over a treasure of more millions than
-his wildest dreams had conjured.</p>
-<p>Teck&rsquo;s nearest neighbor lived at Ash Meadows about 60 miles east
-of the valley.</p>
-<p>Ash Meadows is a flat desert area in Nevada along the California
-border. With several water holes, subterranean streams, and abundant
-wild grass it was a resting place for early emigrants and a hole-in for
-prospectors. It was also an ideal refuge for gentlemen who liked its
-distance from sheriffs and the ease with which approaching horsemen
-could be seen from nearby hills.</p>
-<p>Lacking was woman. The male needed the female but there wasn&rsquo;t
-a white woman in the country. So he took what the market afforded&mdash;a
-squaw and not infrequently two or three. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s my son all right,&rdquo; a
-patriarch once informed me, &ldquo;but it&rsquo;s been so long I don&rsquo;t exactly
-recollect which of them squaws was his mother.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Usually the wife was bought. Sometimes for a trinket. Often a
-horse. Among the trappers who first blazed the trails to the West, 30
-beaver skins were considered a fair price for an able bodied squaw. She
-was capable in rendering domestic service and loyal in love. Too often
-the consort&rsquo;s fidelity was transient.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;For 20 years,&rdquo; said the noted trapper, Killbuck, &ldquo;I packed a squaw
-along&mdash;not one, but a many. First I had a Blackfoot&mdash;the darndest slut
-as ever cried for fo-farrow. I lodge-poled her on Coulter&rsquo;s Creek ... as
-good as four packs of beaver I gave for old Bull-tail&rsquo;s daughter. He was
-the head chief of the Ricaree. Thar wan&rsquo;t enough scarlet cloth nor beads
-... in Sublette&rsquo;s packs for her ... I sold her to Cross-Eagle for
-one of Jake Hawkins&rsquo; guns.... Then I tried the Sioux, the Shian
-<span class="pb" id="Page_26">26</span>
-(Cheyenne) and a Digger from the other side, who made the best moccasins
-as ever I wore.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So Aaron Winters chose his mate from the available supply and
-with Rosie, part Mexican and Indian, part Spanish, he settled in Ash
-Meadows in a dugout. In front and adjoining had been added a shack,
-part wood, part stone. The floors were dirt. Rosie dragged in posts, poles,
-and brush and made a shed. Aaron found time between hunting and
-trapping to add a room of unmortared stone. At times there was no
-money, but pi&ntilde;on nuts grew in the mountains, desert tea and squaw
-cabbage were handy and the beans of mesquite could be ground into
-flour.</p>
-<p>Rosie, to whom one must yield admiration, was not the first woman
-in Winters&rsquo; life. &ldquo;He liked his women,&rdquo; Ed Stiles recalled, &ldquo;and changed
-&rsquo;em often.&rdquo; But to Rosie, Aaron Winters was always devoted. Her material
-reward was little but all who knew her praised her beauty and her
-virtues.</p>
-<p>One day when dusk was gathering there was a rap on the sagging
-slab door and Rosie Winters opened it on an angel unawares. The
-Winters invited the stranger in, shared their meager meal. After supper
-they sat up later than usual, listening to the story of the stranger&rsquo;s travels.
-He was looking for borax, he told them. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a white stuff....&rdquo; At
-this time, only two or three unimportant deposits of borax were known to
-exist in America and the average prospector knew nothing about it.</p>
-<p>The first borax was mined in Tibet. There in the form of tincal it
-was loaded on the backs of sheep, transported across the Himalayas and
-shipped to London. It was so rare that it was sold by the ounce. Later the
-more intelligent of the western prospectors began to learn that borax
-was something to keep in mind.</p>
-<p>To Aaron Winters it was just something bought in a drug store, but
-Rosie was interested in the &ldquo;white stuff.&rdquo; She wanted to know how one
-could tell when the white stuff was borax. Patiently the guest explained
-how to make the tests: &ldquo;Under the torch it will burn green....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Finally Rosie made a bed for the wayfarer in the lean-to and long
-after he blew out his candle Rosie Winters lay awake, wondering about
-some white stuff she&rsquo;d seen scattered over a flat down in the hellish heat
-of Death Valley. She remembered that it whitened the crust of a big
-area, stuck to her shoes and clothes and got in her hair when the wind
-lifted the silt.</p>
-<p>The next morning Rosie and Aaron bade the guest good luck and
-goodbye and he went into the horizon without even leaving his name.
-Then Rosie turned to Aaron: &ldquo;Maybe,&rdquo; she said ... &ldquo;maybe that
-<span class="pb" id="Page_27">27</span>
-white stuff we see that time below Furnace Creek&mdash;maybe that is borax.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Might be,&rdquo; Aaron answered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t we go see?&rdquo; Rosie asked. &ldquo;Maybe some Big Horn
-sheep&mdash;&rdquo; Rosie knew her man and Aaron Winters got his rifle and
-Rosie packed the sow-belly and beans.</p>
-<p>It was a long, gruelling trip down into the valley under a Death
-Valley sun but hope sustained them. They made their camp at Furnace
-Creek, then Rosie led Aaron over the flats she remembered. She scooped
-up some of the white stuff that looked like cotton balls while Aaron
-prepared for the test. Then the brief, uncertain moment when the white
-stuff touched the flame. Tensely they watched, Aaron grimly curious
-rather than hopeful; Rosie with pounding heart and lips whispering a
-prayer.</p>
-<p>Then, miracle of miracles&mdash;the green flame. They looked excitedly
-into each other&rsquo;s eyes, each unable to believe. In that moment, Rosie,
-always devout, lifted her eyes to heaven and thanked her God. Neither
-had any idea of the worth of their find. Vaguely they knew it meant
-spending money. A new what-not for Rosie&rsquo;s mantel. Perhaps pine
-boards to cover the hovel&rsquo;s dirt floor; maybe a few pieces of golden oak
-furniture; a rifle with greater range than Aaron&rsquo;s old one; silk or satin
-to make a dress for Rosie.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Writers have had to draw on their imagination for what happened,&rdquo;
-a descendant of the Winters once told me. &ldquo;They say Uncle Aaron
-exclaimed, &lsquo;Rosie, she burns green!&rsquo; or &lsquo;Rosie, we&rsquo;re rich!&rsquo; but Aunt
-Rosie said they were so excited they couldn&rsquo;t remember, but she knew
-what they did! They went over to the ditch that Bellerin&rsquo; Teck had dug
-to water the ranch and in its warm water soaked their bunioned feet.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Returning to Ash Meadows they faced the problem of what to do
-with the &ldquo;white stuff.&rdquo; Unlike gold, it couldn&rsquo;t be sold on sight, because
-it was a new industry, and little was known about its handling. Finally
-Aaron learned that a rich merchant in San Francisco, named Coleman
-was interested in borax in a small way and lost no time in sending
-samples to Coleman.</p>
-<p>W. T. Coleman was a Kentucky aristocrat who had come to California
-during the gold rush and attained both fortune and the affection
-of the people of the state. He had been chosen leader of the famed
-Vigilantes, who had rescued San Francisco from a gang of the lawless
-as tough as the world ever saw.</p>
-<p>Actually Coleman&rsquo;s interest in borax was a minor incident in the
-handling of his large fortune and his passionate devotion to the development
-of his adopted state. For that reason alone, Coleman had become
-<span class="pb" id="Page_28">28</span>
-interested in the small deposits of borax discovered by Francis Smith,
-first at Columbus Marsh.</p>
-<p>Smith had been a prospector before coming to California, wandering
-all over western country, looking for gold and silver. He was one of
-those who had heard that borax was worth keeping in mind.</p>
-<p>Reaching Nevada and needing a grubstake, he began to cut wood
-to supply mines around Columbus, Aurora, and Candelaria. On Teel&rsquo;s
-Marsh he found a large growth of mesquite, built a shack and claimed
-all the wood and the site as his own. Upon a portion of it, some Mexicans
-had cut and corded some of the wood and Smith refused to let them haul
-it off. They left grudgingly and with threats to return. The Mexicans, of
-course, had as much right to the wood as Smith.</p>
-<p>Sensing trouble and having no weapons at his camp, he went twelve
-miles to borrow a rifle. But there were no cartridges and he had to ride
-sixty miles over the mountains to Aurora where he found only four. Returning
-to his shack, he found the Mexicans had also returned with
-reinforcements. Twenty-four were now at work and their mood was
-murderous. Smith had a companion whose courage he didn&rsquo;t trust and
-ordered him to go out in the brush and keep out of the way.</p>
-<p>The Mexicans told Smith they were going to take the wood. Smith
-warned that he would kill the first man who touched the pile. With
-only four cartridges to kill 20 men, it was obviously a bluff. One of the
-Mexicans went to the pile and picked up a stick. Smith put his rifle to his
-shoulder and ordered the fellow to drop it. Unafraid and still holding the
-stick the Mexican said: &ldquo;You may kill me, but my friends will kill you.
-Put your rifle down and we will talk it over.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They had cut additional wood during his absence and demanded
-that they be permitted to take all the wood they had cut. Smith consented
-and when the Mexicans had gone he staked out the marsh as a mining
-claim&mdash;which led to the connection with Coleman.</p>
-<p>Upon receipt of Winters&rsquo; letter, Coleman forwarded it to Smith and
-asked him to investigate the Winters claim. Smith&rsquo;s report was enthusiastic.
-Coleman then sent two capable men, William Robertson and
-Rudolph Neuenschwander to look over the Winters discovery, with
-credentials to buy. Again Rosie and Aaron Winters heard the flutter of
-angel wings at the hovel door. This time the angels left $20,000. Rarely
-in this world has buyer bought so much for so little, but to Aaron and
-Rosie Winters it was all the money in the world.</p>
-<p>Despite the troubles of operating in a place so remote from market
-and with problems of a product about which too little was known, borax
-was soon adding $100,000 a year to Coleman&rsquo;s already fabulous fortune.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
-<p>Francis M. (Borax) Smith was put in charge of operations under
-the firm name of Coleman and Smith.</p>
-<p>Freed from the sordid squalor of the Ash Meadows hovel, the
-Winters bought the Pahrump Ranch, a landmark of Pahrump Valley,
-and settled down to watch the world go by.</p>
-<p>Thus began the Pacific Coast Borax Company, one of the world&rsquo;s
-outstanding corporations. Later Smith was to become president of the
-Pacific Coast Borax Company and later still, he was to head a three
-hundred million dollar corporation for the development of the San
-Francisco and Oakland areas and then face bankruptcy and ruin.</p>
-<p>Overlooking the site where Rosie and Aaron made the discovery,
-now stands the magnificent Furnace Creek Inn.</p>
-<p>One day while sitting on the hotel terrace, I noticed a plane discharge
-a group of the Company&rsquo;s English owners and their guests. Meticulously
-dressed, they paid scant attention to the desolation about and hastened
-to the cooling refuge of their caravansary. At dinner they sat down to
-buttered mignon and as they talked casually of the races at Ascot and the
-ball at Buckingham Palace, I looked out over that whitehot slab of hell
-and thought of Rosie and Aaron Winters trudging with calloused feet
-behind a burro&mdash;their dinner, sow-belly and beans.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
-<h2 id="c6"><span class="small">Chapter IV</span>
-<br />John Searles and His Lake of Ooze</h2>
-<p>Actually the first discovery of borax in Death Valley was made by
-Isadore Daunet in 1875, five years before Winters&rsquo; discovery. Daunet
-had left Panamint City when it was apparent that town was through
-forever and with six of his friends was en route to new diggings in
-Arizona.</p>
-<p>He was a seasoned, hardy adventurer and risked a short cut across
-Death Valley in mid-summer. Running out of water, his party killed a
-burro, drank its blood; but the deadly heat beat them down. Indians
-came across one of the thirst-crazed men and learned that Daunet and
-others were somewhere about. They found Daunet and two companions.
-The others perished.</p>
-<p>When Daunet heard of the Winters sale five years later, like Rosie
-Winters he remembered the white stuff about the water, to which the
-Indians had taken him. He hurried back and in 1880 filed upon mining
-claims amounting to 260 acres. He started at once a refining plant which
-he called Eagle Borax Works and began operating one year before Old
-Harmony began to boil borax in 1881. Daunet&rsquo;s product however, was of
-inferior grade and unprofitable and work was soon abandoned. The unpredictable
-happened and dark days fell upon borax and William T.
-Coleman.</p>
-<p>In 1888 the advocates of free trade had a field day when the bill
-authored by Roger Q. Mills of Texas became the law of the land and
-borax went on the free list. The empire of Coleman tumbled in a financial
-scare&mdash;attributed by Coleman to a banker who had falsely undervalued
-Coleman&rsquo;s assets after a report by a borax expert who betrayed
-him. &ldquo;My assets,&rdquo; wrote Coleman, &ldquo;were $4,400,000. My debts $2,000,000.&rdquo;
-No person but Coleman lost a penny.</p>
-<p>But Borax Smith was never one to surrender without a fight and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_31">31</span>
-organized the Pacific Coast Borax Company to take over the property
-and the success of that company justifies the faith and the integrity of
-Coleman.</p>
-<p>Marketing the borax presented a problem in transportation even
-more difficult than it did in Tibet. At first it was scraped from the flat
-surface of the valley where it looked like alkali. It was later discovered
-in ledge form in the foothills of the Funeral Mountains. The sight of this
-discovery was called Monte Blanco&mdash;now almost a forgotten name.</p>
-<p>The borax was boiled in tanks and after crystallization was hauled
-by mule team across one hundred and sixty-five miles of mountainous
-desert at a pace of fifteen miles per day&mdash;if there were no accidents&mdash;or
-an average of twenty days for the round trip. The summer temperatures
-in the cooler hours of the night were 112 degrees; in the day, 120
-to 134 (the highest ever recorded). There were only four water holes on
-the route. Hence, water had to be hauled for the team.</p>
-<p>The borax was hauled to Daggett and Mojave and thence shipped to
-Alameda, California, to be refined. Charles Bennett, a rancher from
-Pahrump Valley, was among the first to contract the hauling of the raw
-product.</p>
-<p>In 1883 J. W. S. Perry, superintendent of the borax company, decided
-the company should own its freighting service and under his
-direction the famous 20 mule team borax wagons with the enormous
-wheels were designed. Orders were given for ten wagons. Each weighed
-7800 pounds. Two of these wagons formed a train, the load being
-40,000 pounds. To the second wagon was attached a smaller one with a
-tank holding 1200 gallons of water.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d leave around midnight,&rdquo; Ed Stiles said. &ldquo;Generally 110 or 112
-degrees.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The first hauls of these wagons were to Mojave, with overnight stations
-every sixteen miles. Thirty days were required for the round trip.</p>
-<p>In the Eighties a prospector in the then booming Calico Mountains,
-between Barstow and Yermo discovered an ore that puzzled him. He
-showed it to others and though the bustling town of Calico was filled
-with miners from all parts of the world, none could identify it. Under
-the blow torch the crystalline surface crumbled. Out of curiosity he had
-it assayed. It proved to be calcium borate and was the world&rsquo;s first knowledge
-of borax in that form. Previously it had been found in the form of
-&ldquo;cotton ball.&rdquo; The Pacific Coast Borax Company acquired the deposits;
-named the ore Colemanite in honor of W. T. Coleman.</p>
-<p>Operations in Death Valley were suspended and transferred to the
-new deposit, which saved a ten to fifteen days&rsquo; haul besides providing a
-superior product. The deposit was exhausted however, in the early part
-<span class="pb" id="Page_32">32</span>
-of the century when Colemanite was discovered in the Black Mountains
-and the first mine&mdash;the Lila C. began operations.</p>
-<p>It is a bit ironical that during the depression of the Thirties, two
-prospectors who neither knew nor cared anything about borax were
-poking around Kramer in relatively flat country in sight of the paved
-highway between Barstow and Mojave when they found what is believed
-to be the world&rsquo;s largest deposit of borax.</p>
-<p>It was a good time for bargain hunters and was acquired by the
-Pacific Coast Borax Company and there in a town named Boron, all its
-borax is now produced.</p>
-<p>Even before Aaron Winters or Isadore Daunet, John Searles was
-shipping borax out of Death Valley country. With his brother Dennis,
-member of the George party of 1861, Searles had returned and was
-developing gold and silver claims in the Slate Range overlooking a
-slimy marsh. They had a mill ready for operation when the Indians,
-then making war on the whites of Inyo county destroyed it with fire. A
-man of outstanding courage, Searles remained to recuperate his losses.
-He had read about the Trona deposits first found in the Nile Valley and
-was reminded of it when he put some of the water from the marsh in a
-vessel to boil and use for drinking. Later he noticed the formation of
-crystals and then suspecting borax he went to San Francisco with samples
-and sought backing. He found a promoter who after examining the samples,
-told him, &ldquo;If the claims are what these samples indicate, I can get
-all the money you need....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>An analysis was made showing borax.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But where is this stuff located?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Searles told him as definitely as he could. He was invited to remain
-in San Francisco while a company could be organized. &ldquo;It will take but
-a few days....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Searles explained that he hadn&rsquo;t filed on the ground and preferred to
-go back and protect the claim.</p>
-<p>The suave promoter brushed his excuse aside. &ldquo;Little chance of anybody&rsquo;s
-going into that God forsaken hole.&rdquo; He called an associate. &ldquo;Take
-Mr. Searles in charge and show him San Francisco....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Not a rounder, Searles bored quickly with night life. His funds ran
-low. He asked the loan of $25.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Certainly....&rdquo; His host stepped into an adjacent office, returning
-after a moment to say the cashier was out but that he had left instructions
-to give Searles whatever he wished.</p>
-<p>Searles made trip after trip to the cashier&rsquo;s office but never found him
-in and becoming suspicious, he pawned his watch and hurried home,
-arriving at midnight four days later.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_33">33</div>
-<p>The next morning a stranger came and something about his attire,
-his equipment, and his explanation of his presence didn&rsquo;t ring true and
-Searles was wary even before the fellow, believing that Searles was still
-in San Francisco announced that he had been sent to find a man named
-Searles to look over some borax claims. &ldquo;Do you know where they are?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Searles thought quickly. He had not as yet located his monuments
-nor filed a notice. He pointed down the valley. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re about 20 miles
-ahead....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The fellow went on his way and before he was out of sight, Searles
-was staking out the marsh and with one of the most colorful of Death
-Valley characters, Salty Bill Parkinson, began operations in 1872. Incorporated
-under the name of San Bernardino Borax Company, the business
-grew and was later sold to Borax Smith&rsquo;s Pacific Coast Borax
-Company.</p>
-<p>Once while Searles was away hunting grizzlies, the Indians who had
-burned his mill, raided his ranch and drove his mules across the range.
-Suspecting the Piutes, he got his rifle and two pistols.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll kill you,&rdquo; he was warned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to get those mules,&rdquo; Searles snapped and followed their
-tracks across the Slate Range and Panamint Valley. High in the overlooking
-mountains he came upon the Indians feasting upon one of the
-animals and was immediately attacked with bows and arrows. He killed
-seven bucks and the rest ran, but an Indian&rsquo;s arrow was buried in his
-eye. He jerked the arrow out, later losing the eye, pushed on and recovered
-the rest of his mules. Thereafter the Piutes avoided Searles and his
-marsh because, they said, he possessed the &ldquo;evil eye.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On the same lake where Searles began operations, the town of
-Trona was established to house the employees and processing plants of
-the American Potash and Chemical Company. It was British owned,
-though this ownership was successfully concealed in the intricate corporate
-structure of the Pacific Coast Borax Company, but later sold for
-twelve million dollars to Hollanders who left the management as they
-found it. During World War II Uncle Sam discovered that the Hollanders
-were stooges for German financiers&rsquo; Potash Cartel.</p>
-<p>The Alien Property Custodian took over and ordered the sale of the
-stock to Americans. Today it is what its name implies&mdash;an American
-company.</p>
-<p>From the ooze where John Searles first camped to hunt grizzly
-bears, is being taken more than 100 commercial products and every day
-of your life you use one or more of them if you eat, bathe, or wear
-clothes, brush your teeth or deal with druggist, grocer, dentist or doctor.</p>
-<p>Fearing exhaustion of the visible supply (the ooze is 70 feet deep)
-<span class="pb" id="Page_34">34</span>
-tests were made in 1917 to determine what was below. Result, supply
-one century; value two billion dollars.</p>
-<p>Here are a few things containing the product of the ooze. Fertilizer
-for your flowers, orchards, and fields. Baking soda, dyes, lubricating oils,
-paper. Ethyl gasoline, porcelain, medicines, fumigants, leathers, solvents,
-cosmetics, textiles, ceramics, chemical and pharmaceutical preparations.</p>
-<p>About 1300 tons of these products are shipped out every day over a
-company-owned railroad and transshipped at Searles&rsquo; Station over the
-Southern Pacific, to go finally in one form or another into every home in
-America and most of those in the entire world.</p>
-<p>The weird valley meanders southward from the lake through blown-up
-mountains gorgeously colored and grimly defiant&mdash;a trip to thrill the
-lover of the wild and rugged.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_35">35</div>
-<h2 id="c7"><span class="small">Chapter V</span>
-<br />But Where Was God?</h2>
-<p>For years, on the edge of the road near Tule Hole, a rough slab
-marked Jim Dayton&rsquo;s grave, on which were piled the bleached bones of
-Dayton&rsquo;s horses. On the board were these words: &ldquo;Jas. Dayton. Died
-1898.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The accuracy of the date of Dayton&rsquo;s death as given on the bronze
-plaque on the monument and on the marker which it replaced, has been
-challenged. The author of this book wrote the epitaph for the monument
-and the date on it is the date which was on the original marker&mdash;an old
-ironing board that had belonged to Pauline Gower. In a snapshot made
-by the writer, the date 1898, burned into the board with a redhot poker
-shows clearly.</p>
-<p>The two men who know most about the matter, Wash Cahill and
-Frank Hilton, whom he sent to find Dayton or his body, both declared
-the date on the marker correct.</p>
-<p>The late Ed Stiles brought Dayton into Death Valley. Stiles was
-working for Jim McLaughlin (Stiles called him McGlothlin), who
-operated a freighting service with headquarters at Bishop. McLaughlin
-ordered Stiles to take a 12 mule team and report to the Eagle Borax
-Works in Death Valley. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t give you any directions. You&rsquo;ll just
-have to find the place.&rdquo; Stiles had never been in Death Valley nor
-could he find anyone who had. It was like telling a man to start across
-the ocean and find a ship named Sally.</p>
-<p>At Bishop Creek in Owens Valley Stiles decided he needed a helper.
-There he found but one person willing to go&mdash;a youngster barely out of
-his teens&mdash;Jim Dayton.</p>
-<p>Dayton remained in Death Valley and somewhat late in life, on one
-of his trips out, romance entered. After painting an intriguing picture
-<span class="pb" id="Page_36">36</span>
-of the lotus life a girl would find at Furnace Creek, he asked the lady to
-share it with him. She promptly accepted.</p>
-<p>A few months later, the bride suggested that a trip out would make
-her love the lotus life even more and so in the summer of 1898 she
-tearfully departed. Soon she wrote Jim in effect that it hadn&rsquo;t turned out
-as she had hoped. Instead, she had become reconciled to shade trees,
-green lawns, neighbors, and places to go and if he wanted to live with
-her again he would just have to abandon the Death Valley paradise.</p>
-<p>Dayton loaded his wagon with all his possessions, called his dog and
-started for Daggett.</p>
-<p>Wash Cahill, who was to become vice-president of the borax company,
-was then working at its Daggett office. Cahill received from Dayton
-a letter which he saw from the date inside and the postmark on the envelope,
-had been held somewhere for at least two weeks before it was
-mailed.</p>
-<p>The letter contained Dayton&rsquo;s resignation and explained why Dayton
-was leaving. He had left a reliable man in temporary charge and was
-bringing his household goods; also two horses which had been borrowed
-at Daggett.</p>
-<p>Knowing that Dayton should have arrived in Daggett at least a week
-before the actual arrival of the letter, Cahill was alarmed and dispatched
-Frank Hilton, a teamster and handy man, and Dolph Lavares to see what
-had happened.</p>
-<p>On the roadside at Tule Hole they found Dayton&rsquo;s body, his dog
-patiently guarding it. Apparently Dayton had become ill, stopped to rest.
-&ldquo;Maybe the sun beat him down. Maybe his ticker jammed,&rdquo; said Shorty
-Harris, &ldquo;but the horses were fouled in the harness and were standing up
-dead.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There could be no flowers for Jim Dayton nor peal of organ. So they
-went to his wagon, loosened the shovel lashed to the coupling pole. They
-dug a hole beside the road, rolled Jim Dayton&rsquo;s body into it.</p>
-<p>The widow later settled in a comfortable house in town with neighbors
-close at hand. There she was trapped by fire. While the flames were
-consuming the building a man ran up. Someone said, &ldquo;She&rsquo;s in that upper
-room.&rdquo; The brave and daring fellow tore his way through the crowd,
-leaped through the window into a room red with flames and dragged her
-out, her clothing still afire. He laid her down, beat out the flames, but she
-succumbed.</p>
-<p>A multitude applauded the hero. A little later over in Nevada another
-multitude lynched him. Between heroism and depravity&mdash;what?</p>
-<p>Although Tule Hole has long been a landmark of Death Valley,
-few know its story and this I believe to be its first publication.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_37">37</div>
-<p>One day while resting his team, Stiles noticed a patch of tules growing
-a short distance off the road and taking a shovel he walked over,
-started digging a hole on what he thought was a million to one chance
-of finding water, and thus reduce the load that had to be hauled for use
-between springs. &ldquo;I hadn&rsquo;t dug a foot,&rdquo; he told me &ldquo;before I struck
-water. I dug a ditch to let it run off and after it cleared I drank some,
-found it good and enlarged the hole.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He went on to Daggett with his load. Repairs to his wagon train
-required a week and by the time he returned five weeks had elapsed. &ldquo;I
-stopped the team opposite the tules, got out and started over to look at
-the hole I&rsquo;d dug. When I got within a few yards three or four naked
-squaw hags scurried into the brush. I stopped and looked away toward
-the mountains to give &rsquo;em a chance to hide. Then I noticed two Indian
-bucks, each leading a riderless horse, headed for the Panamints. Then I
-knew what had happened.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ed Stiles was a desert man and knew his Indians. Somewhere up in
-a Panamint canyon the chief had called a powwow and when it was over
-the head men had gone from one wickiup to another and looked over all
-the toothless old crones who no longer were able to serve, yet consumed
-and were in the way. Then they had brought the horses and with two
-strong bucks to guard them, they had ridden down the canyon and out
-across the desert to the water hole. There the crones had slid to the
-ground. The bucks had dropped a sack of pi&ntilde;on nuts. Of course, the
-toothless hags could not crunch the nuts and even if they could, the nuts
-would not last long. Then they would have to crawl off into the scrawny
-brush and grabble for herbs or slap at grasshoppers, but these are quicker
-than palsied hands and in a little while the sun would beat them down.</p>
-<p>The rest was up to God.</p>
-<p>The distinction of driving the first 20 mule team has always
-been a matter of controversy. Over a nation-wide hook-up, the National
-Broadcasting Co. once presented a playlet based upon these conflicting
-claims. A few days afterward, at the annual Death Valley picnic held at
-Wilmington, John Delameter, a speaker, announced that he&rsquo;d made
-considerable research and was prepared to name the person actually
-entitled to that honor. The crowd, including three claimants of the title,
-moved closer, their ears cupped in eager attention as Delameter began
-to speak. One of the claimants nudged my arm with a confident smile,
-whispered, &ldquo;Now you&rsquo;ll know....&rdquo; A few feet away his rivals, their
-pale eyes fixed on the speaker, hunched forward to miss no word.</p>
-<p>Mr. Delameter said: &ldquo;There were several wagons of 16 mules and
-who drove the first of these, I do not know, but I do know who drove
-the first 20 mule team.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_38">38</div>
-<p>Covertly and with gleams of triumph, the claimants eyed each other
-as Delameter paused to turn a page of his manuscript. Then with a loud
-voice he said: &ldquo;I drove it myself!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>May God have mercy on his soul.</p>
-<p>A few days later I rang the doorbell at the ranch house of Ed Stiles,
-almost surrounded by the city of San Bernardino. As no one answered,
-I walked to the rear, and across a field of green alfalfa saw a man
-pitching hay in a temperature of 120 degrees. It was Stiles who in 1876
-was teaming in Bodie&mdash;toughest of the gold towns.</p>
-<p>I sat down in the shade of his hay. He stood in the sun. I said, &ldquo;Mr.
-Stiles, do you know who drove the first 20 mule team in Death Valley?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He gave me a kind of <i>et-tu, Brute</i> look and smiled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In the fall of 1882 I was driving a 12 mule team from the Eagle
-Borax Works to Daggett. I met a man on a buckboard who asked if the
-team was for sale. I told him to write Mr. McLaughlin. It took 15 days to
-make the round trip and when I got back I met the same man. He
-showed me a bill of sale for the team and hired me to drive it. He had
-an eight mule team and a new red wagon, driven by a fellow named
-Webster. The man in the buckboard was Borax Smith.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Al Maynard, foreman for Smith and Coleman, was at work grubbing
-out mesquite to plant alfalfa on what is now Furnace Creek Ranch.
-Maynard told me to take the tongue out of the new wagon and put a
-trailer tongue in it. &lsquo;In the morning,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;hitch it to your wagon.
-Put a water wagon behind your trailer, hook up those eight mules with
-your team and go to Daggett.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That was the first time that a 20 mule team was driven out of
-Death Valley. Webster was supposed to swamp for me. But when he saw
-his new red wagon and mules hitched up with my outfit, he walked into
-the office and quit his job.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
-<h2 id="c8"><span class="small">Chapter VI</span>
-<br />Death Valley Geology</h2>
-<p>The pleasure of your trip through the Big Sink will be enhanced if
-you know something about the structural features which are sure to
-arrest your attention.</p>
-<p>For undetermined ages Death Valley was desert. Then rivers and
-lakes. Rivers dried. Lakes evaporated. Again, desert. It is believed that in
-thousands of years there have been no changes other than those caused
-by earthquakes and erosion.</p>
-<p>It is no abuse of the superlative to say that the foremost authority
-upon Death Valley geology is Doctor Levi Noble, who has studied it
-under the auspices of the U.S. Geological Survey since 1917. He has
-ridden over more of it than anyone and because of his studies, earlier
-conclusions of geologists are scrapped today.</p>
-<p>From a pamphlet published by the American Geological Society
-with the permission of the U. S. Dept. of Interior, now out of print, I
-quote a few passages which Doctor Noble, its author, once described to
-me as &ldquo;dull reading, even for scientists.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The southern Death Valley region contains rocks of at least eight
-geologic systems whose aggregate thickness certainly exceeds 45,000 feet
-for the stratified rocks alone.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The dissected playa or lake beds in Amargosa Valley between
-Shoshone and Tecopa contain elephant remains that are Pleistocene....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rainbow Mountain is one of the geological show places of the
-Death Valley region.... Here the Amargosa river has cut a canyon
-1000 feet deep.... The mountain is made up of thrust slices of Cambrian
-and pre-Cambrian rocks alternating with slices of Tertiary rocks,
-all of which dip in general about 30 to 40 degrees eastward, but are
-also anticlinally arched.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;None of the geologic terms in common use appear exactly to fit
-<span class="pb" id="Page_40">40</span>
-this mosaic of large tightly packed individual blocks of different ages
-occupying a definite zone above a major thrust fault.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The significant feature is that a stratum that began with creation
-may lie above one that is an infant in the age of rock&mdash;a puzzle that
-will engage men of Levi Noble&rsquo;s talents for years to come. But one
-doesn&rsquo;t have to be a member of the American Geological Society to
-find thrills in other gripping features.</p>
-<p>Throughout the area south of Shoshone are many hot springs containing
-boron and fluorine&mdash;some with traces of radium. The water
-is believed to come from a buried river. The source of other hot springs
-in the Death Valley area is unknown.</p>
-<p>More startling features were related to Shorty Harris and me at
-Bennett&rsquo;s Well in the bottom of Death Valley where we met one of
-Shorty&rsquo;s friends. Lanky and baked brown, in each wrinkle of his face
-the sun had etched a smile. &ldquo;Shorty,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;yachts will be sailing
-around here some day. There&rsquo;s a passage to the sea, sure as hell.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What makes you think so?&rdquo; Shorty asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Those salt pools. Just come from there. I was watching the
-crystals; felt the ground move a little. Pool started sloshing. A sea
-serpent with eyes big as a wagon wheel and teeth full of kelp stuck
-his head up. Where&rsquo;d he come from? No kelp in this valley. That
-prove anything?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ubehebe Crater is believed to have resulted from the only major
-change in the topography of the valley since its return to desert, but
-John Delameter, old time freighter, thought geologists didn&rsquo;t know
-what they were talking about. &ldquo;When I first saw Saratoga Spring I
-could straddle it. Full of fish four inches long. Next time, three springs
-and a lake. Fish shrunk to one inch and different shaped head.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Actually these fish are the degenerate descendants of the larger fish
-that lived in the streams and lakes that once watered Death Valley&mdash;an
-interesting study in the survival of species. The real name, <i>Cyprinodon
-Macularius</i>, is too large a mouthful for the natives so they are called
-desert sardines, though they are in reality a small killifish.</p>
-<p>Dan Breshnahan, in charge of a road crew working between Furnace
-Creek Inn and Stove Pipe Well, ordered some of the men to dig a hole
-to sink some piles. Two feet beneath a hard crust they encountered
-muck. When they hit the pile with a sledge it would bounce back. Dan
-put a board across the top. With a man on each end of the board, the
-rebound was prevented and the pile driven into hard earth. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m convinced
-that under that road is a lake of mire and Lord help the fellow
-who goes through,&rdquo; Dan said.</p>
-<p>A heavily loaded 20 mule team wagon driven by Delameter
-<span class="pb" id="Page_41">41</span>
-broke the surface of this ooze and two days were required to get it out.
-To test the depth, he tied an anvil to his bridle rein and let it down.
-The lead line of a 20 mule team is 120 feet long. It sank (he said)
-the length of the line and reached no bottom.</p>
-<p>On Ash Meadows, a few miles from Death Valley Junction and on
-the side of a mountain is what is known as The Devil&rsquo;s Hole which it is
-said has no bottom. True or false, none has ever been found.</p>
-<p>A steep trail leads down to the water which will then be over your
-head. Indians will tell you that a squaw fell into this hole within the
-memory of the living and that she was sucked to the bottom and came
-out at Big Spring several miles distant. The latter is a large hole in the
-middle of the desert and from its throat, also bottomless, pours a large
-volume of clear, warm water.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Explored?&rdquo; shouted Dad Fairbanks one day when a white-haired
-prospector declared every foot of Death Valley had been worked over.
-&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t scratched!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Only the day before (in 1934), Dr. Levi Noble had been working
-in the mountains overlooking the valley on the east rim. Through his
-field glasses he saw a formation that looked like a natural bridge. When
-he returned to Shoshone he phoned Harry Gower, Pacific Borax Co.
-official at Furnace Creek of his discovery and suggested that Gower investigate.</p>
-<p>Since Furnace Creek Inn wanted such attractions for its guests,
-Gower went immediately and almost within rifle shot of a road used
-since the Seventies, he found the bridge.</p>
-<p>That too is Death Valley&mdash;land of continual surprise.</p>
-<p>Death Valley is the hottest spot in North America. The U.S. Army,
-in a test of clothing suitable for hot weather made some startling discoveries.
-According to records, on one day in every seven years the
-temperature reaches 180 on the valley floor. But five feet above ground
-where official temperatures are recorded the thermometer drops 55
-degrees to 125.</p>
-<p>The highest temperature ever recorded was 134 at Furnace Creek
-Ranch&mdash;only two degrees below the world&rsquo;s record in Morocco. In 1913,
-the week of July 7-14, the temperature never got below 127. Official
-recording differs little from that of Arabia, India, and lower California,
-but the duration is longer.</p>
-<p>Left in the sun, water in a pail of ordinary size will evaporate in an
-hour. Bodies decompose two or three hours after rigor mortis begins but
-some have been found in certain areas at higher altitudes dried like
-leather. A rattlesnake dropped into a bucket and set in the sun will die
-in 20 minutes.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_42">42</div>
-<p>The evaporation of salt from the body is rapid and many prospectors
-swallow a mouthful of common salt before going out into a killing sun.</p>
-<p>One of the pitiable features of death on the desert is that bodies are
-found with fingers worn to the bone from frantic digging and often
-beneath the cadaver is water at two feet.</p>
-<p>There is also legendary weather for outside consumption. Told to see
-Joe Ryan as a source of dependable information, a tourist approached
-Joe and asked what kind of temperature one would encounter in the
-valley.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Heat is always exaggerated,&rdquo; said Joe. &ldquo;Of course it gets a little
-warm now and then. Hottest I ever saw was in August when I crossed
-the valley with Mike Lane. I was walking ahead when I heard Mike
-coughing. I looked around. Seemed to be choking and I went back. Mike
-held out his palm and in it was a gold nugget and Mike was madder&rsquo;n
-hell. &lsquo;My teeth melted,&rsquo; Mike wailed. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m going to kill that dentist. He
-told me they would stand heat up to 500 degrees.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I met an engaging liar at Bradbury Well one day. He was gloriously
-drunk and was telling the group about him that he was a great grand-son
-of the fabulous Paul Bunyan.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Gramp was a mighty man, but he was dumb
-at that. One time I saw him put a handful of pebbles in his mouth and
-blow &rsquo;em one at a time at a flock of wild geese flying a mile high. He
-got every goose, but how did he end up? Not so good. He straddled the
-Pacific ocean one day and prowled around in China, and saw a cross-eyed
-pigeon-toed midget with buck teeth. Worse, she had a temper that
-would melt pig-iron.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gramp went nuts over her. What happened? He married her. She
-had some trained fleas. If Gramp got sassy, she put fleas in his ears and
-ants in his pants and stood by, laughing at him, while he scratched himself
-to death. Hell of an end for Gramp, wasn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the late fall, winter, and early spring perfect days are the rule and
-if you are among those who like uncharted trails, do not hurry. Then
-when night comes you will climb a moonbeam and play among the
-stars. You will learn too, that life goes on away from box scores, radio
-puns, and girls with a flair for Veuve Cliquot.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_43">43</div>
-<h2 id="c9"><span class="small">Chapter VII</span>
-<br />Indians of the Area</h2>
-<p>The Indians of the Death Valley country were dog eaters&mdash;both
-those of Shoshone and Piute origin. Both had undoubtedly degenerated
-as a result of migrations. The Shoshones (Snakes) had originally lived
-in Idaho, Oregon, and Washington. The Piutes in Utah, Idaho, and
-Nevada.</p>
-<p>The true blood connection of coast Indians may well be a matter
-of dispute. &ldquo;Almost every 15 or 20 leagues you&rsquo;ll find a distinct dialect,&rdquo;
-was said of California Indians. (Boscana in Robinson&rsquo;s Life in California,
-p. 220.) Most of them were hardly above the animal in intelligence or
-morality. Though the Death Valley Indians are called Shoshone and
-Piutes, to what extent their blood justifies the classification is the white
-man&rsquo;s guess.</p>
-<p>Those whom Dr. French found in the Panamint said they had no
-tribal name. Many California tribes were given names by the whites,
-these names being the American&rsquo;s interpretation of a sound uttered by
-one group to designate another. &ldquo;They do not seem to have any names
-for themselves.&rdquo; (Schoolcraft&rsquo;s Arch., Vol. 3.)</p>
-<p>All seem to agree however, that the farther north the Indian lived,
-the more intelligent he was and the better his physique&mdash;which would
-indicate a relation to the better diet in the lush, well-watered and game-filled
-valleys and foothills. Some of the women are described by early
-writers as &ldquo;exceedingly pretty.&rdquo; Others, &ldquo;flat-faced and pudgy.&rdquo; &ldquo;The
-Indians in the northern portion ... are vastly superior in stature and
-intellect to those found in the southern part.&rdquo; (Hubbard, Golden Era,
-1856.)</p>
-<p>Certainly those found in Death Valley country reflected in their
-persons and in their character the niggardly land and the struggle for
-<span class="pb" id="Page_44">44</span>
-survival upon it. They were treacherous as its terrain. Cruel as its cactus.
-Tenacious as its stunted life.</p>
-<p>It is interesting to note the range of opinion and the conclusions
-drawn by earlier travelers.</p>
-<p>Of the Shoshones: &ldquo;Very rigid in their morals.&rdquo; (Remi and Brenchley&rsquo;s
-Journal, Vol. 1, p. 85.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They of all men are lowest, lying in a state of semi-torpor in holes
-in the ground in winter and in spring, crawling forth and eating grass
-on their hands and knees until able to regain their feet ... living in
-filth ... no bridles on their passions ... surely room for no
-missing links between them and brutes.&rdquo; (Bancroft&rsquo;s Native Races, Vol.
-1, p. 440.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It is common practice ... to gamble away their wives and children....
-A husband will prostitute his wife to a stranger for a trifling
-present.&rdquo; (Ibid. ch. 4, Vol. 1.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Our Piute has a peculiar way of getting a foretaste of connubial
-bliss&mdash;cohabiting experimentally with his intended for two or three days
-previous to the nuptial ceremony, at the end of which time either party
-can stay further proceedings to indulge further trials until a companion
-more congenial is found.&rdquo; (S. F. Medical Press, Vol. 3, p. 155. See also,
-Lewis and Clark&rsquo;s Travels, p. 307.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Piutes are the most degraded and least intellectual Indians
-known to trappers.&rdquo; (Farnham&rsquo;s Life, p. 336.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pah-utes are undoubtedly the most docile Indians on the continent.&rdquo;
-(Indian Affairs Report, 1859, p. 374.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Honest and trustworthy, but lazy and dirty,&rdquo; is said of the Shoshones.
-(Remi and Brenchley&rsquo;s Journal, p. 123.) Some ethnologists
-declare they cannot be identified with any other American tribe.</p>
-<p>Wives were purchased, cash or credit. Polygamy prevailed. Unmarried
-women belonged to all, but Gibbs says women bewailed their
-virginity for three days prior to marriage. &ldquo;They allow but one wife.&rdquo;
-(Prince in California Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861.)</p>
-<p>Husbands were allowed to kill their mothers-in-law. The heart of a
-valiant enemy killed in battle was eaten raw or cut into pieces and made
-into soup. Women captives of other tribes were ravished, sold or kept as
-slaves. Some Southern California tribes sold their women and occasionally
-tribes were found without a single squaw.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They are exceedingly virtuous.&rdquo; (Remi and Brenchley&rsquo;s Journal,
-Vol. 1, pp. 1-23-8.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Given to sensual excesses.&rdquo; (Farnham&rsquo;s Travel, p. 62.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Nevada Shoshones are the most pure and uncorrupted aborigines
-<span class="pb" id="Page_45">45</span>
-on the continent ... scrupulously clean ... chaste.&rdquo; (Prince,
-California Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861.)</p>
-<p>Thus the Indian who came or was driven to this wasteland evoked
-conflicting opinions and the real picture is vague.</p>
-<p>The lowest of California Indians is believed to have been the Digger,
-so-called because he existed chiefly upon roots and lived in burrows of
-his own making, but his isolation by ethnologists is not convincing. He
-was found around Shoshone by Fremont and Kit Carson and inhabited
-valleys to the north and west, but in the Death Valley region the Piute
-and Shoshone were dominant.</p>
-<p>Blood vengeance was deep-rooted. Found with the Indian collection
-of Dr. Simeon Lee at Carson City was a revealing manuscript that tells
-how swiftly it struck.</p>
-<p>Mudge rode up to another Indian standing on a Carson City street
-and without warning shot him dead and galloped away. The dead man
-had two cousins working at Lake Tahoe. The murder had occurred at
-9:30 a.m. and by some means of communication unknown to whites,
-they were on Mudge&rsquo;s trail within two hours and had found him. Mudge
-promptly killed them both and fled again. Sheriff Ulric engaged Captain
-Johnnie, a Piute, to track the slayer. He found Mudge&rsquo;s lair, but Mudge
-was a sure shot, well protected and to rush him meant certain death.
-The posse decided to keep watch until thirst or hunger forced him out.
-&ldquo;Me fix um,&rdquo; said Captain Johnnie.</p>
-<p>He disappeared, but soon returned with an enormous amount of
-tempting food which he contrived to place within easy reach of Mudge.
-&ldquo;Him see moppyass (food). Eat bellyful and fall down asleep.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>That is exactly what happened and old Demi-John, the father of the
-murdered boys crawled stealthily through the sage and with his hunting
-knife severed the head from the sleeping Mudge&rsquo;s body.</p>
-<p>In Mono county Piutes killed the Chinese owner of a cafe and fed
-the carcass to their dogs. In court they blandly confessed and justified it,
-claiming the Chinaman had killed and pickled one of their missing
-tribesmen and then sold and served to them portions of the victim as
-&ldquo;corned beef and cabbage.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>For the desert Indian life was raw to the bone. He was an unemotional,
-fatalistic creature as ruthless as the land. In the struggle to live,
-he had acquired endurance and cunning. He knew his desert&mdash;its
-moods, its stingy dole, its chary tolerance of life. He knew where the
-mountain sheep hid, the screw-bean grew and the fat lizard crawled.
-He knew where the drop of water seeped from the lone hill. He combed
-the lower levels of the range for chuckwalla, edible snakes, horned
-toads&mdash;anything with flesh; stuffed the kill into bags and preserved
-<span class="pb" id="Page_46">46</span>
-them for later use. He made flour from mesquite beans; stored pi&ntilde;ons,
-roots, herbs in his desperate fight to survive, and anything that crawled,
-flew, or walked was food. I have seen a squaw squatted beside the carcass
-of a dog, picking out the firmer flesh.</p>
-<p>When the Piute came to a spring, the first thing he did was to look
-about for a flat rock which he was sure to find if a member of his tribe
-had previously been there. Kneeling, he would skim the water from the
-surface and dash it upon this rock. Then he smelled the rock. If there
-was an odor of onion or garlic, he knew it contained arsenic and was
-deadly. Naturally, he would be concerned about another water hole.
-He had only to look about him. He would find partially imbedded in
-the earth several stones fixed in the form of a circle not entirely closed.
-The opening pointed in the direction of the next water. The distance
-to that water was indicated by stones inside the circle. There he would
-find for example, three stones pointing toward the opening. He knew
-that each of those stones indicated one &ldquo;sleep.&rdquo; Therefore he would
-have to sleep three times before he got there. In other words, it was
-three days&rsquo; journey.</p>
-<p>But which of these trails leading to the water should he take? There
-might be several trails converging at the water hole. The matter was
-decided for him. He walked along each of those trails for a few feet.
-Beside one of them he would find an oblong stone. By its shape and
-position he knew that was the trail that led to the next water.</p>
-<p>Under such circumstances a man would perhaps wonder if upon
-arrival at the next water hole he would find that water also unfit to use.
-The information was at hand. If, upon top of that oblong stone he
-found a smaller stone placed crosswise and white in color, he knew the
-water would be good water. If a piece of black malpai was there instead
-of the white stone, he knew the next water would be poison also.</p>
-<p>Not infrequently he would find other information at the water hole
-if there were boulders about, or chalky cliffs upon which the Indian
-could place his picture writing. If he saw the crude drawing of a lone
-man, it indicated that the land about was uninhabited except by hunters,
-but if upon the pictured torso were marks indicating the breasts of a
-woman, he knew there was a settlement about and he would find squaws
-and children and something to eat.</p>
-<p>Frequently other information was left for this wayfaring Indian.
-Under conspicuous stones about, he might find a feather with a hole
-punched through it or one that was notched. The former indicated that
-one had been there who had killed his man. The notch indicated that
-he had cut a throat.</p>
-<p>Since there was a difference between the moccasins of Indian tribes,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_47">47</span>
-the dust about would often inform him whether the buck who went
-before was friend or enemy.</p>
-<p>Like all American aborigines, the Piute had his medicine man, but
-the manner of his choosing is not clear. The one selected had to accept
-the role, though the honor never thrilled him, because he knew that
-when the score of death was three against him he would join his lost
-patients in the happy hereafter. Occasionally he was stoned to death
-by the relatives of the first lost patient and with the approval of the
-rest of the tribe. Not infrequently it was believed the medicine man&rsquo;s
-departed spirit then entered the medicine man&rsquo;s kin and they were also
-butchered or stoned to death.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span id="piute" class="sc">Note.</span> Early writers refer to Pau Eutahs, Pah Utes, Paiuches,
-Pyutes, and Paiutes. The word Piute is believed to mean true Ute.</p>
-<p>Bancroft claimed the Piutes and Pah Utes were separate tribes, the
-latter being the Trout or Ochi Indians of Walker River; the former the
-Tule (or Toy) Indians of Pyramid Lake.</p>
-<p>There was an undetermined number of branches of the original
-Utah stock. Besides the above, there was another tribe called by other
-Indians, Cozaby Piutes, Cozaby being the Indian name of a worm that
-literally covered the shores of Mono Lake. This worm was a principal
-food of the tribe.</p>
-<p>Though &ldquo;Piute&rdquo; is the spelling justifiably used throughout the region,
-&ldquo;Pahute&rdquo; was chosen a few years ago by a group of scholars as the
-preferable form.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_48">48</div>
-<h2 id="c10"><span class="small">Chapter VIII</span>
-<br />Desert Gold. Too Many Fractions</h2>
-<p>On the Nevada desert wind-whipped Mount Davidson (or Sun
-Mountain) guided the Forty Niners across the flat Washoe waste. At
-its foot they rested and cursed it because it impeded their progress to
-the California goldfields. Ten years later they rushed back because it
-had become the fabulous Comstock, said to have produced more than
-$880,000,000, though the Nevada State bureau of mines places the
-figure at $347,892,336. The truth lies somewhere between.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pancake&rdquo; Comstock had acquired, more by bluff and cunning than
-labor, title to gold claims others had discovered and cursed a &ldquo;blue
-stuff&rdquo; that slowed the recovery of visible particles of gold. Later the
-&ldquo;blue stuff&rdquo; was blessed as incredibly rich silver. A mountain of gold
-and silver side by side. It just couldn&rsquo;t be.</p>
-<p>A new crop of overnight millionaires. New feet feeling for the first
-step on the social ladder. The Mackays, the Floods, the Fairs, the
-Hearsts.</p>
-<p>All this was more like current than twenty year old history to Jim
-Butler on May 18, 1900, when his hungry burro strayed up a hill in
-search of grass. Soon a city stood where the burro ate and soon adventurers
-were poking around in the canyons of Death Valley, 66 miles
-south.</p>
-<p>Jim Butler, more rancher than gold hunter was a likable happy-go-lucky
-fellow, who could strum a banjo and sing a song. But when he
-found the burro in Sawtooth Pass he saw a ledge which looked as if it
-might have values. Born in El Dorado county in California in 1855,
-Butler was more or less gold conscious, but unexcited he stuck a few
-samples in his pocket and went on after the burro.</p>
-<p>A story survives which states that a half-breed Shoshone Indian
-known as Charles Fisherman had told Butler of the existence of the ore
-<span class="pb" id="Page_49">49</span>
-without disclosing its location and that Butler was actually searching
-for it when the burro strayed. The preponderance of evidence, however,
-indicates that Butler was en route to Belmont to see his friend, Tasker
-Oddie, who was batching there in a cabin. He gave Oddie one of the
-samples and after his visit, left for home.</p>
-<p>Oddie laid the sample on a window sill and forgot it.</p>
-<p>In Klondike a few days later, Butler showed another sample to
-Frank Higgs, an assayer. Half in jest he said: &ldquo;Frank, I&rsquo;ve no money
-to pay for an assay, but I&rsquo;ll cut you in on this stuff if it shows anything.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Higgs looked at the sample and returned it to Butler: &ldquo;Just a waste
-of time. Forget it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Later in Belmont Henry Broderick, a prospector dropped in for a
-visit with Oddie and noticed the sample Butler had given Oddie and
-looked it over. &ldquo;This ore has good values,&rdquo; he told Oddie. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s worth
-investigating.&rdquo; Oddie knew that Broderick&rsquo;s opinion was not to be
-underrated.</p>
-<p>Oddie was a young lawyer with little practice and a salary of $100
-a year as District Attorney. Belmont had a population of 100. Oddie
-didn&rsquo;t have two dollars to risk, but he took the sample to W. C. Gayhart
-at Austin and offered Gayhart a fractional interest if he&rsquo;d assay it.
-With few customers, Gayhart took a chance.</p>
-<p>The ore showed values and Oddie was mildly excited. Butler lived
-35 miles away in wild, difficult country and Oddie wrote him, enclosing
-the assay. Several weeks passed before Butler received the letter.
-Then Butler and his wife returned to Belmont only to find Oddie could
-not go with them. Jim and Mrs. Butler now returned home, loaded
-provisions, tools, and camp equipment in a wagon and three days later,
-Aug. 26, 1900, they reached Sawtooth Pass and made camp.</p>
-<p>The Butlers staked out eight claims. Jim took for himself the one
-he considered best. He named it The Desert Queen. Mrs. Butler chose
-another and called it Mizpah. Jim located another for Oddie and named
-it Burro. The best proved to be Mrs. Butler&rsquo;s Mizpah.</p>
-<p>Returning to Belmont, they found Oddie at home. The matter of
-recording the location notices had to be attended to. &ldquo;That will cost ten
-or fifteen dollars,&rdquo; Butler said. Neither of them had any money. Wils
-Brougher was recorder of Nye county and Oddie&rsquo;s friend, so Oddie made
-a proposition to Brougher. &ldquo;If you&rsquo;ll pay the recorder&rsquo;s fees we&rsquo;ll give you
-an eighth.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Brougher said, &ldquo;Nye county is one of the largest counties in the
-United States, but there are only 400 people in it and I&rsquo;m not getting
-many fees these days. Leave &rsquo;em.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After they&rsquo;d gone Brougher looked at the assay Oddie had left and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_50">50</span>
-decided to take a chance. The setup was now: Butler and his wife
-five-eighths, Oddie, Brougher, and Gayhart, one-eighth each.</p>
-<p>They managed to pool resources and obtained $25 in cash to provide
-material and provisions.</p>
-<p>Brougher, Oddie, Jim, and Mrs. Butler set out in October, 1900.
-Mrs. Butler did the cooking while the men dug, drilled, and blasted two
-tons of ore. The ore was sacked and hauled 150 miles to Austin and
-shipped to a San Francisco smelter. The returns showed high values but
-still they had a major problem&mdash;money to develop the claims. Because
-the country had been prospected and pronounced worthless, men of
-millions were not backing a banjo-picking rancher and a young lawyer
-with no money and few clients. The answer was leasing to idle miners
-willing to gamble muscle against money. The venture made many of
-them rich. The others recovered more than wages. As the leases expired
-the owners took them over.</p>
-<p>The camp where Mrs. Butler cooked became the site of the Mizpah
-Hotel and the City of Tonopah and the hill where the burro strayed
-produced many millions.</p>
-<p>There are several versions of the Butler discovery and the writer
-does not pretend that his own is the true one. He can only say that he
-knew many of those who were first on the scene and some of those who
-held the first and best leases, and his conclusions are based on their
-personal narratives.</p>
-<p>Oddie became one of the moguls of mining, Nevada&rsquo;s governor, and
-a senator of the United States.</p>
-<p>Twenty-six miles south of Tonopah was a place known as Grandpa,
-so named because there were always a few old prospectors camped at
-the water hole known as Rabbit Springs. These patriarchs had combed
-the desert about, for years without success.</p>
-<p>Al Myers, a prospector working on a hill nearby, came to the
-Grandpa Spring to fill a barrel of water and found his friend, Shorty
-Harris, who had been camping there, packing his burros to leave.
-&ldquo;Better hang around, Shorty,&rdquo; Al advised. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m getting color.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Luck to you,&rdquo; Shorty laughed. &ldquo;But any place where these old
-grandpas can&rsquo;t find color, is no place for me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In six weeks Myers and Tom Murphy made the big strike (1903)
-and Grandpa became Goldfield&mdash;one of the West&rsquo;s most spectacular
-camps. Some of the more promising claims of Goldfield were leased,
-the most valuable being that of Hays and Monette, on the Mohawk.
-In 106 days the lease produced $5,000,000.</p>
-<p>Out of the Mohawk one car was shipped which yielded over
-$579,000 and ore in all of the better mines was so rich that Goldfield
-<span class="pb" id="Page_51">51</span>
-quickly became the high-grader&rsquo;s paradise. Though wages at Tonopah
-were twice those paid at Goldfield, miners deserted the older camp for
-the lower wage and made more than the difference by concealing high-grade
-in the cuffs of their overalls or in other ingenious receptacles
-built into their clothing. Miners and muckers took the girls of their
-choice out of honkies and installed them in cottages. More than one
-of these gorgeous creatures, having found her man in her boom-town
-crib, later ascended life&rsquo;s grand stairway to live virtuously and bravely
-in a Wilshire mansion or a swank hotel.</p>
-<p>To stop the stealing, a change room was installed but many had
-already secured themselves against want. A wealthy resident of California
-once told me: &ldquo;With the proceeds of the high-grade I took home
-I built rentals that led to bank connections and more lucky investments.
-Everybody was doing it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tex Rickard, a gambler and saloon man, already known in Alaska
-and San Francisco for spectacular adventures, here began his career
-as a sports promoter in the ill-advised Jeffries-Johnson fight.</p>
-<p>One morning his Great Northern had more than its usual crowd.
-Men stood three deep at the bar, games were busy and Billy Murray,
-the cashier was rushed. It was not unusual for desert men to leave
-their money with Murray. He would tag and sack it and toss it aside,
-but today there was a steady stream being poked at him. Finally it got
-in his way and he had it taken through the alley to the bank, but the
-deluge continued.</p>
-<p>When it again got in his way, his assistant having stepped out, Billy
-took it to the bank himself. There he learned the reason for the flood
-of money. A run was being made on the John S. Cook bank. He
-satisfied himself that the bank was safe and returned to his cage. As
-fast as the money came in the front door, it went out the back and
-Billy Murray thus saved the bank and the town from collapse.</p>
-<p>A resourceful youngster who knew that wherever men recklessly
-acquire, they recklessly spend, dropped in from Oregon, got a job in
-Tom Kendall&rsquo;s Tonopah Club as a dealer. Good looking and likable,
-he made friends, took over the gambling concession and was soon
-taking over Goldfield and the state of Nevada. He was George Wingfield,
-who, when offered a seat in the United States Senate, calmly
-declined it.</p>
-<p>Goldfield is only 40 miles from the northern boundary of Death
-Valley National Monument and was in bonanza when Shorty Harris
-walked into the Great Northern saloon. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been drinking gulch
-likker,&rdquo; he told the bartender. &ldquo;Give me the best in the house.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_52">52</div>
-<p>The bartender reached for a bottle. &ldquo;This is 100 proof 14 year old
-bourbon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Shorty drank it, laid a goldpiece on the bar. &ldquo;Good stuff. I&rsquo;ll have
-another.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You must be celebrating,&rdquo; the bartender said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You guessed it,&rdquo; Shorty said and laid a piece of high-grade beside
-his glass. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got more gold where that came from than Uncle Sam&rsquo;s
-got in the mint.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A faro dealer noticed the ore and picked it up. &ldquo;Good looking rock,&rdquo;
-he said and passed it to a promoter standing by. In a moment a crowd
-had gathered. &ldquo;Looks like Breyfogle quartz,&rdquo; the promoter said and
-led Shorty aside. &ldquo;I can make you a million on this. Want to sell?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not on your life,&rdquo; Shorty said, but after pressure and a few drinks,
-he agreed to part with an eighth interest. The deal closed, he left to
-see friends around town. He found each of them in a barroom. News
-of his strike had preceded him and each time he laid the ore on the bar
-someone wanted an interest. Someone called him aside and someone
-bought the drinks.</p>
-<p>Within an hour every fortune hunter in Goldfield was looking for
-Shorty Harris, each believing Shorty had found the Lost Breyfogle.</p>
-<p>When he left town, weaving in the dust of his burros, sixteen men
-wished him well, for each had a piece of paper conveying a one-eighth
-interest in Shorty&rsquo;s claim.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_53">53</div>
-<h2 id="c11"><span class="small">Chapter IX</span>
-<br />Romance Strikes the Parson</h2>
-<p>Scorning Al Myers&rsquo;s advice to locate a claim on the Goldfield hill,
-Shorty Harris headed south, prospecting as he went until he reached
-Monte Beatty&rsquo;s ranch where he camped with Beatty, a squaw man.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to look at a rhyolite formation in the hills four miles west.
-It looks good&mdash;that hill,&rdquo; Shorty told him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Forget it,&rdquo; Beatty said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve combed every inch.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>With faith in Beatty&rsquo;s knowledge of the country, he abandoned the
-trip and crossed the Amargosa desert to Daylight Springs, found the
-country full of amateur prospectors excited by the discoveries at Tonopah
-and Goldfield. After a few weeks he decided there was nothing
-worthwhile to be found. &ldquo;I had a hunch Beatty could be wrong about
-that formation and decided to go back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He was well outfitted and with five burros and more than enough
-provisions, was ready to go when, out of the bush came a cleancut
-youngster&mdash;a novice who had brought his wife along.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Shorty,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;we&rsquo;re out of grub. Can you spare any?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure. But you&rsquo;d be better off to go with me. I have enough grub
-for all of us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ed Cross had all to gain; nothing to lose by following an experienced
-prospector.</p>
-<p>At a water hole known as Buck Springs they made camp. Within
-an hour they went up a canyon, each working a side of it. Shorty broke
-a piece of quartz from an outcropping; saw shades of turquoise and
-jade. &ldquo;Come a-runnin&rsquo; Ed,&rdquo; he shouted. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got the world by the
-tail and a downhill pull.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They staked out the discovery claims. &ldquo;How many more should we
-locate?&rdquo; Cross asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;None. Give the other fellow a chance. If this is as good as we
-<span class="pb" id="Page_54">54</span>
-think, we&rsquo;ve got all the money we&rsquo;ll ever need. If it isn&rsquo;t and the other
-fellow makes a good showing it will help us sell this one.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They went to Goldfield. Shorty showed the sample to Bob Montgomery,
-an old friend. Bob was skeptical. But in an hour the news was
-out and Goldfield en masse headed for the new strike. Those, who
-couldn&rsquo;t get conveyances, walked. Some pulled burro carts across the
-desert. Some started out with wheelbarrows. Jack Salsbury began to
-move lumber. Others brought merchandise, barrels of liquor. Everything
-to build a town.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Specimens of my ore,&rdquo; Shorty said, &ldquo;were used by Tiffany for ring
-settings, lavallieres, bracelets. It went to Paris and London. Ore broken
-from the ledge sold for $50 a pound. I must have given away thousands
-of dollars&rsquo; worth of it for souvenirs.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Overnight Rhyolite was born. Shorty bought a barrel of liquor, drove
-a row of nails around the barrel, hung tin dippers on the nails and
-invited the town to quench its thirst. Two railroads came. One, 114
-miles from Las Vegas. Another, 200 miles from Ludlow.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Two things influenced me in naming it Bullfrog,&rdquo; Shorty said. &ldquo;Ed
-had asked, &lsquo;what&rsquo;ll we name it?&rsquo; As I looked at the green ore in my
-hand, a frog bellowed. &lsquo;Bullfrog,&rsquo; I said.&rdquo; (One writer has stated erroneously
-that there is not a bullfrog on the desert.)</p>
-<p>The tycoons of mining and their agents appeared as if borne on
-magic carpets and in a little while men who would have turned him
-from their doors, were fawning around the little man with the golden
-smile and the ugly brawl for the Bullfrog was on&mdash;a struggle between
-cheap promoters who gave him cheap whiskey and moguls who gave
-him champagne.</p>
-<p>Scores of yarns have been written about the sale of the Bullfrog.
-It was one of the few things in Shorty&rsquo;s life which he discussed with
-reserve. In my residence two years before he died and in my presence
-he told my wife, to whom he was singularly devoted, the sordid story.
-&ldquo;Cross had a good head,&rdquo; Shorty said. &ldquo;He attended to business, sold
-his interest and retired to a good ranch.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I woke up one morning and judging from the empties, I must have
-had a grand evening. I reached for a full pint on the table and under it
-was a piece of paper with a note. I read it and learned for the first time
-that I&rsquo;d sold the Bullfrog.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The law would have released you from that contract,&rdquo; I said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d signed it,&rdquo; he answered quietly.</p>
-<p>I thought of the crumbling adobe on the Ballarat flat and the lean
-years that followed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_55">55</div>
-<p>&ldquo;At that, I got good money for a fellow like me,&rdquo; he added. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
-never wanted for anything.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A fortune blown like a bubble meant absolutely nothing&mdash;stopped
-no laugh; dimmed no hope; quenched no fire in his eager eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If I&rsquo;d got those millions the big boys would have hauled me off
-to town, put a white shirt on me. Maybe they would have made me
-believe Shorty Harris was important. &lsquo;Mr. Harris this and Mr. Harris
-that.&rsquo; I&rsquo;ve got something they can&rsquo;t take away. I step out of my cabin
-every morning and look it over&mdash;100 miles of outdoors. All mine.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The future of Rhyolite seemed assured when Bob Montgomery sold
-to Charles M. Schwab, president of Bethlehem Steel Company, his
-interest in the claim known as the Montgomery Shoshone for more than
-$2,000,000.</p>
-<p>The discovery of this claim has been accredited to Shoshone Johnnie
-and historians have said that Montgomery bought it from Johnnie for
-a pair of overalls, a buggy, and a few dollars. Actually Bob Montgomery
-was among the first on the scene following Shorty&rsquo;s discovery strike and
-located the claim himself. Even if Johnnie had located it Montgomery
-would have been entitled to one-half interest for the reason that he had
-been grubstaking Johnnie for years.</p>
-<p>It never paid as a mine, but America was gold mad and the two
-railroads which brought mail for Rhyolite also carried stock certificates
-out and the promoters lost nothing.</p>
-<p>The strike at Bullfrog was made in 1904. Rhyolite attained a population
-of about 14,000 at its peak&mdash;then started downward. On January
-1, 1926, I made a camp fire in its empty streets and beside it tried
-to sleep through a biting wind that seemed aptly enough a dirge. The
-next morning I poked around in the abandoned stores to marvel at
-things of value left behind. Chinaware and silver in hurriedly abandoned
-houses and in the leading cafe. The cribs still bore the castoff ribbons
-and silks of the girls and for all I know, the satin slipper which I found
-on a bed may have been the one that Shorty Harris filled with champagne
-to toast the charms of Flaming Jane.</p>
-<p>I walked up to the vacant depot. Across the door, through which
-thousands had passed from incoming trains with youth and hope and
-the eagerness of life, lay the long-dead carcass of a cow. It fitted, it
-seemed to me, the scene about.</p>
-<p>Like Tonopah, Skidoo on top of Tucki Mountain overlooking Death
-Valley may be accredited to the straying of a burro in 1905.</p>
-<p>John Ramsey and John Thompson, two prospectors, camped overnight
-in Emigrant Canyon which leads into Death Valley. The grass
-about was lush and they thought it safe to turn the burros loose. The
-<span class="pb" id="Page_56">56</span>
-burros strayed during the night and because the walls on the east side
-of the canyon are perpendicular, search was immediately confined to
-the sloping west area. But the burros, always unpredictable, found a
-way to ascend Tucki Mountain and there they were found&mdash;one of
-them actually straddling an outcropping of gold.</p>
-<p>This happened on the 23rd day of the month and because of a popular
-current slang expression, &ldquo;Twenty-three for you&mdash;skidoo,&rdquo; (meaning
-phooey, or shut up) the claim and the town were named Skidoo.</p>
-<p>Bob Montgomery bought the claim on sight. A winding road with
-a spectacular view of Death Valley was built, a mill installed on the
-side of Telephone Canyon and water brought 22 miles from Panamint
-Canyon. A long rambling building on top of the mountain served as
-offices and living quarters for officials. A broad porch encircled it and
-afforded a sweeping and unforgettable view of Death Valley country.</p>
-<p>On the area about this building was the company town. Adjoining
-was &ldquo;Our Town&rdquo; where the cribs and honkies thrived.</p>
-<p>I first visited it with Shorty Harris, holding my breath most of the
-way on the steep, narrow, and winding road. We appropriated the
-company building for our temporary home. Shorty had owned claims
-there and had helped build the road.</p>
-<p>Montgomery paid $60,000 for the claims and took out $9,000,000
-before production costs exceeded his profits, when work was abandoned.</p>
-<p>During World War I, Montgomery sold the pipe, which had brought
-the water to Skidoo, to Standard Oil Company at a price far in excess
-of its cost. That was the end of Skidoo.</p>
-<p>More interesting to me than the fate of Skidoo was that of Blonde
-Betty and the traveling preacher, of which Shorty was reminded when
-we strolled by the crib in which Betty had lived.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Skagway Thompson, as fine a chap as ever drew a cork, died right
-over there in that shack and we decided he deserved a nice planting.
-Everybody liked Skagway. Only women around at that time were crib
-girls and they banked his grave with wild flowers and I got this sky
-pilot to say a few words.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He was a young fellow, good looking and agreeable. I told him
-Skagway&rsquo;s friends thought it would be nice if one of the women in
-town would sing Skagway&rsquo;s favorite song. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s called &ldquo;When the Wedding
-Bells Are Ringing&rdquo;&rsquo; I said, &lsquo;and I hope you don&rsquo;t mind if it&rsquo;s not
-in the hymn books.&rsquo; I didn&rsquo;t tell him the girl who was going to sing it
-was Blonde Betty&mdash;a chippy&mdash;figuring he&rsquo;d be on his way before he
-found out. That gal could sing like a flock of larks and after the
-service the preacher barged up to me and said he wanted to meet Betty
-and would I introduce him.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_57">57</div>
-<p>&ldquo;There was no way out and besides, I figured what he didn&rsquo;t know
-wouldn&rsquo;t hurt him. He told her what a wonderful voice she had, how
-the song had touched him and hoped she would sing at one of his
-meetings.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Blonde Betty was pretty as curly ribbon and I was afraid every
-minute he was going to ask if he could call on her, so I horned in and
-said, &lsquo;Parson, excuse me, but I promised I would bring Miss Betty
-home right away.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So I took her arm and pulled her away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;You big-mouthed bum,&rsquo; Betty says when we were out of hearing.
-&lsquo;Why don&rsquo;t you attend to your own business? I know how to act.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Shorty pointed to a riot of wild flowers on the side of a hill across
-the gulch. &ldquo;The next day I saw her and the Parson picking flowers
-right over there. Of course he didn&rsquo;t know then what she was. After
-that I reckon he didn&rsquo;t give a dam&rsquo;. He chucked the preaching job and
-ran off with Betty. But maybe God went along. They got married and
-live over in Nevada and you couldn&rsquo;t find a happier family or a finer
-brood of children anywhere.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It is no argument for sin, but this was a hell of a country in those
-days and you just couldn&rsquo;t always live by the Book.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On July 4, 1905 Shorty Harris made the strike which started the
-town of Harrisburg, now only a name on a signboard. A feud due to
-a partnership of curious origin, started immediately and is worth mention
-only because it confused historians of a later period who, gathering
-material after Shorty&rsquo;s death have given only the story of the feudist
-who survived him.</p>
-<p>Here is Shorty&rsquo;s version: &ldquo;I was trying to save distance by taking
-the Blackwater trail across Death Valley into the Panamint. I had been
-over the country and had seen a formation that looked good and was
-going back to look it over. The Blackwater trail is a wet trail and one
-of my burros sank in the ooze. I had just gotten her out when a fellow
-I&rsquo;d never seen before, came up. He said he was a stranger in the country
-and he wanted to get to Emigrant Springs where his two partners were
-waiting. He explained that the foreman at Furnace Creek had told him
-I had left only a short while before, but he might overtake me by
-hurrying, and I would show him the way. Then he asked if he could
-join me.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told him it was free country and nobody on the square was barred.
-When I reached my destination I showed him the trail to Emigrant
-Springs. I reckon I talked too much on the way over&mdash;maybe made
-him think I had a gold mountain. Anyway, he said he believed he would
-look around a little to see what he could find. I didn&rsquo;t even know his
-<span class="pb" id="Page_58">58</span>
-name and though it was against the unwritten code, he followed me.
-There wasn&rsquo;t anything I could do about it without trouble and I was
-looking for gold&mdash;not trouble.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In 15 minutes I had found gold. He was pecking around a short
-distance away and also found rock with color and claimed a half
-interest. It was then that I learned his name&mdash;Pete Auguerreberry and
-that his partners were Flynn and Cavanaugh. Wild Bill Corcoran had
-grubstaked me. I told Pete five partners were too many and we should
-agree upon a division point&mdash;each taking a full claim and he could
-have his choice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He refused and wanted half interest in both and nothing short of
-murder would have budged him. I went to Rhyolite for Bill Corcoran.
-He went for his partners. When we met, Corcoran had an offer to buy,
-sight unseen, from one of Schwab&rsquo;s agents. Everyone of us wanted to
-sell, except Pete who stood out for a fantastic price. His partners offered
-to give him a part of their share if he would accept the offer. Pete
-refused. He thought it was worth millions. Wild Bill organized a company
-and we started work.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>For awhile it seemed the Harrisburg claims would prove to be good
-producers. In the end it was just another town on the map for Shorty.
-Futile years for Pete.</p>
-<p class="tb">Once I asked Shorty Harris how he obtained his grubstakes. &ldquo;Grubstakes,&rdquo;
-he answered, &ldquo;like gold, are where you find them. Once I was
-broke in Pioche, Nev., and couldn&rsquo;t find a grubstake anywhere. Somebody
-told me that a woman on a ranch a few miles out wanted a man for a
-few days&rsquo; work. I hoofed it out under a broiling sun, but when I got
-there, the lady said she had no job. I reckon she saw my disappointment
-and when her cat came up and began to mew, she told me the cat had
-an even dozen kittens and she would give me a dollar if I would take
-&rsquo;em down the road and kill &rsquo;em.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;It&rsquo;s a deal,&rsquo; I said. She got &rsquo;em in a sack and I started back to
-town. I intended to lug &rsquo;em a few miles away and turn &rsquo;em loose,
-because I haven&rsquo;t got the heart to kill anything.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A dozen kittens makes quite a load and I had to sit down pretty
-often to rest. A fellow in a two-horse wagon came along and offered
-me a ride. I picked up the sack and climbed in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Cats, eh?&rsquo; the fellow said. &lsquo;They ought to bring a good price. I
-was in Colorado once. Rats and mice were taking the town. I had a cat.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_59">59</span>
-She would have a litter every three months. I had no trouble selling
-them cats for ten dollars apiece. Beat a gold mine.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There were plenty rats in Pioche and that sack of kittens went like
-hotcakes. One fellow didn&rsquo;t have any money and offered me a goat. I
-knew a fellow who wanted a goat. He lived on the same lot as I did.
-Name was Pete Swain.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pete was all lit up when I offered him the goat for fifty dollars. He
-peeled the money off his roll and took the goat into his shack. A few
-days later Pete came to his door and called me over and shoved a fifty
-dollar note into my hands. &lsquo;I just wanted you to see what that goat&rsquo;s
-doing,&rsquo; he said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I looked inside. The goat was pulling the cork out of a bottle of
-liquor with his teeth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;That goat&rsquo;s drunk as a boiled owl,&rsquo; Pete said. &lsquo;If I ever needed any
-proof that there&rsquo;s something in this idea of the transmigration of souls,
-that goat gives it. He&rsquo;s Jimmy, my old sidekick, who, I figgered was
-dead and buried.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Now listen,&rsquo; I said. &lsquo;Do you mean to tell me you actually believe
-that goat is your old pal, whom you drank with and played with and saw
-buried with your own eyes, right up there on the hill?&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Exactly,&rsquo; Pete shouted, and he peeled off another fifty and gave it
-to me. So, you see, a grubstake, like gold, is where you find it.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_60">60</div>
-<h2 id="c12"><span class="small">Chapter X</span>
-<br />Greenwater&mdash;Last of the Boom Towns</h2>
-<p>Located on Black Mountain in the Funeral Range on the east side
-of Death Valley, Greenwater was the last boom town founded in the
-mad decade which followed Jim Butler&rsquo;s strike at Tonopah. Records
-show locations of mining claims in the district as early as 1884, but all
-were abandoned.</p>
-<p>The location notice of a &ldquo;gold and silver claim&rdquo; was filed in 1884 by
-Doc Trotter, a famous character of the desert, remembered both for
-his good fellowship and his burro&mdash;Honest John&mdash;a habitual thief of
-incredible cunning, &ldquo;Picked locks with baling wire....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The first location of a copper claim was made by Frank McAllister
-who, with a man named Cooper and Arthur Kunzie, may be credited
-with one of the West&rsquo;s most spectacular mining booms.</p>
-<p>In 1905 Phil Creaser and Fred Birney took samples of the Copper
-Blue Ledge and sent them to Patsy Clark, who was so impressed that
-he dispatched Joseph P. Harvey, a prominent mining engineer to look
-at the property. Harvey started from Daggett and had reached Cave
-Spring in the Avawatz Mountains when he was caught in a cloudburst
-and lost all his equipment. He returned to Daggett, secured a new
-outfit and this time reached Black Mountain, but was unable to locate
-the claims.</p>
-<p>Again Birney and Creaser contacted Clark and this time the mining
-magnate came to Rhyolite, ordered another examination of the property,
-giving his agent authority to buy. Upon the assay&rsquo;s showing, the
-claims were bought. Immediately Charles M. Schwab, August Heinze,
-Tasker L. Oddie, Borax Smith, W. A. Clark, and many other moguls
-of mining hurried to the scene or sent their agents. In their wake came
-gamblers, merchants, crib girls, soldiers of fortune, and thugs.</p>
-<p>$4,125,000 was paid for 2500 claims. Result&mdash;a hectic town with
-as many as 100 people a day pouring out of the canyons onto the
-barren, windy slope.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_61">61</div>
-<p>Noted mining engineers announced that Black Mountain was one
-huge deposit of copper with a thin overlay of rock, dirt, and gravel. &ldquo;It
-will make Butte&rsquo;s &lsquo;Richest Hill on Earth&rsquo; look like beggars&rsquo; pickings,&rdquo;
-they announced.</p>
-<p>Greenwater stocks sky-rocketed and so many people poured into
-the new camp that the town was moved two miles from the mines in
-order to take care of the growth which it was believed would soon make
-it a metropolis. Before pick and shovel had made more than a dent on
-the crust of Black Mountain, two newspapers, a bank, express lines,
-and a magazine were in operation.</p>
-<p>Here Shorty Harris missed another fortune only because his partner
-went on a drunk.</p>
-<p>Leaving Rhyolite, Shorty had induced Judge Decker, a convivial
-resident of Ballarat to furnish a grubstake to look over Black Mountain.
-He made several locations, erected his monuments, returned to Ballarat
-and gave them to Decker to be recorded.</p>
-<p>When the papers reached Ballarat with the news that the copper
-barons were bidding recklessly for Greenwater claims Shorty was broke
-again. Bursting into Chris Wicht&rsquo;s saloon, he shouted, &ldquo;Where&rsquo;s the
-Judge?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Chris nodded toward the end of the bar where the Judge, swaying
-slightly, was waving his glass in lieu of a baton while leading the
-quartet in &ldquo;Sweet Adeline.&rdquo; Wedging through the crowd, Shorty touched
-the Judge&rsquo;s elbow: &ldquo;Lay off that cooking likker, Judge. It&rsquo;s Mum&rsquo;s Extra
-for us from now on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yeh? How come?&rdquo; the Judge asked thickly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re worth a billion dollars,&rdquo; Shorty said. &ldquo;I staked out that
-whole dam&rsquo; mountain. Where&rsquo;re those location notices?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What location notices?&rdquo; Decker blinked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The ones I gave you to take to Independence.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>With one hand the Judge steadied himself on the bar. With the
-other he fumbled through his pockets, finally producing a frayed batch
-of papers, covered with barroom doodling, but no recorder&rsquo;s receipt for
-the location notices. &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ll be damned,&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So&rsquo;ll I,&rdquo; Shorty gulped.</p>
-<p>If Decker had recorded the notices both he and Shorty would have
-become rich through the sale of those claims.</p>
-<p>When laborers cleared the ground to begin work for Schwab, Patsy
-Clark, and others, they tore down the monuments containing the unrecorded
-notices.</p>
-<p>In a little cemetery on the gravel flats at Ballarat, lies Decker.</p>
-<p>Pleasantly refreshed with liquor one yawny afternoon he managed
-<span class="pb" id="Page_62">62</span>
-to have the last word in an argument with the constable, Henry Pietsch
-and went happily to his room. Later the constable thought of a way to
-win the argument and went to the Judge&rsquo;s cabin. A shot was heard and
-Pietsch came through the door with a smoking gun in his hand. Decker,
-he said, had started for a pistol in his dresser drawer. But Decker was
-found with a hole in his back, his spine severed. At Independence, the
-constable was acquitted for lack of evidence and returned to Ballarat to
-resume his duties, but was told that he might live longer somewhere
-else. Pietsch didn&rsquo;t argue this time and thus avoided a lynching. He left
-Ballarat and, I believe, was hanged for another murder.</p>
-<p>Among those who came early to Greenwater, none was more outstanding
-than a gorgeous creature with a wasp waist who stepped from
-the stage one day, patted her pompadour with jewelled fingers, gave
-the bustling town an approving glance. Then she turned to the bevy
-of blondes and brunettes she had brought. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a man&rsquo;s town, girls....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bystanders were already eyeing the girls; their scarlet lips and the
-deep dark danger in their roving eyes.</p>
-<p>So Diamond Tooth Lil was welcomed to Greenwater and became
-important both in its business and social economy.</p>
-<p>It was agreed that Lil was a good fellow. Greenwater also learned
-that her word was good as her bond. She kept an orderly five dollar
-house and if anyone chose to break her rules of conduct, he ran afoul
-of her six-gun. Because she could fight like a jungle beast, she was
-also called Tiger Lil. Somewhere along the line, four of her upper teeth
-had been broken and in each of the replacements was set a diamond of
-first quality. As Greenwater prospered so did Diamond Tooth Lil.</p>
-<p>One day an exotic creature with a suggestion of Spanish-Creole and
-dark, compelling eyes dropped off the stage. She too had pretty girls
-and when the new bagnio had its grand opening, with champagne and
-imported orchestra, Diamond Tooth Lil sent a huge floral piece.</p>
-<p>A few nights later Lil was sitting in her parlor wondering where
-the men were. The girls were all banked around with folded hands.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe there&rsquo;s a celebration....&rdquo; A moment later a belated male
-barged in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Willie, where&rsquo;s everybody?&rdquo; Lil asked.</p>
-<p>Willie flicked a look at the idle girls. &ldquo;Maybe,&rdquo; he announced,
-&ldquo;they&rsquo;re down at that new cut-rate menage.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Cut-rate?&rdquo; Lil cried.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yeh. Three dollars.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A steely glint came into Diamond Tooth Lil&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
-<p>She tossed her cigarette into the cuspidor, went to her room, picked
-up her six-gun, saw that it was loaded and hurried to her rival&rsquo;s.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_63">63</div>
-<p>A rap on the door brought the dark beauty to the porch. &ldquo;Listen
-dearie,&rdquo; Diamond Tooth Lil began. &ldquo;This is a union town. I hear you&rsquo;re
-scabbing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The hot Latin temper flared. &ldquo;I run my business to suit myself....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And you won&rsquo;t raise the price?&rdquo; asked Diamond Tooth Lil.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Never!&rdquo; Suddenly the exotic one looked into hard steel and harder
-eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Okay. You&rsquo;re through. Start packing,&rdquo; ordered Lil.</p>
-<p>Something in the eyes behind the six-gun told the madam that
-surrender was wiser than a funeral and the scab house closed forever.</p>
-<p>A wayfarer in Greenwater announced that he was so low he could
-mount stilts and clear a snake&rsquo;s belly, but being broke, he could only
-sniff the liquor-scented air coming from Bill Waters&rsquo;s saloon and look
-wistfully at the bottles on the shelves. Then he noticed that Bill Waters
-was alone, polishing glasses. A sudden inspiration came and he sauntered
-in. &ldquo;Bill,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;gimme a drink....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bill Waters was no meticulous interpreter of English and slid a glass
-down the bar. A bottle followed. The drinker filled the glass, poured
-it down an arid throat. &ldquo;Thanks,&rdquo; he called and started out.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hey&mdash;&rdquo; cried Bill Waters. &ldquo;You haven&rsquo;t paid for that drink.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, I asked you to give me a drink....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yeh,&rdquo; Bill sneered. &ldquo;Well, brother, you&rsquo;d better pay.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Horse feathers&mdash;&rdquo; said the fellow and proceeded toward the door.</p>
-<p>Bill Waters picked up a double barrelled shotgun, pointed it at the
-departing guest and pulled the trigger. The jester fell, someone called
-the undertaker and the porter washed the floor.</p>
-<p>It looked bad for Bill. But lawyers solve such problems. Bill said
-he was joking and didn&rsquo;t know the gun was loaded. The answer satisfied
-the court and Bill returned to his glasses.</p>
-<p>For a few years Greenwater prospered. Then it was noticed that the
-incoming stages had empty seats. Bartenders had more time to polish
-glasses. &ldquo;The World&rsquo;s Biggest Copper Deposit&rdquo; which the world&rsquo;s
-greatest experts had assured the moguls lay under the mountain just
-wasn&rsquo;t there.</p>
-<p>Today there is barely a trace of Greenwater. A few bottles gleam
-in the sun. The wind sweeps over from Dante&rsquo;s View or up Dead
-Man&rsquo;s Canyon. The greasewood waves. The rotted leg of a pair of overalls
-protrudes from its covering of sand. A sunbaked shoe lies on its side.</p>
-<p>But somewhere under its crust is a case of champagne. Dan Modine,
-the freighter, buried it there one dark night over 40 years ago and was
-never able to find it.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_64">64</div>
-<h2 id="c13"><span class="small">Chapter XI</span>
-<br />The Amargosa Country</h2>
-<p>In Hellgate Pass I met Slim again, resting on the roadside, his burro
-browsing nearby. Slim, I may add here, already had a niche in Goldfield&rsquo;s
-hall of fame. He had walked into a gambling house one day
-broke, thirsty, nursing a hangover, and hoping to find a friend who
-would buy him a drink. Though it was a holiday and the place crowded,
-he saw no familiar face, but while waiting he noticed the cashier was
-busy collecting the winnings from the tables. He also noticed that in order
-to save the time it required to unlock the door of the cage, the cashier
-would dump the gold and silver coins on the shelf at his wicker window,
-then for safety&rsquo;s sake, shove it off to fall on the floor inside.</p>
-<p>Slim watched the procedure awhile and with a sudden bright idea,
-sauntered out. A few moments later he returned through an alley with
-an auger wrapped in a tow sack, crawled under the house and soon a
-stream of gold and silver was cascading into Slim&rsquo;s hat.</p>
-<p>A lookout at a table nearest the cage, hearing a strange metallic
-noise, went outside to investigate and peeking under the floor, saw Slim
-without being seen. It was just too good to keep. Stealthily moving away,
-he spread the news and half of Goldfield was gathered about when Slim,
-his pockets bulging with his loot, crawled out only to face a jeering,
-heckling crowd.</p>
-<p>Cornered like a rat in a cage, he couldn&rsquo;t run; he couldn&rsquo;t speak.
-He could only stand and grin and somehow the grin caught the crowd
-and instead of a lynching, Slim was handcuffed and led away and later
-the merciful judge who had been in the crowd declared Goldfield out
-of bounds for Slim and sent him on his way.</p>
-<p>At no other place in the world except Goldfield, with its craving for
-life&rsquo;s sunny side, could such an incident have occurred.</p>
-<p>After greetings Slim confided that he was en route to a certain
-canyon, the location of which he wouldn&rsquo;t even tell to his mother.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_65">65</span>
-There, not a cent less than $100,000,000 awaited him. No prospector
-worthy of the name ever bothers to mention a claim of less value. Not
-sure of the roads ahead, I asked him for directions.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d better go down the valley,&rdquo; he advised, pointing to a small
-black cloud above Funeral Range. &ldquo;Regular cloudburst hatchery&mdash;these
-mountains.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At a sudden burst of thunder we flinched and at another the earth
-seemed to tremble. Forked lightning was stabbing the inky blackness
-and I expected to see the mountains fall apart. &ldquo;Something&rsquo;s got to
-give,&rdquo; Slim said. &ldquo;Look at that lightning ... no letup.&rdquo; Another
-roar rumbled and rolled over the valley. &ldquo;God&mdash;&rdquo; muttered Slim, &ldquo;I
-haven&rsquo;t prayed since I fell into a mine shaft full of rattlesnakes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As we watched the incessant play of lightning, Slim told me about
-his fall into the shaft: &ldquo;Arkansas Ben Brandt was working about 100
-yards away. Deaf as a lamp post, Ben is, but I kept praying and hollering
-and just when I&rsquo;d given up, here comes a rope. You can argue with
-me all day but you can&rsquo;t make me believe the Lord didn&rsquo;t unstop old
-Ben&rsquo;s ears.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Slim gave me a final warning. &ldquo;Take the road over the mountain
-when you come to the Shoshone sign. When you get there be sure to
-see Charlie before you go any farther.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At every water hole where prospectors were gathered I&rsquo;d heard
-someone tell someone else to see Charlie. At Furnace Creek I&rsquo;d heard
-the vice president of the Borax Company tell an official of the Santa Fe
-railroad to see Charlie and only an hour before I met Slim I had stopped
-to give a tire patch to a young miner with a flat. While I waited to see
-that the patch stuck, I learned he was on his way to consult Charlie.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My helper,&rdquo; he confided, &ldquo;jumped my claim after he learned I
-hadn&rsquo;t done last year&rsquo;s assessment work. That&rsquo;s legal if a fellow&rsquo;s a skunk
-but when he stole my wife and chased me off with my own shotgun,
-bigod&mdash;that&rsquo;s different.&rdquo; I suggested a lawyer. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see Charlie first....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Naturally I became curious about this Charlie, who seemed to be
-a combination of Father Confessor and the Caliph Haroun Alraschid
-to all the desert. &ldquo;Just who is Charlie?&rdquo; I asked Slim.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He runs the store at Shoshone. Tell him I&rsquo;ll be down soon. I want
-him to handle my deal.&rdquo; He slapped his burro and we parted&mdash;he for
-his $100,000,000, I to leave the country. Watching the spring in his
-step a moment, I got into my car and knew at last the why of those
-dark alluring canyons that ran up from the hungry land and hid in the
-hills. I knew why there are riches that nothing can take away and why
-rainbows swing low in the sky. The good God had made them so that
-fellows like Slim could climb one and ride.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_66">66</div>
-<p>Driving along I found myself trying to appraise the endless waste.
-Was it a blunder of creation, hell&rsquo;s front yard or God&rsquo;s back stairs? It
-was easy to understand the appeal of vast distances, of desert dawns and
-desert nights but what was it that made men &ldquo;go desert&rdquo;?</p>
-<p>The answer was becoming clearer. Fellows like Slim had found
-God in a snake hole, or if you prefer&mdash;a way of life patterned with
-infinite precision to their needs. It is easy enough to tear into scraps,
-another&rsquo;s formula for happiness and recommend your own but that is
-an egotism that only the fool will flaunt and I began to suspect that the
-Slims and the Shortys had found a freedom for which millions in the
-tired world Outside vainly struggled and slowly died.</p>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">&ldquo;I wanted the gold, and I got it&mdash;</p>
-<p class="t">Came out with a fortune last fall&mdash;</p>
-<p class="t0">Yet somehow life&rsquo;s not what I thought it,</p>
-<p class="t">And somehow the gold isn&rsquo;t all.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">It grips you like some kinds of sinning;</p>
-<p class="t">It twists you from foe to a friend;</p>
-<p class="t0">It seems it&rsquo;s been since the beginning;</p>
-<p class="t">It seems it will be to the end.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="lr">&mdash;<i>Robert W. Service.</i></p>
-</div>
-<p>Rounding a sharp turn in the road that led over and around a hill
-jutting out from a mountain of black malpai, I saw a sign: &ldquo;Shoshone&rdquo;
-and just beyond, a little settlement almost hidden in a thicket of mesquite.
-A sign on a weather-beaten ramshackle building read, &ldquo;Store.&rdquo; A
-few listing shacks on a naked flat. An abandoned tent house, its torn
-canvas top whipping the rafters in the wind. Whirlwinds spiraling
-along dry washes to vanish in hummocks of sand.</p>
-<p>The presence of three or four prospectors strung along a slab bench
-either staring at the ground at their feet or the brown bare mountains,
-only emphasized the depressing solitude and I decided if I had to choose
-between hell and Shoshone I&rsquo;d take hell.</p>
-<p>Reaching the store through deep dust, I guessed correctly that the
-big fellow giving me an appraising look was Charlie. He was slow in
-his movements, slow in his speech and I had the feeling that his keen,
-calm eyes had already counted the number of buttons on my shirt and
-the eyelets in my shoes. I asked about the road to Baker.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Washed out. Won&rsquo;t be open for two weeks.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Two weeks?&rdquo; I gasped. &ldquo;Long enough to kill a fellow, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, there&rsquo;s a little cemetery handy. Just up the gulch.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_67">67</div>
-<p>Impulsively I thrust out my hand. &ldquo;Shake. You win. Now that we
-understand each other, have you a cabin for rent for these two weeks?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, but you&rsquo;d better take it longer,&rdquo; he chuckled. &ldquo;In two weeks
-you&rsquo;ll be a native and won&rsquo;t want to get out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The showing of the cabin was delayed by a lanky individual who
-was pawing over a pile of shoes. &ldquo;Charlie, soles on my shoes are worn
-through. These any good?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not worth a dam&rsquo;,&rdquo; Charlie said. He picked up hammer and nails,
-handed them to the lanky one. &ldquo;Some old tires outside. Cut off a piece
-and tack it on. I&rsquo;ll have some good shoes next time you&rsquo;re in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A miner in an ancient pickup stopped for gas. As Brown filled the
-tank he noticed a tire dangerously worn. &ldquo;Blackie, you need a new
-casing to get across Death Valley.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;These&rsquo;ll do,&rdquo; Blackie answered as he dug into all his pockets, paid
-for the gas and got into the car.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait a minute,&rdquo; Brown said and in a moment he was rolling a
-new tire out, lifting it to the bed of the pickup. He handed Blackie a
-new tube. &ldquo;If you use them, pay me. If you don&rsquo;t, bring &rsquo;em back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Blackie regarded him a moment. &ldquo;How&rsquo;d you know I was broke?&rdquo;
-he grinned, and chugged away.</p>
-<p>A man stopped a truck in front of the door, came in and asked
-how far it was to Furnace Creek. Charlie looked him over, then glanced
-at the truck. &ldquo;Fifty-eight miles the short way. Nearly 80 the other.
-You&rsquo;ll have to take the long way.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; the fellow bristled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your load is too high for the underpass on the short route. Road&rsquo;s
-washed out anyway.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The man frowned and turned to go.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait a minute,&rdquo; Charlie called. He reached for a sack of flour,
-laid it on a counter. Then he stood a slab of bacon on its edge and
-cut off a chunk. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll stop at Bradbury Well&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t stop nowhere,&rdquo; the truckman said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have to. Your radiator will be boiling.&rdquo; He got a carton,
-put the flour and bacon in it and reaching on a shelf behind, got coffee,
-sugar, and canned milk and put these in. &ldquo;Old Dobe Charlie Nels is
-camped there. Poor old fellow hasn&rsquo;t been in for two weeks....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The man looked at Charlie, uncertain. &ldquo;You want me to drop it off,
-huh?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Charlie said and lugging the carton to the truck, he shoved
-it in.</p>
-<p>With squinted eyes the driver watched. &ldquo;Mister, I&rsquo;ll surely fill up
-here on my way back,&rdquo; and with a friendly wave, climbed into his cab
-<span class="pb" id="Page_68">68</span>
-and I began to understand why all over the desert I&rsquo;d heard of Charlie.</p>
-<p>The cabin assigned me was the usual box type, shaded by the overhanging
-branches of a screwbean mesquite.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Cabin&rsquo;s not much,&rdquo; Charlie said, &ldquo;but you&rsquo;ll have a Beauty Rest
-mattress to sleep on. My wife says folks&rsquo;ll put up with most anything
-if they have a good bed.&rdquo; He looked the room over and I noticed that
-nothing escaped him. Wood and kindling. Oil in the lamp. Water in
-the pitcher&mdash;an ornate vessel with enormous roses edged with gilt. He
-opened a closet door, saw that the matching vessel was in place and
-went out. After arranging my belongings, with time to kill, I returned
-to the store, hoping to learn something about nearby trails.</p>
-<p>A short woman who preceded me slammed a can of coffee on the
-counter, removed her long cigarette holder, blew a ring of smoke at
-the ceiling and asked Charlie where he got the coffee. He told her that
-it came in a shipment.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well bigod, you send it back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Charlie laughed and turned to me: &ldquo;This is Myra Benson. You
-want to stay on the good side of Myra. She has charge of the dining
-room.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>My remark that good coffee was my early morning weakness led to
-an invitation to sample her brew. &ldquo;Mine too,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;The pot&rsquo;s on
-the stove before daylight, if you&rsquo;re up that early.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I soon discovered that Myra&rsquo;s language was just a bit of color Death
-Valley imparts to speech, for she was deeply religious if not in all its
-forms, in all of its essentials and the occasional use of a two-fisted
-phrase did not in the least detract from the eternal feminine of one of
-Death Valley&rsquo;s most remarkable women.</p>
-<p>Guided by the light in her kitchen, I joined her the next morning
-while Shoshone still slept, and over a delicious cup learned something
-about people and places.</p>
-<p>The man with the wide Stetson was Dan Modine, deputy sheriff.
-Liked poker. The quiet, squat fellow with the blue pop eyes was Billy
-de Von. &ldquo;College man. Works on the roads. Taught in the University
-of Mexico before he came here. Siberian Red? Oh, that&rsquo;s Ernie Huhn.
-No place on Godamighty&rsquo;s earth he hasn&rsquo;t been. As soon bet $1000
-as two bits on a pair of jacks.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The tall thin fellow they called Sam? Must be Sam Flake. Here
-before Noah built the ark.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Knowing that Mormons had pioneered in the area, I was curious
-about an undersized man pushing an oversize baby carriage loaded
-with infants and a dozen youngsters trailing him. &ldquo;Does he happen
-to be one of the Faithful who has clung to his wives?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_69">69</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s Eddie Main,&rdquo; Myra laughed. &ldquo;Bachelor. Just loves kids. He
-was born in San Francisco in the days when a nickel just wasn&rsquo;t counted
-unless it had a dime alongside. His folks sent him to New York to be
-educated. Eddie didn&rsquo;t like it. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s a nickel town,&rsquo; Eddie said. &lsquo;Cheapest
-hole on earth.&rsquo; He came to the desert and the desert took him over. When
-he&rsquo;s not hauling kids around he&rsquo;s reading. Don&rsquo;t get out on a limb in an
-argument with Eddie. You&rsquo;ll lose sure. Every now and then Eddie goes
-East for a vacation. It&rsquo;s awful on the mothers. They have to take care of
-their own children and the children want Eddie.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who is Hank, the fellow that came in with the pickup Ford?&rdquo; I
-asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Our bootlegger. Comes Wednesdays and Saturdays. Regular as a
-bread route. Always tell when he&rsquo;s due. Bench is crowded. Didn&rsquo;t you
-notice the tarpaulin over his truck? Always two kegs and a sack of
-empty pints and quarts. Rough roads here. Siphons out what you want.
-Death Valley Scotty? Around yesterday. Lit up like a barn afire.&rdquo; The
-short man with the black whiskers was Henry Ashford who, with his
-brothers Harold and Rudolph owned the Ashford mine.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How does such a little store in a place like this make a living for
-the Browns?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wonder myself, at times,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Everybody around here takes
-their troubles to Charlie or Stella. Maybe you noticed their home&mdash;the
-cottage with the screen porch a few steps from the store. Stella was telling
-me yesterday she needed a new carpet for her living room. I said,
-&lsquo;I&rsquo;m not surprised. You&rsquo;re running a nursery, emergency hospital, and a
-domestic relations court.&rsquo; Sometimes young couples find their marriage
-going on the rocks. The woman goes to Stella to get the kinks out. As
-for Charlie, if you&rsquo;re around long enough you&rsquo;ll see him most every
-morning strolling over to the shacks in the jungle or up to the dugouts
-in Dublin Gulch. He thinks nobody knows what he&rsquo;s doing or maybe
-they figure he&rsquo;s just taking a walk. I know. Some of these old fellows are
-always in a bad way. Just last week Charlie came in here and told me
-to send something a sick man could eat over to old Jim. &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll have to take
-him to the hospital soon as I can get my car ready,&rsquo; he said. Three hundred
-miles&mdash;that trip.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And there&rsquo;s Phil. You&rsquo;ll see him around. Fine steady chap. Lost his
-job when the mine he worked in shut down. Long as he was working he
-was the first in the dining room when I opened the door. He began to
-miss a breakfast, then a dinner, and finally he didn&rsquo;t show up at all. I
-supposed he was cooking his own and didn&rsquo;t mention it. Kept his chin
-up. You could hear him laughing loud as anybody on the bench, but
-<span class="pb" id="Page_70">70</span>
-Charlie noticed that once a day Phil would follow his nose over into the
-mesquite where somebody was sure to share a mulligan stew.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One day when Phil was sitting alone on the woodpile just outside
-my kitchen, Charlie sat down beside him. They didn&rsquo;t know I was there.
-&lsquo;Phil,&rsquo; Charlie says, &lsquo;the ditch that carries the runoff up at the spring
-needs widening. Could you spare a few days to put it in shape?&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Phil left that bench running, got a pick and shovel and went singing
-up the road and to this day he doesn&rsquo;t know that Charlie just created
-that job so he could eat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I mentioned the fellow with black hair and blue eyes. &ldquo;He complained
-of rheumatism and slapped his knees a lot.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, that&rsquo;s Dutch Barr. It isn&rsquo;t rheumatism. Just a sign he&rsquo;s going
-on a drunk.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The lanky man with the blond eyebrows and sombre face which
-lighted so easily to laugh, was Whitey Bill McGarn. &ldquo;... Never had
-a worry in his life....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I learned also that the mountain of malpai which lifts above Shoshone
-was a burial place for a race of Indians antedating the Piutes and
-Shoshones. &ldquo;They buried their dead in a crouching position on their
-knees, elbows bent, hands at their ears. Old Nancy, who was Sam Yundt&rsquo;s
-squaw wife before he got rich, says they were buried that way so they
-would be ready to go quick when the Great Spirit called.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The first rose of dawn was in the sky when I left Myra. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll
-have time enough to look around before breakfast,&rdquo; she told me and
-recommended a view of the valley from the flat-topped mesa above my
-cabin. &ldquo;You can reach the top by climbing up a gully and holding on to
-the greasewood. You can see the dugouts in Dublin Gulch too. Some real
-old timers live there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A sweeping view of the little valley rewarded the climb.</p>
-<p>Below, Shoshone lay, tucked away in the mesquite. No honking
-horns, no clanging cars. No swollen ankles dragging muted chains to
-bench or counter, desk or machine. Soon faint spirals of smoke leaned
-from the shanties. Shoshone was awakening. It would wash its face on a
-slab bench, eat its bacon and eggs, and somebody would go out to look
-for two million dollars.</p>
-<p>After breakfast, I joined the old timers on the bench. &ldquo;No&mdash;nothing
-exciting happens around here,&rdquo; Joe Ryan told me and stopped whittling
-to look at a car coming up the road. A moment later the car stopped at
-the gas pump and three smartly tailored men stepped out. I heard one
-say, &ldquo;Odd looking lot on that bench, aren&rsquo;t they?&rdquo; Then Joe said to the
-fellow at his side, &ldquo;Queer looking birds, ain&rsquo;t they?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How much is gas?&rdquo; one of the tourists asked.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_71">71</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Thirty cents,&rdquo; Charlie said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, it&rsquo;s only 18 in the city,&rdquo; the man flared. &ldquo;How far is it to the
-next gas?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Charlie told him, and Big Dan sitting beside me muttered: &ldquo;Dam&rsquo;
-fool&rsquo;ll pay 50 cents up there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The driver climbed into the car and Charlie asked if he had plenty
-of water.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A gallon can full....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not enough,&rdquo; Charlie warned.</p>
-<p>A fellow in the back seat spoke, &ldquo;Aw, go on. He wants to sell a
-canteen....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As the car pulled out, Joe called to Charlie: &ldquo;You&rsquo;re sold out of
-canteens, ain&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes. But I was going to give him one of those old five gallon cans
-on the dump.&rdquo; He went inside and Joe Ryan said, &ldquo;Won&rsquo;t get far on a
-gallon of water.&rdquo; He waved his knife toward the little cemetery at the
-mouth of the gulch. &ldquo;Lot of smart Alecs like him up there, that Charlie
-dragged in offa the desert.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was five days almost to the hour when Ann Cowboy, a Piute
-squaw came to the store with an Indian boy who couldn&rsquo;t speak
-English; nodded at the boy and said to Charlie: &ldquo;Him see....&rdquo; She
-pointed to the big black mountain of malpai above Shoshone, whirled
-her finger in a circle, shot it this way and that, then patted the floor.
-&ldquo;You savvy?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Her dark eyes watched Charlie&rsquo;s and when she had finished Charlie
-called Joe Ryan and together they went across the road, climbed into
-a pickup truck and left in a hurry. Even I understood that somebody on
-the other side of that mountain was in trouble, but I had no idea that in
-three or four hours the pickup would return with a cadaver under a
-tarpaulin and a thirst-crazed survivor whose distorted features bore little
-resemblance to those of man.</p>
-<p>Big Dan helped lift the victim from the truck. &ldquo;There were three,&rdquo;
-Dan said. &ldquo;Where is the other fellow?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We looked all over,&rdquo; Joe shrugged.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The one that&rsquo;s missing,&rdquo; Dan said, &ldquo;is the fellow that griped about
-the canteen. I remember his black hair.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They carried the still-living man over to Charlie&rsquo;s house and left
-him to the ministrations of the capable Stella. Charlie returned to the
-store, got a pick and shovel from a rack, handed one to Ben Brandt and
-one to Cranky Casey. Not a word was spoken to them. They took the
-tools and started toward the little cemetery at the mouth of Dublin
-Gulch.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_72">72</div>
-<p>I joined Dan on the bench. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Dan said, &ldquo;they saved the price
-of a canteen.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">Two spinsters&mdash;teachers of zoology in a fashionable eastern school
-for girls&mdash;came in search of a place they called Metbury Springs. Brown
-told them there were no such springs in the Death Valley region. Obviously
-disappointed, one produced a map, spread it on the counter, ran
-her finger over a maze of notes and looking up asked what sort of rats
-lived about Shoshone. Charlie told them that very few rats survived their
-natural enemies and were seldom seen.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do they look like?&rdquo; the teacher asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just regular rats,&rdquo; Charlie told her.</p>
-<p>Again she consulted her notes. &ldquo;Do you mean to say the only rat
-you&rsquo;ve seen here is <i>Mus decumanus</i>?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mus who?&rdquo; Charlie asked. &ldquo;Only rats around here besides the two-legged
-kind are just plain everyday rats.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The ladies gathered up their papers, went outside, looked over the
-hills, consulted their maps, and returned to Brown. &ldquo;Sir, this is Metbury
-Spring,&rdquo; one announced, &ldquo;and for your own information we may add
-that in no other place in the world is there a rat like the one you have
-here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The amazing feature of this incident is that it is true. The rats in
-some unexplained way had disappeared.</p>
-<p>The spinsters remained for weeks but failed to find the specimen
-they sought, but Charlie learned that the first man known to have settled
-at Shoshone was a man named Brown and Shoshone&rsquo;s first name was
-Metbury Spring.</p>
-<p class="tb">Death came to Shoshone that week-end. George Hoagland, prospector,
-reached Trail&rsquo;s End. Charlie announced the news to the bench
-and asked for volunteers to dig the grave. Bob Johnson, another prospector,
-jumped up. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll help.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The others gave Bob a quick look and exchanged slow ones with
-each other, because it was known that Bob had not liked Hoagland.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been in lots of deals with that bastard,&rdquo; he had often said. &ldquo;Came
-out loser every time. Always left himself a hole to wiggle out of.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Right or wrong, Bob&rsquo;s opinion was shared by many. Herman Jones
-glanced after Bob, now going for a pick and shovel. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s sure white
-of Bob, forgetting his grudge,&rdquo; Herman said and all Shoshone approved.</p>
-<p>I joined the little group that filed up to the cemetery at the mouth
-of the gulch for the graveside ceremony. We stood about waiting for
-the box that contained all there was of George.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_73">73</div>
-<p>They take death on the desert just as they do any other grim fact
-of nature. They talked of George and the hard, chalky earth Bob had
-to dig through in the hot sun. There were mild arguments about whose
-bones lay under this or that unmarked grave. &ldquo;Dad Fairbanks brought
-that fellow in....&rdquo; &ldquo;No such thing. That&rsquo;s Tillie Younger&mdash;member
-of Jesse James&rsquo;s gang. I helped bury him....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Presently there was a stir and I saw Charlie over where the women
-were. He had another chore and was doing it because there was no one
-else to do it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Usually reads a coupla verses,&rdquo; Joe Ryan told me. &ldquo;But somebody
-stole the only Bible in Shoshone.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The box was lowered, the grave filled and Charlie stepped forward.
-He held his hat well up in front of his chest and I suspected that he
-had a few notes pasted in the hat. Those about were listening intently
-as people will to one who has something to say and says it in a few
-words.</p>
-<p>Suddenly I was conscious of mumbling and the tramping of earth
-and seeing Brown flick a glance out of the corner of his eye toward the
-disturbing sound, I turned to see Bob Johnson jumping up and down on
-the earth that filled the grave&mdash;careful to miss no inch of it. When he
-had tamped it sufficiently he stepped aside and muttered angrily: &ldquo;Now
-dam&rsquo; you&mdash;let&rsquo;s see you wiggle out of this hole!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Yet, when the hills are covered with wild flowers one may see on
-the unsodded graves of the little cemetery a bottle or a tin can filled
-with sun cups or baby blue eyes and in the dust the tracks of a hobnailed
-shoe.</p>
-<p>I soon discovered the bench was more than a slab of wood. It was
-a state of Hallelujah. For the most part those who gathered there were
-a silent lot, but as one unshaven ancient told me, &ldquo;Too damned much
-talk in the world. Two-three words are plenty&mdash;like yes, naw, and dam&rsquo;.&rdquo;
-Some of them had beaten trails from Crede or Cripple Creek, Virginia
-City or Bodie. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a clean life and clean money,&rdquo; was an expression
-that ran like a formula through their conversation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course, few keep the money they get,&rdquo; Joe Ryan said. &ldquo;Jack
-Morissey couldn&rsquo;t read or write. He struck it rich. Bought a diamond-studded
-watch and couldn&rsquo;t even tell the time of day. Went to Europe;
-hit all the high spots; came back and died in the poor house. But he
-had his fun, which makes more sense than what Nat Crede did. He
-hit it rich. Built a town and a palace. Then blew his brains out and left
-all his millions to a Los Angeles foundling.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>One oldster remembered Eilly Orrum of Virginia City. &ldquo;She had
-followed the covered wagons and made a living washing our clothes,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_74">74</span>
-but she got into our hearts. Everybody liked her. Some say she forgot
-to get a divorce from her second husband before she married Sandy
-Bowers. Nobody blamed her. She and Sandy ran a beanery. Eilly would
-feed anybody on the cuff. John Rodgers ran up a board bill and couldn&rsquo;t
-pay it. He had a few shares in a no-count claim and talked Eilly into
-taking the shares to settle the bill.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Within two weeks Eilly was getting $20,000 a month from that
-deal. It wasn&rsquo;t long before she was giggling happily and telling everybody
-she didn&rsquo;t see how folks could live on less than $100,000 a year.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Julia Bulette? Ran a snooty fancy house. But she taught Virginia
-City how to eat and what, and soon the rich fellows wouldn&rsquo;t stand for
-anything except the world&rsquo;s best foods.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh yes, everybody knew Old Virginny. Gave the town its name.
-Always drunk. Discovered the Ophir. Swapped it for a mustang pony
-and a pint of likker to old Pancake Comstock. When he sobered up
-he discovered the pony was blind. Pancake swapped an eighth interest
-in the Ophir to a Mexican, Gabriel Maldonado, for two burros. The
-Mexican took out $6,000,000. Pancake was quite a lady-killer. Ran
-away with a miner&rsquo;s wife. Fellow was glad to get rid of her, but decided
-he&rsquo;d beat hell out of Pancake. Found him in new diggings nearby
-and jumped him. &lsquo;You don&rsquo;t want her,&rsquo; Pancake says. &lsquo;Be reasonable.
-I&rsquo;ll buy her.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They haggled awhile and the fellow agreed to accept $50 and a
-plug horse. He took the money and started for the horse.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Wait a minute,&rsquo; Pancake says, &lsquo;I want a bill of sale,&rsquo; and wrote it
-out on the spot, and made the fellow sign it. Didn&rsquo;t keep her long
-though. She ran away with a tramp fiddler. The Comstock Lode produced
-over a billion dollars. He might have had a fifth of that. Just too
-smart for his own good. Finally paid the price. Found him on the trail
-one day. Brains blowed out. Suicide.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Dobe Charlie Nels was at Bodie, rendezvous of the toughest of the
-bad men when the United States Hotel rented its rooms in six-hour
-shifts and guests were awakened at the end of that period to make
-places for others. He recalled Eleanor Dumont, whose deft fingers
-dealt four kings to the unwary and four aces to herself. Smitten lovers
-had shot it out for her favors on the Mother Lode and on the Comstock,
-but when life and love still were fair, fate played a scurvy trick
-on the beauteous Eleanor. The shadow of a little down began to show
-on her lip and darkened with the years and so she became Madame
-Moustache. &ldquo;She just got tired living and one night she went outside,
-swallowed a little pellet and passed the deal to God.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But the charmers of Bodie and its bad men and the millions its hills
-<span class="pb" id="Page_75">75</span>
-produced were not so deeply etched on his memory as the job he lost
-because he did it well. Hungry and broke when he arrived he took the
-first job offered&mdash;stacking cord wood.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was a job I really knew. The boss drove stakes 4&times;8 feet alongside
-a mountain of cut wood. I figured I had a long job. He left and
-I took pains to make every cord level on top, sides even. When the
-boss came back he blew up, kicked over my piles and wanted to know
-if I was trying to ruin him. &lsquo;If you&rsquo;d picked out a few crooked sticks
-and crossed a few straight ones, you could have made a cord with half
-the wood. Get out and don&rsquo;t come back.&rsquo;&rdquo; Charlie also had a story of
-a memorable night.</p>
-<p>A bartender in one of Bodie&rsquo;s better saloons was putting his stock
-in order after a busy night when three celebrants in swallow tails and
-toppers came unsteadily through the doors. The two on the outside
-were gallantly steadying the one in the center as they led him to the
-bar. The bartender smiled understandingly when, coming for their
-orders, he noticed the center man&rsquo;s head was pillowed on his arms over
-the bar, his topper lying on its side in front of his face. Recalling that
-the fellow had consumed often and eagerly but had paid for none in
-an earlier session, he nodded at the silent one: &ldquo;Shall I count him out?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh no. Bill&rsquo;s buying this time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The drinks served, the bartender left to attend another late patron
-and moments passed before he returned to find Bill just as he had left
-him, but alone&mdash;his drink untouched. He tapped Bill&rsquo;s shoulder and
-asked payment for the drinks. When three taps and three demands
-brought no answer, he picked up a bung starter; went around the
-counter, seized Bill by the shoulder, wheeled him around only to discover
-that Bill was dead. Startled and panicky, the bartender now ran
-to the door, saw Bill&rsquo;s friends weaving up the street and ran after them,
-told them excitedly that Bill had croaked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; one said thickly. &ldquo;Bill&rsquo;s ticker jammed in our room an hour
-ago. His last words were, &lsquo;Fellows, I want you to have a drink on me.&rsquo;
-Couldn&rsquo;t refuse old Bill&rsquo;s last request.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When Dobe Charlie had finished this story he turned to a clear-eyed
-ancient standing nearby. &ldquo;Jim, I reckon you&rsquo;d call me a Johnny-come-lately
-since you were a Forty-Niner.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Jim said. &ldquo;I was 12 when I came to Hangtown. I remember
-a fellow they called Wheelbarrow John, because he made a better
-wheelbarrow than anyone else. He saved $3000 and went back East.
-He was John Studebaker. Made wagons first. Then autos.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Young fellow named Phil Armour came. No luck. Pulled out. He
-did all right in Chicago though. Founded Armour Company.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_76">76</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Did I ever tell you about the Digger Ounce? No? Well, it&rsquo;s history.
-The Digger Indians didn&rsquo;t know what gold was. Actually they&rsquo;d been
-throwing nuggets at rabbits and couldn&rsquo;t believe their eyes when they
-saw miners exchange the same stuff for food and clothing at the store.
-The Indians had been getting it along the stream beds for ages. So
-they came in with their buckskin loin bags full of it. The merchant took
-it all right, but when he balanced his scales, he used a weight that gave
-the Digger only one dollar for every five he was entitled to. Then the
-Indian had to pay three prices for everything he bought. One miner
-loafing around the store, followed the Diggers one day, learned where
-they were getting it and cleaned up $40,000 in no time. That&rsquo;s history
-too.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Crooked merchants used the same trick on drunken whites and
-anybody else who didn&rsquo;t keep their eyes open. So the Digger Ounce
-became a byword all along the Mother Lode.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But of all the stories about the Comstock this fine old gentleman told
-us, I like best one about Joe Plato. Young, strong, and handsome as
-Apollo, Joe craved a fling after months of toil in the gulches with no
-sight of woman other than the flat-faced Washoe squaws.</p>
-<p>In San Francisco Joe saw a big red apple and he wanted it. A
-breath-taking girl sold him the apple and he wanted her. He acquired
-the girl also. His gambols over, Joe handed her five shares of ten he
-owned in a Comstock claim. &lsquo;A little token,&rsquo; he grinned, never dreaming
-the beautiful wanton had a heart and loved him madly. So he
-forgot her. She didn&rsquo;t forget Joe.</p>
-<p>Months later the ten shares were worth on the market $1,000,000.
-Joe remembered then. &lsquo;Too much for a girl like that.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>To beat the news and retrieve the stock, he braved Sierra storms,
-found her. In the battle of wits she played her cards superbly. &ldquo;Of
-course,&rdquo; she said at last, &ldquo;... if we were married....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So the beaten Joe faced the preacher.</p>
-<p>When Joe Plato died she took her millions to San Francisco, married
-a rich merchant, became a social leader and the mother of nabobs.</p>
-<p class="tb">One morning at breakfast Myra informed me that I could get to
-Bradbury Well, a famous landmark on the road to Death Valley. To
-break the routine, I went. The route leads over Salsbury Pass, named
-for Jack Salsbury&mdash;a congenital promoter who was forever hunting
-something to promote. He had made and lost fortunes in cattle, lumber,
-and mines and for a while lived at Shoshone.</p>
-<p>In a ravine near Bradbury Well were two or three dugouts. In one
-was the ubiquitous Rocky Mountain George&mdash;lean, seamed, and soft
-<span class="pb" id="Page_77">77</span>
-voiced. On the box he used for a table lay a letter mailed in Denver
-and bearing this address: &ldquo;Rocky Mountain George, Nevada.&rdquo; Known
-all over the gold belt, a dozen postmasters had sent it from town to
-town and now it had caught up with George.</p>
-<p>Meeting George a few weeks later in Beatty I recalled our meeting.
-He hadn&rsquo;t shaved in a week and his torn overalls were covered with
-grime. A well-tailored gentleman came out of the hotel across the
-street and stepped into a smart car. &ldquo;Hey, Jim&mdash;&rdquo; George called. &ldquo;Come
-over here a minute....&rdquo; The man left his car and walked over. &ldquo;Jim,
-I want you to meet my friend....&rdquo; Jim and I shook hands. &ldquo;Jim&rsquo;s our
-governor,&rdquo; George added and I looked again at Nevada&rsquo;s Governor
-James Scrugham, later its U. S. Senator. For an hour he and George
-talked of canyons in which, they decided, somebody would find a
-billion dollars and I decided Democracy was safe on the desert.</p>
-<p>Walking up the wash from George&rsquo;s dugout I was surprised to see
-a slim blonde with blue eyes and a nice smile. Obviously she had just
-left her stove, for she had a steaming pot of coffee in her hand. I made
-some inane remark about the beauty of the morning.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s nearly always like this,&rdquo; she said and after a moment I was
-sitting on the bench outside the dugout sipping coffee. I learned that
-her name was Helen. &ldquo;Why shouldn&rsquo;t I try prospecting? I&rsquo;ve nothing
-to lose. I had a job clerking, but I just couldn&rsquo;t scrimp enough to pay
-for medicine and the doctors&rsquo; bills.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>That and the telltale spot on her cheek seemed reason enough for
-her presence and, as she explained, &ldquo;I might make a strike.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Later in Beatty, I noticed a small crowd about the office of Judge
-W. B. Gray, Beatty&rsquo;s marrying Justice, who was also interested in
-mines. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the riot?&rdquo; I asked Rocky Mountain George, who was
-whittling on the bench beside me. &ldquo;Helen made a big strike,&rdquo; he told
-me and I hurried over and met her coming out&mdash;radiant and excited.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve just heard of your strike,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;Where did you make it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Right in that wash,&rdquo; she laughed. &ldquo;He came along one day and&mdash;well,
-we just got to liking each other and&mdash;&rdquo; She paused to introduce me to a
-good looking clean-cut fellow and added: &ldquo;So we just up and married.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The population of Beatty had so changed in one generation that in
-1949 when the town wanted to put on a celebration, not a citizen could
-be found who knew Beatty&rsquo;s first name. Finally a former acquaintance
-was located at Long Beach who advised a booster group that the
-name of its founder was William Martin Beatty. The gentleman is
-mistaken. Beatty&rsquo;s first name was Montelius and was called Monte by
-all old timers.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_78">78</div>
-<p>A feature of social life in Shoshone was the Snake House&mdash;an unbelievable
-structure made of shook from apple crates, scraps of corrugated
-iron found in the dump, tin cut from oil cans, and cardboard
-from packing cartons, which because of scant rainfall, served almost
-as well as wood or iron.</p>
-<p>A fellow comes in from the hills, craves relaxation and finds it in
-the Snake House. Though he never plays poker, Eddie Main who lived
-a few yards away was induced to function as a sort of Managing Director,
-to see that the game remained a gentleman&rsquo;s game.</p>
-<p>Inside, swinging from the roof is a Coleman lantern and under it a
-big round table covered with a blanket stretched tight and tacked under
-the edges. A rack of chips. Chairs for players and kegs and beer crates
-for spectators. A stove in the corner furnishes heat when needed. If
-you limit your poker to penny ante, the game is not for you. I have
-seen more than $1000 in the pots and large bets are the rule.</p>
-<p>One night Sam Flake who has been in Death Valley country longer
-than any living man, joined the game. Sam, a student of poker, ran
-afoul of four queens and went home broke. The next day as he worked
-in a mine tunnel, Sam was holding a post mortem over his disaster. He
-went over his play point by point. Like many a desert man used to solitude,
-Sam occasionally talked to himself aloud, And unaware that Whitey
-Bill McGarn was in a stope just above him, Sam diagnosed his loss: &ldquo;I
-opened right. I anted right. I bet right. I called right. Can&rsquo;t be but one
-answer. I was sitting in the wrong seat.&rdquo; (Sam Flake died suddenly at
-Tecopa Hot Springs in 1949.)</p>
-<p>The village of Tecopa is 11 miles south of Shoshone. When the
-railroad was built stations were given names of local significance and
-this honors the Indian chief, Cap Tecopa.</p>
-<p>Important discoveries of gold, silver, lead, and talc were made and
-are still being worked. In the early days murders of both whites and
-Indians, without any clues were of frequent occurrence. Someone recalled
-that every killing of an Indian by a white man had been followed
-by a white man&rsquo;s murder.</p>
-<p>The Piute believed in blood atonement and when a young American
-was found butchered in the Ibex hills, friends of the deceased went to
-Cap Tecopa with evidence which indicated the murder was committed
-by Cap&rsquo;s tribesmen. &ldquo;We want these killings stopped,&rdquo; they told him
-heatedly.</p>
-<p>Cap denied any knowledge of the crime and brushed aside the
-suggestion that he produce the assassin. &ldquo;Too many Indians,&rdquo; Cap said.
-&ldquo;But if you help, I can stop the killings.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How?&rdquo; they demanded.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_79">79</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You tell hiko no kill Indian. I tell Indian no kill hiko.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Cap Tecopa was a good prospector and owned a coveted claim
-which he refused to sell.</p>
-<p>Among the fortune seekers was a flashily dressed individual who
-wore a tall silk topper. The beegum fascinated Cap and he wanted it.
-He followed the wearer about, his eyes never leaving the shiny headgear.
-At last the urge to possess was irresistible and he approached the
-owner. A lean finger gingerly touched the sacred brim. &ldquo;How much?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>All he got was a shake of the head. Failure only stimulated Tecopa&rsquo;s
-desire. His money refused, Cap in his desperation thought of the claim
-which the cunning of the promoters, the wiles of gamblers, the pleas of
-friends had failed to get.</p>
-<p>The owner of the hat annoyed by Tecopa, decided to get rid of him.
-&ldquo;You take hat. I take claim.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Indian reached for the topper. &ldquo;Take um,&rdquo; he grunted and the
-deal was made. Several other versions of this story are recalled by
-old timers.</p>
-<p>The Tecopa Hot Springs were highly esteemed by the desert Indian,
-who always advertised the waters he believed to have medicinal
-value. In the Coso Range he used the walls of a canyon approaching
-the springs for his message. The crude drawing of a man was pictured,
-shoulders bent, leaning heavily on a stick. Another showed the same
-man leaving the springs but now walking erect, his stick abandoned.</p>
-<p>The Tecopa Springs are about one and a half miles north of Tecopa
-and furnish an astounding example of rumor&rsquo;s far-reaching power.
-Originally there was only one spring and when I first saw it, it was a
-round pool about eight feet in diameter, three feet deep and so hidden
-by tules that one might pass within a few feet of it unaware of its
-existence. The singularly clear water seeped from a barren hill. About,
-is a blinding white crust of boron and alkali. There Ann Cowboy used
-to lead Mary Shoofly, to stay the blindness that threatened Mary Shoofly&rsquo;s
-failing eyes. When the whites discovered the spring, the Indians
-abandoned it.</p>
-<p>Later it became a community bath tub and laundry. Prospectors
-would &ldquo;hoof&rdquo; it for miles to do their washing because the water was hot&mdash;112
-degrees, and the borax content assured easy cleansing. Husbands
-and wives began to go for baths and someone hauled in a few pieces of
-corrugated iron and made blinds behind which they bathed in the nude.
-A garment was hung on the blind as a sign of occupation and it is a
-tribute to the chivalry of desert men that they always stopped a few
-hundred feet away to look for that garment, and advanced only when it
-was removed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_80">80</div>
-<p>Today you will see two new structures at the spring and long lines
-of bathers living in trailers parked nearby. They are victims of arthritis,
-rheumatism, swollen feet, or something that had baffled physicians,
-patent medicines, and quacks. They come from every part of the country.
-Somebody has told them that somebody else had been cured at a little
-spring on the desert between Shoshone and Tecopa.</p>
-<p>Some live under blankets, cook in a tin can over bits of wood
-hoarded like gold, for the vicinity is bare of growth. It is government
-land and space is free. Some camp on the bare ground without tent, the
-soft silt their only bed. &ldquo;Something ails my blood. Shoulder gets to
-aching. Neck stiff. Come here and boil out&rdquo; ... &ldquo;Like magic&mdash;this
-water. I&rsquo;ve been to every medicinal bath in Europe and America. This
-beats &rsquo;em all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>You finally turn away, dazed with stories of elephantine legs, restored
-to perfect size and symmetry. Of muscles dead for a decade,
-moving with the precision of a motor. Of joints rigid as a steel rail suddenly
-pliable as the ankles of a tap dancer.</p>
-<p>Here they sit in the sun&mdash;patient, hopeful; their crutches leaning
-against their trailer steps. They have the blessed privilege of discussing
-their ailments with each other. &ldquo;Oh, your misery was nothing. Doctors
-said I would never reach here alive....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>An analysis shows traces of radium.</p>
-<p>A few miles below Tecopa is another landmark of the country known
-as the China Ranch. To old timers it was known as The Chinaman&rsquo;s
-Ranch. One Quon Sing, who had been a cook at Old Harmony Borax
-Works quit that job to serve a Mr. Osborn, wealthy mining man with
-interests near Tecopa. His service with Osborn covered a period of many
-years.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t state it as a fact,&rdquo; Shorty Harris once told me, &ldquo;but I have
-been told by old settlers that Osborn located him on the ranch as a
-reward for long and faithful service.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The land was in the raw stage, with nothing to appeal to a white
-man except water. It was reached through a twisting canyon which
-filled at times with the raging torrents dropped by cloudbursts. Erosion
-has left spectacular scenery. In places mud walls lift straight up hundreds
-of feet. Nobody but a Chinaman or a bandit hiding from the law
-would have wanted it.</p>
-<p>There was a spring which the Chinaman developed and soon a little
-stream flowed all year. The industrious Chinaman converted it into
-a profitable ranch. He planted figs and dates and knowing, as only a
-Chinaman does, the value and uses of water the place was soon transformed
-into a garden with shade trees spreading over a green meadow&mdash;a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_81">81</span>
-cooling, restful little haven hidden away in the heart of the hills.
-He had cows and raised chickens and hogs. He planted grapes, dates,
-and vegetables and soon was selling his produce to the settlers scattered
-about the desert. From a wayfaring guest he would accept no money
-for food or lodging.</p>
-<p>After the Chinaman had brought the ranch to a high state of production
-a white man came along and since there was no law in the
-country, he made one of his own&mdash;his model the ancient one that &ldquo;He
-shall take who has the might and he shall keep who can.&rdquo; He chased
-the Chinaman off with a shot gun and sat down to enjoy himself, secure
-in the knowledge that nobody cared enough for a Chinaman to do
-anything about it.</p>
-<p>The Chinaman was never again heard of.</p>
-<p>The ranch since has had many owners. Though the roads are rough
-and the grades difficult, on the broad verandas that encircle the old
-ranch house, one feels he has found a bit of paradise &ldquo;away from it all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sitting on the porch once with Big Bill Greer, who owned a life
-interest in it until his demise recently, we talked of the various yarns
-told of the Chinaman.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The best thing he did was that planting over there by the stream.&rdquo;
-He lifted his huge form from the chair. &ldquo;Just wait a minute. I&rsquo;ll get you
-a specimen.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>While he was gone I strolled around to see other miracles wrought
-by the heathen chased from his home by a Christian&rsquo;s gun. When I
-returned Bill was waiting with two tall glasses, diffusing a tantalizing
-aroma of bourbon. Floating on the liquor were bunches of crisp, cooling
-mint. He gave me one, lifted the other. &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s to Quon Sing. God rest
-his soul,&rdquo; Bill said.</p>
-<p>As we slowly sipped I asked him if he had brought the specimen.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the mint,&rdquo; Bill said.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_82">82</div>
-<h2 id="c14"><span class="small">Chapter XII</span>
-<br />A Hovel That Ought To Be a Shrine</h2>
-<p>An Indian rode up to the bench, leaped from his cayuse and tried
-to tell Joe Ryan something about a &ldquo;hiko.&rdquo; Joe matched his pantomime
-and broken English, finally jerking a thumb over his shoulder and the
-Indian went into the store.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s Indian Johnnie,&rdquo; Joe said: &ldquo;Hundred and fifty miles to his
-place, other side of the Panamint. Awful country to get at. Shorty
-Harris is in a bad way at Ballarat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A few moments later Charlie drove his pickup to the pump, filled
-the gas tank and before we realized it, was swallowed in a cloud of
-dust. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s in for a helluva trip,&rdquo; Joe said.</p>
-<p>Before the day was over, snow covered the high peaks and a
-biting wind drove us from the bench. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go over to the Mesquite
-Club,&rdquo; Joe said.</p>
-<p>We hurried across the road to the sprawling old building hidden in
-a thicket and listing in every direction of the compass, but over the roof,
-like friendly arms crooked the branches of big mesquite trees. Among
-mining men that ramshackle was known around the world.</p>
-<p>Inside was a big pot-bellied stove. Beside it, a huge woodbox. Chairs
-held together with baling wire. Two or three old auto seats hauled in
-from cars abandoned on the desert. An ancient, moth-eaten sofa on
-which the wayfarer out of luck was privileged to sleep. Three or four
-tables, each with a dog-eared deck of cards where old timers played
-solitaire or a spot of poker. There were books and magazines&mdash;high and
-low-brow, left by the tourists. But there was a friendliness about the
-shabby room that had nothing to gain from mahogany or chandeliers of
-gold.</p>
-<p>Wind kept us indoors for two days. On the third we were on the
-bench again when someone said, &ldquo;Here comes Charlie....&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_83">83</div>
-<p>A moment later Joe and Big Dan were helping Charlie take Shorty
-Harris, dean of Death Valley prospectors, more dead than alive, into a
-cabin and lay him on the bed. &ldquo;You must have had an awful time,&rdquo; Joe
-said to Charlie.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not too bad ... made it,&rdquo; Charlie answered as he started a fire
-in the stove. He brought in water and wood and turned to Joe. &ldquo;Wish
-you&rsquo;d fill up that gas tank and see about the oil....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Joe looked at him, puzzled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Got to take him to the hospital,&rdquo; Charlie said.</p>
-<p>We knew that meant another trip of 140 miles.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Damned if you do,&rdquo; Joe said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get somebody to go.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I supposed after the all night trip under such conditions Brown
-would go to bed but an hour later when I went to the store for some
-small purchase a woman climbed out of a pickup truck and with three
-small children, came in. She lived on her ranch 60 miles away and had
-come to buy her month&rsquo;s supply of provisions&mdash;a full load for the truck.
-When she paid her bill she nodded toward her brood: &ldquo;Charlie, those
-kids look like brush Indians with all that hair....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Charlie got scissors and comb and went to work. Before he had swept
-out the shorn locks Ben Brandt came in, holding his jaw.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Feels like a stamp mill,&rdquo; he groaned. &ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t slept in a week. Be
-dead by the time I get to Barstow.&rdquo; It was 125 miles to Barstow and
-Ben was waiting for a ride with someone going that way.</p>
-<p>Charlie went behind the counter, returned with forceps, opening
-and closing the jaws of the instrument two or three times as if in
-practice and then he turned to the sufferer: &ldquo;You understand it&rsquo;s
-against the law for me to use these things. In a pinch&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To hell with the law,&rdquo; Ben snapped. &ldquo;Yank it out!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Charlie took a chair to the back porch. Ben sat down and with a
-vice-like arm about Ben&rsquo;s head, the forceps went in and the tooth came
-out.</p>
-<p>I went outside and sat on the bench with a better understanding of
-Shoshone and people and values which come only from friendships
-closely knitted and help unselfishly given.</p>
-<p>Why does a man like the desert? As good an answer as any is
-another question: Why does he like chicken? Students of human
-behavior, poets, writers, gushing debutantes and greying dowagers,
-humorless scientists, and bored urbanites have labored mightily to explain
-it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Something just gets into the blood,&rdquo; one says, frankly groping for
-an answer. Immensities of space. Solitudes that whittle the ego down
-to size. Detachment from routine cares. A feel of nearness to whatever
-<span class="pb" id="Page_84">84</span>
-it is that is God. Stars to finger. The muted symphonies of farflung sky
-and earth.</p>
-<p>Whatever it is, I was now aware that as between hell and Shoshone,
-I would give the nod to Shoshone. I was getting used to Shoshone and
-desolation when a few days later Charlie came out of the store and sat
-beside me on the bench. &ldquo;Road&rsquo;s open,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I reckon you&rsquo;re in a
-hurry to get away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I didn&rsquo;t answer at once but conscious of his searching look, finally
-stammered that Dan Modine wanted me to go with him to Happy Jack&rsquo;s
-party. &ldquo;I can spare another day....&rdquo; Charlie lit a cigarette, took a
-puff or two. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve gone desert,&rdquo; he chuckled and went back into the
-store.</p>
-<p>For a week I&rsquo;d been hearing of Happy Jack&rsquo;s party and when Dan
-told me that everyone within 100 miles would be on hand, I was glad
-to go. Dan gave me Jack&rsquo;s background on the 35 mile trip across dry
-washes, deep sands, and hairpin turns on pitching hills.</p>
-<p>Born on the desert, Jack was the son of a Forty Niner and a Piute
-squaw. He had grown up as an Indian and had married Mary, a full
-blood Piute. Jack&rsquo;s brother Lem married Anna, another squaw.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lem had worked at odd jobs and in the mines,&rdquo; Dan said. &ldquo;Now
-and then he and Anna would do a little prospecting. Anna found a claim
-that showed a little color. Lem worked alongside his squaw a couple
-weeks, but it was a back breaking job and Lem quit it. But Anna kept
-digging and one day she came up to their shack with a piece of ore that
-was almost pure gold. Anna&rsquo;s find made them rich.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I reckon money does things to people. Anyway, it didn&rsquo;t take Lem
-long to get rid of Anna. He gave her enough so that she could take it
-easy. Then he pushed off to the city to live high, wide, and handsome. I
-see Anna now and then. She&rsquo;s not jolly like she used to be. Lem has
-always wanted Jack to get rid of Mary and come to the city. In fact,
-Jack told me once that Lem offered to give him half of his money if he
-would do that. But Jack said, to hell with the city. He&rsquo;s the happy go
-lucky sort. Big, good looking, and lazy. His old dobe under the cottonwood
-tree and the water running by with plenty of outdoors&mdash;that
-suits Jack.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We found, as Dan had predicted, that everybody in the country had
-come to Jack&rsquo;s party. A long U shaped table was placed outside under
-the shade of a tree. From nearby pits came a tantalizing aroma of
-barbecue. A keg of bourbon encircled with glasses stood beside a bucket
-of dripping mint. Cigars and cigarettes were on top of the keg and Jack
-saw that his guests were always supplied.</p>
-<p>There was an orchestra with capable musicians, Jack occasionally
-<span class="pb" id="Page_85">85</span>
-pinch hitting for the bull fiddler when the latter took time out for a
-drink or a dance. But when the snare drum player wanted his bourbon,
-Jack was like a kid pulling doodads from a Christmas tree. &ldquo;It will
-last a week,&rdquo; Dan said. &ldquo;A few may pull out after a day or two, but
-others will take their places.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This must have cost Jack a year&rsquo;s labor,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;I told him that
-once,&rdquo; Dan laughed. &ldquo;He asked me what else would a fellow work a
-year for.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jack&rsquo;s views of life and things were Mary&rsquo;s, except that Mary knew
-lean years come and if any provisions were to be made for them she
-would have to make them. She tended the goats and the sheep, cut the
-deer and the mountain sheep into strips and hung them high, where the
-flies wouldn&rsquo;t get them, to cure in the breeze. If Jack wanted to throw
-a party, so did Mary. &ldquo;... Big party ... kill fat steer. Five sheep.
-Heap good time....&rdquo; To Jack&rsquo;s everlasting credit, be it said that whatever
-Mary did, suited Jack.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, him fine man,&rdquo; Mary would say. &ldquo;Like home. Play with children.
-No get mad....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There may be somewhere in this world a morsel approaching Mary&rsquo;s
-barbecued mountain sheep, but I&rsquo;ve never tasted it.</p>
-<p>Jack told me later that the best meat is that from an old ram with
-no teeth. &ldquo;He hasn&rsquo;t eaten all winter, because his teeth won&rsquo;t let him
-cut the hard, woody sage and being starved when spring comes, he
-gorges on the new sacatone. He fattens quickly and his flesh is tender.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>While Dan and I were walking about, a long limousine came across
-the valley and parked behind a screen of mesquite well away from the
-house and the guests. Dan and I happened to be nearby as a big, dark
-man expensively tailored stepped out. A lady fashionably dressed remained
-in the car.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s Lem,&rdquo; Dan explained. &ldquo;When he was a kid he ran around in
-a gee string. I reckon his wife doesn&rsquo;t want to meet the in-laws.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We came upon him a moment later and while he and Dan talked of
-old times Jack rushed down and embraced Lem. &ldquo;Come up,&rdquo; he urged,
-but Lem&rsquo;s interest was lukewarm. Mary was busy and he would see her
-later. No, he didn&rsquo;t wish a drink. He had cigars. Just stopped in to see
-how Jack was and if he&rsquo;d changed his mind.</p>
-<p>Dan and I moved away and sat under a shed along the runoff of
-the spring and had no choice about listening to a conversation not
-intended for our ears.</p>
-<p>Jack was squatted on his heels and his brother was sitting on a
-boulder. Lem was talking, his voice brittle: &ldquo;Of course, we married
-squaws ... but we are more white than Indian. I&rsquo;ll give you all the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_86">86</span>
-money you need. Let Mary go back to her people. She&rsquo;ll be happy.
-Look at Anna ... she&rsquo;s contented and better off with her own people
-and it will be the same with Mary.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lem lifted his hand, a big diamond ring flashing on his finger as he
-pointed to the squalid cabin where Jack&rsquo;s fat squaw, her face beaming,
-was serving the guests. &ldquo;Look at that hovel. Just a pig sty. If you prefer
-that to $10,000 a year, it&rsquo;s your business. I&rsquo;ve come out for the
-last time....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jack, bareheaded, rose, his hair rumpled in the wind as he glanced
-at the things about&mdash;the sagging roof, the shade tree beside it and
-following his glance I saw Mary smile at him and wave. Then he
-turned to Lem: &ldquo;A pig sty, huh? Ten thousand a year. Mansion in
-the city.&rdquo; His eyes traveled over Lem&rsquo;s smart tailored suit, the diamond,
-the malacca cane pecking the gravel at his feet. I could see Jack&rsquo;s
-fingers digging at his palms, the muscles rippling along his wrists and I
-sensed that he was seething inside.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pig sty.... One year I recollect, no crop. No meat. No game.
-Nothing. I was down with fever. She was down too, but she got up
-and walked and crawled from here to Indian Springs. Through the
-brush. Over the mountain to get grub from her people. Why, sometimes
-I&rsquo;d feel like going off by myself and bawling....&rdquo; Jack turned
-again to his brother, flint in his dark eyes. &ldquo;I ought to brain you. To
-hell with your money. She stuck with me and bigod, I&rsquo;ll stick with her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then Jack calmly strode back to his party, and somehow it seemed
-to me the hovel had suddenly become a holy shrine.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_87">87</div>
-<h2 id="c15"><span class="small">Chapter XIII</span>
-<br />Sex in Death Valley Country</h2>
-<p>Sex, of course, went with the white man to the desert, but because
-there were no Freuds, no Kinseys stirring the social sewage, it was considered
-merely as a biologic urge and thus its impact on the lives of the
-early settlers was a realistic one. It was not good for man to live
-alone. The husky young adventurer found a water hole and a cottonwood
-tree and built a cabin. But he found it wasn&rsquo;t a home. The lonely
-immensity of space he knew, was no place for a white woman and none
-were there. He faced the fundamental problem squarely and looked
-about for a squaw.</p>
-<p>He paid Hungry Bill or some other Indian head man $10 for the
-mate of his choice and that sanctified the relation. She brought a certain
-degree of orderliness to the cabin, washed his clothes, cooked his meals.
-A child was born and the cabin became a home. The squaw could
-sharpen a stick, walk out into the brush and return with herbs and
-roots and serve a palatable dinner. She worked his fields, groomed
-his horses and relieved him of responsibility for the children. The
-progeny followed the rules of breeding. Some good. Some bad.</p>
-<p>Said old Jim Baker, who married a Shoshone, pleading for a &ldquo;squar&rdquo;
-deal for his son: &ldquo;There&rsquo;s only one creature worse than a genuine Indian
-and that&rsquo;s a half breed. He has got two devils in him and is meaner than
-the meanest Indian I ever saw. That boy of mine is a half-breed and he
-ain&rsquo;t accountable.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Almost all of the first settlers were squaw men and the matings were
-tolerated because they were understood. It was often a long journey to
-obtain the sanction of a Chief and the squaw was taken without formality.
-Many of these matings lasted and the offspring were absorbed
-without social embarrassment in the life of the community. Dr. Kinsey
-would have had little joy in his search for perversion or infidelities,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_88">88</span>
-though there is the instance of a drunken squaw who aroused the owner
-of a saloon at midnight on the Ash Meadows desert and shouted: &ldquo;I want
-a man....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Once Shoshone faced the desperate need of a school. There were
-only three children of school age in the little settlement and the nearest
-school was 28 miles away. Parents complained, but authorities at the
-county seat nearly 200 miles away, pointed out that the law required 13
-children or an average attendance of five and a half to form a school
-district.</p>
-<p>Like other community problems it was taken to Charlie, though
-none believed that even Charlie could solve it.</p>
-<p>The time for the opening of schools was but a few weeks away
-when one day Brown headed his car out into the desert. &ldquo;Hunting trip,&rdquo;
-he explained.</p>
-<p>In a hovel he found Rosie, a Piute squaw with a brood of children.
-&ldquo;How old?&rdquo; Charlie asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Him five ... him six now,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Him seven. Him eight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How&rsquo;d you like to live at Shoshone? Plenty work. Good house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Okay. Me come,&rdquo; Rosie said.</p>
-<p>With the half breeds, the school was able to open.</p>
-<p>Rosie was a challenging problem. She would have taken no beauty
-prize among the Piutes, but when along her desert trails she acquired
-these children of assorted parentage, Fate dealt her an ace.</p>
-<p>With the few dollars Rosie wangled from the several fathers for
-the support of their children, she lived unworried. She liked to get
-drunk and the only nettling problem in her life was the federal law
-against selling liquor to Indians. So she established her own medium
-of exchange&mdash;a bottle of liquor. Unfortunately she spread a social
-disease and that was something to worry about.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rosie has Shoshone over a barrel,&rdquo; Joe Ryan said. &ldquo;If we run her
-out, we won&rsquo;t have enough children for school.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then there was the economic angle&mdash;the loss of wages by afflicted
-miners and mines crippled by the absence of the unafflicted who would
-take time off to go to Las Vegas for the commodity supplied by Rosie.</p>
-<p>Charlie arranged for Ann Cowboy to look after Rosie&rsquo;s children
-and called up W. H. Brown, deputy sheriff at Death Valley Junction
-and told him to come for Rosie. Brownie, as he is known all over the
-desert, came and took Rosie into custody. &ldquo;What&rsquo;ll I charge her with?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She has a venereal disease,&rdquo; Charlie said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no law I know of against that....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right. Charge her with pollution. She got drunk and fell into
-<span class="pb" id="Page_89">89</span>
-the spring.&rdquo; Then Charlie called up the Judge and suggested Rosie have
-a year&rsquo;s vacation in the county jail.</p>
-<p>The paths that radiated from Rosie&rsquo;s shack in the brush like spokes
-from the hub of a wheel, were soon overgrown with salt grass. She
-served her sentence and returned to Shoshone and the paths were soon
-beaten smooth again.</p>
-<p>Eventually Brown declared Shoshone out of bounds for Rosie and
-she moved over into Nevada. There she found a lover of her tribe and
-one night when both were drunk, Rosie decided she&rsquo;d had enough of
-him and with a big, sharp knife she calmly disemboweled him&mdash;for
-which unladylike incident she was removed to a Nevada prison where
-the state cured her syphilis and turned her loose&mdash;if not morally reformed,
-at least physically fit.</p>
-<p>One of Rosie&rsquo;s patrons was a man thought to be in his middle fifties.
-Always carefully groomed, his white shirts, spotless ties, and tailored
-suits were conspicuous in a place where levis were the rule. He was also
-a total abstainer. When he died suddenly and it was learned he was 82
-years old, Shoshone gasped. An item in his will read: &ldquo;To Rosie, $50 to
-buy whiskey.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Living in a wickiup in the mesquite was the Indian, Tom Weed,
-who shared with his squaw a passion for liquor. Sober, Tom was industrious
-in the Indian way. He knew the country, when and where the
-mountain sheep were fattest; the herbs that cured and the best grasses for
-the beautiful baskets woven by his wife.</p>
-<p>Tom filed on a deposit of non-metallic ore near Shoshone and forgot
-it. A subsequent locater found a buyer. Considerable capital was to be
-invested and the purchaser decided that Tom, if so disposed, could at
-least challenge the title. In order to dispose of Tom he sent the document
-to Dad Fairbanks together with a check payable to Tom for $1000 and
-asked Dad to get a quit claim deed from Tom.</p>
-<p>Since $1000 was more than Tom ever expected to see in his life
-he was eager to sign. &ldquo;You cash check?&rdquo; he asked Dad.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure,&rdquo; Dad told him.</p>
-<p>As Dad was getting the money he said, &ldquo;Tom, long winter ahead.
-Hard to get work. Don&rsquo;t you think you&rsquo;d better leave money with me?
-Might come in handy.&rdquo; Dad saw that Tom was impressed and added:
-&ldquo;You told me yesterday you were going over to Las Vegas. That&rsquo;s another
-good reason. Think it over.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Okay. Me think.&rdquo; Tom stood for a long moment staring at the
-floor, studying every angle of the problem. Finally he thrust his palm
-at Dad and said gravely: &ldquo;Might die....&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_90">90</div>
-<p>Dad gave him the money and Tom went to Las Vegas. In an hour
-he was drunk. In three he was broke and in jail.</p>
-<p>One night he and his squaw got blissfully drunk. They were sleeping
-in a shed full of combustible junk when it caught fire. Other Indians
-attracted by their screams rushed to the scene but both were dead. From
-Tom&rsquo;s wickiup, a few feet from the shed, they took Tom&rsquo;s guns and saddles,
-his squaw&rsquo;s priceless baskets&mdash;all the belongings of both&mdash;and
-tossed them into the flames. Thus the evil spirits were kept away and
-the souls of Tom and his squaw passed happily to the Piute heaven
-which is a place where there is a big lake and forests filled with game
-and the squaws are strong and plentiful.</p>
-<p class="tb">The Johnnie Mine, an important gold producer, east of Shoshone,
-was located by John Tecopa, son of Cap Tecopa, Pahrump Chief.</p>
-<p>Tecopa found the float; gave Ed Metcalf an interest to help him
-locate the ledge. Bob and Monte Montgomery bought the claim. They
-interested Jerry Langford, who induced the Mormon Church to get
-behind the project.</p>
-<p>The Potosi was an early discovery on Timber Mountain between the
-Johnnie Mine and Good Springs. (It was here that Carole Lombard,
-wife of Clark Gable, was killed in an airplane accident in 1941.) From
-this mine came the lead which made the bullets used in the Mountain
-Meadows massacre. Jeff Grundy, a prospector of early days, said his
-father molded the bullets and delivered them to John D. Lee, who after
-20 years was executed for the murder of the 123 victims of the massacre.</p>
-<p>Lee was the owner of Lee&rsquo;s Ferry, which was the only place where
-the Colorado River could be crossed in the Grand Canyon area until the
-present suspension bridge 500 feet high was built.</p>
-<p>Near Johnnie are Ash Meadows and the beautiful Pahrump Valley,
-overlooked by the Charleston Mountains&mdash;the summer sleeping porch
-of Las Vegas, 35 miles south.</p>
-<p>At Ash Meadows lived Jack Longstreet, who wore his hair long
-enough to cover his ears. He claimed kinship with the distinguished
-South Carolina family of that name. Easier to prove is that Mr. Longstreet
-came from Texas and as a 14 year old youngster was caught with
-a band of horse thieves in Colorado. The older ones were hanged but
-because of his youth Longstreet was released after his ears were cropped
-to brand him for identification by others. He lived and drank lustily for
-96 years and died with a competency.</p>
-<p>Near Johnnie also lived Mary Scott, who discovered the Confidence
-Mine, a landmark in Death Valley. Mary was a squaw who, after
-consorting with several white men, chose for her mate a half-breed
-<span class="pb" id="Page_91">91</span>
-named Bob Scott. On a hunting and trapping trip Mary picked up some
-ore which Scott decided was silver. Since silver could not be profitably
-handled because of transportation costs, Scott filed no notice.</p>
-<p>Years after Scott&rsquo;s death, Mary showed samples of the ore to her
-cousin, an Indian named Bob Black and Bob showed it to Frank Cole,
-a millwright at the Johnnie Mine. Cole and Jimmy Ashdown grubstaked
-Mary and Bob, who returned to Death Valley and located the
-property. Samples showed rich gold.</p>
-<p>For a wagon with a canopy and a spavined horse Cole and Ashdown
-secured the interest of Mary and Bob. Cole and Ashdown then
-sold to the Montgomery brothers, who through Bishop Cannon secured
-backing for the venture from the Mormon Church.</p>
-<p>Dan Driscoll built the road to the mine. Shorty Harris, Bob Warnack,
-and Rube Graham dug the well and mine shaft. It produced rich
-ore to a depth of 65 feet, where the vein was broken up.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_92">92</div>
-<h2 id="c16"><span class="small">Chapter XIV</span>
-<br />Shoshone Country. Resting Springs</h2>
-<p>The country about Shoshone is identified with the earliest migration
-of Americans to California.</p>
-<p>It is a curious fact that prior to the coming of Jedediah Smith who,
-in 1826 was actually the first American to enter the state from the east,
-the contented Spanish believed that the Sierras were insurmountable
-barriers to invasion by the hated American or any attacking enemy.</p>
-<p>After Smith the first white American to look upon the Shoshone
-region so far as known, was William Wolfskill, a Kentucky trapper who
-left Santa Fe in 1830-31 on a trading expedition with stores of cloth,
-garments, and gimcracks.</p>
-<p>Having had poor luck in disposing of his cargo, when he reached
-the Virgin River he decided to push westward across the Mojave Desert
-and entered California by way of Cajon Pass. After resting at San Gabriel
-he went north into the San Joaquin Valley. There he disposed of his stock
-at fabulous prices, taking in trade mules, horses, silks, and other items
-which he took to Taos and Santa Fe, receiving for this merchandise
-equally huge profits.</p>
-<p>Wolfskill later settled in Los Angeles, one of the earliest Americans
-in the pueblo where he acquired large land holdings. There he established
-the citrus industry, planting a grove in what is now the heart of Los
-Angeles.</p>
-<p>In 1832 Joseph B. Chiles organized a party at Independence, Missouri,
-and started for California. It numbered 50 men, women, and children.
-Upon reaching Fort Laramie, Wyoming (which was officially Fort
-John, but for some reason was never so called) Chiles met Joseph Reddeford
-Walker and employed him as guide.</p>
-<p>Eighteen years before the Bennett-Arcane party came to grief,
-Walker had discovered Walker River and Walker Lake in Nevada,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_93">93</span>
-afterward named for him. After reaching the Sierras, his jaded teams
-were unable to cross and had to be abandoned, the party narrowly
-escaping death. Having heard of the southerly course over the old
-Spanish Trail, he turned back and over it guided the Chiles party.</p>
-<p>Early in 1843, John C. Fremont led a party of 39 men from Salt
-Lake City northward to Fort Vancouver and in November of that year,
-started on the return trip to the East. This trip was interrupted when he
-found his party threatened by cold and starvation and he faced about;
-crossed the Sierra Nevadas and went to Sutter&rsquo;s Fort. After resting and
-outfitting, he set out for the East by the southerly route over the old
-Spanish trail, which leads through the Shoshone region.</p>
-<p>At a spring somewhere north of the Mojave River he made camp.
-The water nauseated some of his men and he moved to another. Identification
-of these springs has been a matter of dispute and though historians
-have honestly tried to identify them, the fact remains that none can say
-&ldquo;I was there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the vicinity were several springs any of which may have been the
-one referred to by Fremont in his account of the journey. Among these
-were two water holes indicated on early maps as Agua de Tio Mesa, and
-another as Agua de Tomaso.</p>
-<p>There are several springs of nauseating water in the area and some
-of the old timers academically inclined, insisted that Fremont probably
-camped at Saratoga Springs, which afforded a sight of Telescope Peak or
-at Salt Spring, nine miles east on the present Baker-Shoshone Highway
-at Rocky Point.</p>
-<p>Kit Carson was Fremont&rsquo;s guide. Fremont records that two Mexicans
-rode into his camp on April 27, 1844, and asked him to recover some
-horses which they declared had been stolen from them by Indians at the
-Archilette Spring, 13 miles east of Shoshone.</p>
-<p>One of the Mexicans was Andreas Fuentes, the other a boy of 11
-years&mdash;Pablo Hernandez. While the Indians were making the raid, the
-boy and Fuentes had managed to get away with 30 of the horses and
-these they had left for safety at a water hole known to them as Agua de
-Tomaso. They reported that they had left Pablo&rsquo;s father and mother and
-a man named Santiago Giacome and his wife at Archilette Spring.</p>
-<p>With Fremont, besides Kit Carson, was another famed scout, Alexander
-Godey, a St. Louis Frenchman&mdash;a gay, good looking dare devil
-who later married Maria Antonia Coronel, daughter of a rich Spanish
-don and became prominent in California.</p>
-<p>In answer to the Mexicans&rsquo; plea for help, Fremont turned to his
-men and asked if any of them wished to aid the victims of the Piute
-raid. He told them he would furnish horses for such a purpose if anyone
-<span class="pb" id="Page_94">94</span>
-cared to volunteer. Of the incident Kit Carson, who learned to
-write after he was grown, says in his dictated autobiography: &ldquo;Godey
-and myself volunteered with the expectation that some men of our
-party would join us. They did not. We two and the Mexicans ...
-commenced the pursuit.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Fuentes&rsquo; horse gave out and he returned to Fremont&rsquo;s camp that
-night, but Godey, Carson, and the boy went on. They had good moonlight
-at first but upon entering a deep and narrow canyon, utter blackness
-came, even shutting out starlight, and Carson says they had to
-&ldquo;feel for the trail.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>One may with reason surmise that Godey and Carson proceeded
-through the gorge that leads to the China Ranch and now known as
-Rainbow Canyon. When they could go no farther they slept an hour,
-resumed the hunt and shortly after sunrise, saw the Indians feasting on
-the carcass of one of the stolen horses. They had slain five others and
-these were being boiled. Carson&rsquo;s and Godey&rsquo;s horses were too tired
-to go farther and were hitched out of sight among the rocks. The
-hunters took the trail afoot and made their way into the herd of stolen
-horses.</p>
-<p>Says Carson: &ldquo;A young one got frightened. That frightened the rest.
-The Indians noticed the commotion ... sprang to their arms. We
-now considered it time to charge on the Indians. They were about 30
-in number. We charged. I fired, killing one. Godey fired, missed but
-reloaded and fired, killing another. There were only three shots fired
-and two were killed. The remainder ran. I ... ascended a hill to keep
-guard while Godey scalped the dead Indians. He scalped the one he shot
-and was proceeding toward the one I shot. He was not yet dead and was
-behind some rocks. As Godey approached he raised, let fly an arrow. It
-passed through Godey&rsquo;s shirt collar. He again fell and Godey finished
-him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Subsequently it was discovered that Godey hadn&rsquo;t missed, but that
-both men had fired at the same Indian as proven by two bullets found
-in one of the dead Indians. Godey called these Indians &ldquo;Diggars.&rdquo; The
-one with the two bullets was the one who sent the arrow through
-Godey&rsquo;s collar and when Godey was scalping him, &ldquo;he sprang to his
-feet, the blood streaming from his skinned head and uttered a hideous
-yowl.&rdquo; Godey promptly put him out of his pain.</p>
-<p>They returned to camp. Writes Fremont: &ldquo;A war whoop was heard
-such as Indians make when returning from a victorious enterprise and
-soon Carson and Godey appeared, driving before them a band of horses
-recognized by Fuentes to be part of those they had lost. Two bloody
-scalps dangling from the end of Godey&rsquo;s gun....&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_95">95</div>
-<p>Fremont wrote of it later: &ldquo;The place, object and numbers considered,
-this expedition of Carson and Godey may be considered among
-the boldest and most disinterested which the annals of Western adventure
-so full of daring deeds can present.&rdquo; It was indeed a gallant
-response to the plea of unfortunates whom they&rsquo;d never seen before and
-would never see again.</p>
-<p>When Fremont and his party reached the camp of the Mexicans
-they found the horribly butchered bodies of Hernandez, Pablo&rsquo;s father,
-and Giacome. The naked bodies of the wives were found somewhat
-removed and shackled to stakes.</p>
-<p>Fremont changed the name of the spring from Archilette to Agua
-de Hernandez and as such it was known for several years. He took the
-Mexican boy, Pablo Hernandez, with him to Missouri where he was
-placed with the family of Fremont&rsquo;s father-in-law, U. S. Senator Thomas
-H. Benton. The young Mexican didn&rsquo;t care for civilization and the
-American way of life and in the spring of 1847 begged to be returned
-to Mexico. Senator Benton secured transportation for him on the
-schooner Flirt, by order of the Navy, and he was landed at Vera Cruz&mdash;a
-record of which is preserved in the archives of the 30th Congress,
-1848.</p>
-<p>Three years later a rumor was circulated that the famed bandit,
-Joaquin Murietta was no other than Pablo Hernandez.</p>
-<p>Lieutenant, afterwards Colonel, Brewerton was at Resting Springs
-in 1848 with Kit Carson who then was carrying important messages
-for the government to New Mexico. He found the ground white with the
-bleached bones of other victims of the desert Indians. Brewerton
-calls them Pau Eutaws.</p>
-<p>The Mormons began early to look upon this region as a logical part
-of the State of Deseret, for the creation of which, Brigham Young petitioned
-Congress, setting forth among reasons for the recognition of
-such a state that: &ldquo;... We are so far removed from all civilized society
-and organized government and also natural barriers of trackless
-deserts, including mountains of snow and savages more bloody than
-either, so that we can never be united with any other portion of the
-country.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As early as 1851, the far-seeing Young decided to found a colony
-of Saints in San Bernardino, California, to extend Mormon influence.
-Sam Brannan, brilliant adherent of that faith, had already come to
-California with the nucleus of a Mormon colony in 1846, two years
-before Marshall discovered gold.</p>
-<p>Brannan became an outstanding figure among the Argonauts. None
-exceeded him in leadership or popularity in the building of San Francisco
-<span class="pb" id="Page_96">96</span>
-and the state. He grew rich and unfortunately began drinking; finally
-abandoned Mormonism and died poor.</p>
-<p>The colonizers sent out by Brigham Young were in three divisions.
-One under the leadership of Amasa Lyman, who brought his five wives.
-Another was headed by Charles C. Rich, who was accompanied by three
-of his wives. It is interesting to note that Rich became the father of
-51 children by five wives.</p>
-<p>The third division was under the command of Captain Jefferson
-Hunt, guide for the entire party. These leaders were all able men who
-were highly regarded by gentiles. They also camped at Agua de Hernandez
-and it was the Mormons who junked the previous name and gave
-one with significance. They called it &ldquo;Resting Springs&rdquo; and this more
-fitting name has lasted.</p>
-<p>On May 21, 1851, the Mormon elder, Parley P. Pratt, heading a
-party of missionaries en route to the South Sea Islands writes in his
-diary: &ldquo;We encamped at a place called Resting Springs.... This is a
-fine place for rest.... Since leaving the Vegas (Las Vegas) we have
-traveled 75 miles through the most horrible desert.... Twenty miles
-from the Vegas we were assailed ... by a shower of arrows from the
-savage mountain robbers.... Leaving Resting Springs the party arrived
-at Salt Spring gold mines toward evening....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In 1850, Phineas Banning, pioneer resident of Los Angeles and
-later owner of Catalina Island, hauled freight from Los Angeles to the
-gold mine at Salt Spring opposite Rocky Point just south of the Amargosa
-River on the Baker road and in 1854 Mormons discovered gold 25
-miles south of Resting Springs, long before Dr. French searched for the
-Gunsight in Death Valley.</p>
-<p>The Amargosa River is one of the world&rsquo;s most remarkable water
-courses. Originating at Springdale, north of Beatty, Nevada, it twists
-southward in zigzag pattern until it reaches a point about 34 miles
-south of Shoshone. There it turns west, crosses Highway 127, enters
-Death Valley at its most southerly point and then turns north to disappear
-60 miles from the place of its origin.</p>
-<p>You may cross and re-cross it many times totally unaware of its
-existence, but in the cloudburst season it can and does become a terrible
-agent of destruction.</p>
-<p>In 1853 Major George Chorpenning obtained a contract to carry
-mail between the Mormon colony of San Bernardino, California, and
-Salt Lake. To reach Resting Springs, a station on the route, required
-five days. Today it is a journey of four hours.</p>
-<p>Resting Springs was also a relay station for white outlaws and
-Indian raiders from Utah, Wyoming, and the Dakotas. Even before
-Fremont, Carson, or the Mormons old Bill Williams, for whom Bill
-Williams River, Bill Williams Mountain, and the town of Williams,
-Arizona, are named was at Resting Springs.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_i">i</div>
-<div class="img" id="map1">
-<img src="images/map1_lr.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="895" />
-<p class="pcap">Map of Death Valley<br /><a class="ab" href="images/map1_hr.jpg">High-resolution Map</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_ii">ii</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig1">
-<img src="images/pmg002.jpg" alt="" width="447" height="600" />
-<p class="pcap">John W. Searles, looking for gold, made a fortune in borax.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig2">
-<img src="images/pmg002a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="342" />
-<p class="pcap">
-<span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT</span>
-Like Weepah which &ldquo;Boomed and Busted&rdquo; after one day,
-Gilbert died after a few weeks.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_iii">iii</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig3">
-<img src="images/pmg002b.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="533" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD G. WEIGHT</span>
-Saratoga Springs</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig4">
-<img src="images/pmg002c.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="544" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-The Bottom of America</p>
-</div>
-<p class="center">BAD WATER
-<br />279.6 FEET BELOW SEA LEVEL
-<br />LOWEST POINT IN THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE</p>
-<table class="center" summary="">
-<tr><td class="l">&lArr; </td><td class="l">SHOSHONE </td><td class="r">57</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">&lArr; </td><td class="l">BAKER </td><td class="r">93</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"> </td><td class="l">FURNACE CREEK </td><td class="r">17 </td><td class="l">&rArr;</td></tr>
-</table>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_iv">iv</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig5">
-<img src="images/pmg003.jpg" alt="" width="415" height="600" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-Grave of Jas. Dayton.
-<br />Bones are those of his horses.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig6">
-<img src="images/pmg003a.jpg" alt="" width="455" height="600" />
-<p class="pcap">Dugouts in Dublin Gulch at Shoshone.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig7">
-<img src="images/pmg003b.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="537" />
-<p class="pcap">Mesquite Club, Shoshone. Known throughout the West.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_v">v</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig8">
-<img src="images/pmg003c.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="858" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-Golden Canyon</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_vi">vi</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig9">
-<img src="images/pmg004.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="526" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-One of the famous Twenty Mule Teams.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig10">
-<img src="images/pmg004c.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="540" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-Here boomed and busted the C. C. Julian swindle. Great names and
-great banks were shamefully involved.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_vii">vii</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig11">
-<img src="images/pmg004d.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="545" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT</span>
-Yellow Aster Mine (foreground) made owners rich. Randsburg in the background.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig12">
-<img src="images/pmg004e.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="547" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT</span>
-Belle Springs (Agua Tomaso) on old Salt Lake trail.
-Camp site of John C. Fremont.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_viii">viii</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig13">
-<img src="images/pmg005.jpg" alt="" width="413" height="599" />
-<p class="pcap">Ralph Jacobus Fairbanks, outstanding
-pioneer, every man&rsquo;s friend.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig14">
-<img src="images/pmg005a.jpg" alt="" width="436" height="600" />
-<p class="pcap">Dobe Charlie Nels.
-<br />He saw Bodie boom and die.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig15">
-<img src="images/pmg005b.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="483" />
-<p class="pcap">Bodie, hellroarer from cemetery. Now another ghost town.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_ix">ix</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig16">
-<img src="images/pmg005d.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="865" />
-<p class="pcap">Seldom-seen Slim, colorful desert character.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_x">x</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig17">
-<img src="images/pmg006.jpg" alt="" width="412" height="596" />
-<p class="pcap">Senator Charles Brown,
-benevolent overlord of Death Valley.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig18">
-<img src="images/pmg006a.jpg" alt="" width="437" height="596" />
-<p class="pcap">Panamint Tom, noted Piute,
-brother of Hungry Bill, Indian Chief</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig19">
-<img src="images/pmg006b.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="541" />
-<p class="pcap">Where these wickiups were, now stands luxurious Furnace Creek Inn.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xi">xi</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig20">
-<img src="images/pmg006c.jpg" alt="" width="556" height="800" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">Courtesy Frasher&rsquo;s Photo. Pomona, Calif.</span>
-Darwin Falls</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xii">xii</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig21">
-<img src="images/pmg007.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="510" />
-<p class="pcap">First House in Shoshone, built by Cub Lee.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig22">
-<img src="images/pmg007a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="541" />
-<p class="pcap">Shorty Harris and his cabin at Ballarat, Panamint Valley.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xiii">xiii</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig23">
-<img src="images/pmg007c.jpg" alt="" width="458" height="500" />
-<p class="pcap">Jim Butler, the discoverer
-of Tonopah Silver.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig24">
-<img src="images/pmg007d.jpg" alt="" width="449" height="500" />
-<p class="pcap">Sir Harry Oakes, booted off a
-train one day, discovered one
-of the world&rsquo;s richest mines the
-next.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig25">
-<img src="images/pmg007e.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="647" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT</span>
-Beatty, Nevada. Bare Mountain in distance.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xiv">xiv</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig26">
-<img src="images/pmg008.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="598" />
-<p class="pcap">&ldquo;Ma&rdquo; and &ldquo;Dad&rdquo; Fairbanks.
-<br />He was known to the Indians as Long Man.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig27">
-<img src="images/pmg008a.jpg" alt="" width="319" height="601" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT</span>
-Old Road Sign in Emigrant Wash.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="center">Townsend Pass &rarr;
-<br />&larr; Skidoo 7 M.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig28">
-<img src="images/pmg008b.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="481" />
-<p class="pcap">Rock resting on gravel, gravel on sand. Here Quon Sing, heathen,
-created an oasis, was chased off by Christian&rsquo;s guns.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xv">xv</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig29">
-<img src="images/pmg008c.jpg" alt="" width="356" height="594" />
-<p class="pcap">Death Valley Scotty on his native heath.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig30">
-<img src="images/pmg008d.jpg" alt="" width="358" height="594" />
-<p class="pcap">Charles and Stella Brown, Shoshone.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig31">
-<img src="images/pmg008e.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="456" />
-<p class="pcap">Station at Rhyolite, Nevada, long a ghost town.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xvi">xvi</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig32">
-<img src="images/pmg009.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="649" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-Monument in Death Valley honors Shorty Harris.</p>
-</div>
-<blockquote>
-<p>BURY ME BESIDE JIM DAYTON IN THE
-VALLEY WE LOVED. ABOVE ME WRITE:
-&ldquo;HERE LIES SHORTY HARRIS, A SINGLE
-BLANKET JACKASS PROSPECTOR.&rdquo;&mdash;EPITAPH
-REQUESTED BY SHORTY (FRANK) HARRIS
-BELOVED GOLD HUNTER. 1856-1834.
-HERE JAS. DAYTON, PIONEER, PERISHED 1898.</p>
-<p><span class="small">TO THESE TRAILMAKERS WHOSE COURAGE MATCHES
-THE FOUNDERS OF THE LAND THIS BIT OF EARTH
-IS DEDICATED FOREVER.</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="img" id="fig33">
-<img src="images/pmg009a.jpg" alt="" width="258" height="599" />
-<p class="pcap">Pete Harmon, prospector.
-He walked more than 400
-miles in July to visit Shorty
-Harris when he heard that
-he was ill.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig34">
-<img src="images/pmg009a2.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="572" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD. O. WEIGHT</span>
-Calico, Ghost Town</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xvii">xvii</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig35">
-<img src="images/pmg009b.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="522" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-Wild Burro Colt</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig36">
-<img src="images/pmg009c.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="579" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT</span>
-Death Valley&rsquo;s fantastic rock formations
-seen from Auguerreberry&rsquo;s Point.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xviii">xviii</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig37">
-<img src="images/pmg010.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="567" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT</span>
-Old Harmony Borax Works, opposite Furnace Creek.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig38">
-<img src="images/pmg010a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="465" />
-<p class="pcap">January 2, 1926. We camped our second night out at the
-Phantom City of Rhyolite.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xix">xix</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig39">
-<img src="images/pmg010b.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="441" />
-<p class="pcap">Dublin Gulch, Shoshone. In these dugouts lived Joe Volmer,
-Dobe Charley and Jack Crowley, prospectors.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig40">
-<img src="images/pmg010c.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="560" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT</span>
-Golden Street, Rhyolite</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xx">xx</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig41">
-<img src="images/pmg011.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="460" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT</span>
-Bad Water, here the thirsty drank and died.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig42">
-<img src="images/pmg011a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="540" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT</span>
-Ballarat, once an important freight station, now sand and sage.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xxi">xxi</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig43">
-<img src="images/pmg011b.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="540" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT</span>
-Stables of Tufa Works used by Twenty Mule Teams,
-where borax was mined.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig44">
-<img src="images/pmg011c.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="550" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY HAROLD O. WEIGHT</span>
-Zabriskie Ruins. Opals may be found in the canyon at right.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xxii">xxii</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig45">
-<img src="images/pmg012.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="538" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-Charcoal Pits</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig46">
-<img src="images/pmg012a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="546" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-Typical Death Valley Canyon</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xxiii">xxiii</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig47">
-<img src="images/pmg012b.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="530" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-Death Valley sand dunes</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig48">
-<img src="images/pmg012c.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="548" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-Effect of prehistoric convulsions</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xxiv">xxiv</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig49">
-<img src="images/pmg013.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="522" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-Furnace Creek wash</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig50">
-<img src="images/pmg013a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="536" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="ss">COURTESY FRASHER&rsquo;S PHOTO. POMONA, CALIF.</span>
-Ryan, and an abandoned borax mine.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_97">97</div>
-<p>Williams was a Baptist preacher, turned Mountain Man. He had
-guided Fremont through the terrors of the San Juan country and was
-accused of cannibalism when hunger threatened one detachment. Of
-Williams Kit Carson said: &ldquo;In starving times, don&rsquo;t walk ahead of Bill
-Williams.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Williams brought a band of Chaguanosos Indians to Resting Springs
-and made it an outpost for a horse stealing raid. With him were Pegleg
-Smith and Jim Beckwith, the mulatto who after having been a blacksmith
-with Ashley&rsquo;s Fur Traders in 1821, became a famous guide,
-Indian Chief, trader, and scout. (Also called Beckwourth and Beckworth.)</p>
-<p>Leaving Resting Springs, they proceeded through Cajon Pass for their
-loot and on May 14, 1840, Juan Perez, administrator at San Gabriel
-Mission excited Southern California when he announced that every
-ranch between San Gabriel and San Bernardino had been stripped
-of horses. Two days later posses from every settlement in the valley
-started in pursuit. The raiders made it a running battle, defeated several
-detachments, adding the latter&rsquo;s stock and grub to their plunder.</p>
-<p>Five days later, reinforcements were sent from Los Angeles, Chino,
-and other settlements, all under command of Jose Antonio Carrillo&mdash;ancestor
-of the movie celebrity, Leo Carrillo. He had &ldquo;225 horses, 75
-men, 49 guns with braces of pistols, 19 spears, 22 swords and sabers, and
-400 cartridges.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The posse threw fear into the raiders, but didn&rsquo;t catch them, though
-the latter lost half of the stolen horses. At Resting Springs, Carrillo
-found some abandoned clothing, saddles, and cooking utensils. Fifteen
-hundred horses that had died from thirst or lack of food were counted
-during the chase.</p>
-<p>Later, when Pegleg Smith was chided about the high price he demanded
-of an emigrant for a horse, he remarked: &ldquo;Well, the horses
-cost me plenty. I lost half of them getting out of the country and three
-of my best squaws....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The earliest American settler at Resting Springs remembered by old
-timers was Philander Lee, a rough and somewhat eccentric squaw man.
-He was big, straight as a ramrod, afraid of nothing, and of an undetermined
-past. He was there in the early Eighties. He cleared 200 acres,
-raised alfalfa, stock, and some fruit. He had a way of adding the last
-part of his first name to his offspring, Leander and Meander are samples.
-Some of his descendants still live in the country.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_98">98</div>
-<p>It was near Resting Springs Ranch while Phi Lee owned it that
-Jacob Breyfogle, of lost mine fame, was scalped by Hungry Bill&rsquo;s tribesmen.
-The story is told in another chapter.</p>
-<p>Phi Lee&rsquo;s brother, Cub Lee, who added spicy pages to the annals
-of Death Valley country, built the first home erected at Shoshone&mdash;an
-adobe which still stands. It was long the home of the squaw, Ann
-Cowboy. Another brother of Phi Lee was known as &ldquo;Shoemaker&rdquo;
-because he roamed the desert as a cobbler. All were squaw men.</p>
-<p>Cub Lee established a reputation for keeping his word and it was
-said no one ever disputed it and lived. Indians over in Nevada were
-giving a &ldquo;heap big&rdquo; party. His squaw wanted to go. Cub didn&rsquo;t. &ldquo;You
-stay home,&rdquo; he ordered. &ldquo;If you go, I&rsquo;ll kill you.&rdquo; He rode away and
-upon returning, discovered she was absent. He leaped on his cayuse,
-went to the party and found her. Whipping out his gun he killed both
-wife and son, blew the smoke out of his pistol and leisurely rode away.</p>
-<p>But the Nevada officials thought Cub Lee was too meticulous about
-keeping his word and Cub had a brief cooling off period in the pen.</p>
-<p>Pegleg Smith made Resting Springs his headquarters for the greatest
-haul in the history of California horse stealing and reached Cajon Pass
-before the theft was discovered. These horses were driven into Utah
-and there sold to emigrants, traders, and ranchers. Smith may be said to
-be the inventor of the Lost Mine, as a means of getting quick money. The
-credulous are still looking for mines that existed only in Pegleg&rsquo;s fine
-imagination.</p>
-<p>Thomas L. Smith was born at Crab Orchard, Kentucky, October 10,
-1801. With little schooling, he ran away from home to become a
-trapper and hunter, and following the western streams eventually settled
-in Wyoming. He married several squaws, choosing these from different
-tribes, thus insuring friendly alliance with all.</p>
-<p>He had been a member of Le Grand&rsquo;s first trapping expedition to
-Santa Fe and was an associate of such outstanding men as St. Vrain,
-Sublette, Platte, Jim Bridger, Kit Carson, the merchant Antoine Rubideaux
-(properly Robedoux) of St. Louis. He spoke several Indian
-languages and earned the gratitude of the Indians in his area by leading
-them to victory in a battle with the Utes. Able and likable, he also had
-iron nerves and courage. His morals, he justified on the ground that his
-were the morals of the day.</p>
-<p>J. G. Bruff, historian, whose &ldquo;Gold Rush-Journal and Drawings&rdquo; is
-good material for research, met Smith on Bear River August 6, 1849,
-and wrote in his diary: &ldquo;Pegleg Smith came into camp. He trades
-whiskey.&rdquo; Actually he traded anything he could lay his hands on.</p>
-<p>While trapping for beaver with St. Vrain on the Platte, Smith was
-<span class="pb" id="Page_99">99</span>
-shot by an Indian, the bullet shattering the bones in his leg just above
-the ankle. He was talking with St. Vrain at the moment and after a
-look at the injury, begged those about to amputate his leg. Having no
-experience his companions refused. He then asked the camp cook to
-bring him a butcher knife and amputated it himself with minor assistance
-by the noted Milton Sublette.</p>
-<p>Smith was then carried on a stretcher to his winter quarters on the
-Green River. While the wound was healing he discovered some bones
-protruding. Sublette pulled them out with a pair of bullet molds.
-Indian remedies procured by his squaws healed the stump and in the
-following spring of 1828 he made a rough wooden leg. Thereafter he
-was called Pegleg by the whites and We-he-to-ca by all Indians.</p>
-<p>A wooden socket was fitted into the stirrup of his saddle and with
-this he could ride as skillfully as before. In the lean, last years of his
-life, he could be seen hopping along under an old beaver hat in San
-Francisco to and from Biggs and Kibbe&rsquo;s corner to Martin Horton&rsquo;s.
-Something in his appearance stamped him as a remarkable man.</p>
-<p>Major Horace Bell, noted western ranger, lawyer, author, and
-editor of early Los Angeles, relates that he saw Pegleg near a Mother
-Lode town, lying drunk on the roadside, straddled by his half-breed
-son who was pounding him in an effort to arouse him from his stupor.</p>
-<p>Smith had little success as a prospector, but saw in man&rsquo;s lust for
-gold, ways to get it easier than the pick and shovel method.</p>
-<p>In the pueblo days of Los Angeles, Smith was a frequent visitor at
-the Bella Union, the leading hotel. Always surrounded by a spellbound
-group, he lived largely. When his money ran out he always had a piece
-of high-grade gold quartz to lure investment in his phantom mine.</p>
-<p>And so we have the Lost Pegleg, located anywhere from Shoshone
-to Tucson. Nevertheless, no adequate story of the movement of civilization
-westward can ignore South Pass and Pegleg Smith.</p>
-<p class="tb">About 25 miles east of Shoshone and set back from the road under
-willows and cottonwoods, an old house identifies a landmark of Pahrump
-Valley&mdash;the Manse Ranch, once owned by the Yundt family.</p>
-<p>The original Yundt was among the first settlers, contemporary with
-Philander and Cub Lee and Aaron Winters. Yundt was a squaw man
-and his children, Sam, Lee, and John followed the father in taking
-squaws for their wives.</p>
-<p>Sam Yundt was operating a small store at Good Springs and making
-a precarious living when a sleek and talented promoter secured a mining
-claim nearby and induced Sam to enlarge his stock in order to care for
-the increased business promised by supplying provisions for the mine&rsquo;s
-<span class="pb" id="Page_100">100</span>
-employees. Sam, with visions of quick, profitable turnovers, stocked
-the empty shelves. For a few months the bills were paid promptly,
-then lagged. Sam yielded to plausible excuses and carried the account.
-Finally his own credit was jeopardized and wholesalers began to
-threaten suits. Then he heard the sheriff had an attachment ready to
-serve. In his desperation Sam went to the debtor. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m ruined,&rdquo; he
-pleaded. &ldquo;You fellows will have to raise some money or we&rsquo;ll all quit
-eating.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The fellow said, &ldquo;All I can give you is stock in the Yellow Pine.
-It&rsquo;s that or nothing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sam Yundt had done with next to nothing all his life, took the stock
-and waited for the sheriff. Then the miracle&mdash;pay dirt and Sam Yundt
-was rich, and now he did the natural thing. He decided he would live
-at a pace that matched his means.</p>
-<p>George Rose, an old friend, had a mine in the Avawatz and he
-needed money. He went to Sam. &ldquo;Now that you&rsquo;re rich,&rdquo; he told Sam,
-&ldquo;you&rsquo;ll be taking life easy. I&rsquo;ve got some swamp land on the coast near
-Long Beach. Best duck shooting I know of and I&rsquo;ll sell it cheap.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sam didn&rsquo;t want it but he bought it just to accommodate his friend.
-In a little while the swamp land was an oil field and oil added another
-fortune to Yellow Pine&rsquo;s gold. Sam put his squaw Nancy, away, moved
-to the city and married a white woman. Nancy was provided for and
-for years she could be seen driving all over the desert in her buggy.</p>
-<p>A later owner of the Manse was one of whom the writer has a
-revealing memory. A battered Ford stopped at Shoshone and an unshaven
-individual stepped out, went into the store and came out with
-a loaf of bread and a chunk of bologna. Dirty underwear showed
-through a flapping rent in his patched overalls as he tore off a piece of
-bread and a chunk of the bologna and had his meal. The uneaten
-portions he tossed into the tool box, wiped his hands on his thighs
-and his mouth on his hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jean Cazaurang,&rdquo; Brown chuckled, &ldquo;won&rsquo;t pay six bits for lunch
-in the dining room. Worth $2,000,000.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When the dinner gong sounded Cazaurang went to his tool box,
-retrieved the rest of the bologna, twisted a hunk from the bread loaf,
-tossed the rest back into the tool box. This time he saved a dollar. He
-curled himself up in the Ford that night and saved $2.00. Besides the
-Manse Ranch he had a 10,000 acre ranch in Mexico, stocked with
-sheep, cattle, and horses, and had several mines.</p>
-<p>Jean&rsquo;s end was not a happy one. One payday at his ranch, the good
-looking and likable young Mexican who worked for him, came for his
-money. Jean counted out the money from a poke and poured it into
-<span class="pb" id="Page_101">101</span>
-the palm of the Mexican. The Mexican counted it and with a smile
-looked at Jean. &ldquo;Pardon me, Se&ntilde;or ... it&rsquo;s two bits short.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Be gone,&rdquo; ordered Jean.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But Se&ntilde;or, I have worked hard. My wife is hungry and I am
-hungry. My children are hungry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Be gone,&rdquo; again shouted Jean and whipped out his gun.</p>
-<p>But the Mexican was young, lean, and lithe and he seized Jean&rsquo;s
-wrist and when he turned the wrist loose Jean Cazaurang was dead.
-And then the Mexican made one mistake. Instead of going to the
-sheriff he became panic stricken and taking the body to a nearby ravine,
-he heaved it into the brush where it was found later, feet up.</p>
-<p>But Jean Cazaurang had saved two bits.</p>
-<p>A big luxuriously appointed hearse came for Jean and people said
-it was the first decent ride he&rsquo;d ever had in his life.</p>
-<p>Sentiment was with the Mexican, but he drew a short term for
-bungling.</p>
-<p>Because in one will Jean left his property to his wife and in another
-to his housekeeper, the estate was tied up in court, where it remained for
-11 years&mdash;fat pickings for lawyers. Finally the widow was awarded one
-half the estate under community property law, but the widow was dead.
-The housekeeper got the other half, and so ends the story of Jean
-Cazaurang and two bits.</p>
-<p>Rarely did desert ranches show other profits than those which one
-finds in doing the thing one likes to do, as in the case of a recent owner
-of the Manse&mdash;the wealthy Mrs. Lois Kellogg&mdash;the soft-voiced eastern
-lady who fell in love with the desert, drilled an artesian well, the flow of
-which is among the world&rsquo;s largest. Small, cultured, she yet found
-thrills in driving a 20-ton truck and trailer from the Manse to Los
-Angeles or to the famed Oasis Ranch 200 miles away in Fish Lake
-Valley&mdash;another desert landmark which she bought to further gratify
-her passion for the Big Wide Open.</p>
-<p>And there you have a slice of life as it is on the desert&mdash;one miserably
-dying in his lust for money, one fleeing its solitude; another seeking
-its solace.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_102">102</div>
-<h2 id="c17"><span class="small">Chapter XV</span>
-<br />The Story of Charles Brown</h2>
-<p>The story of Charles Brown and the Shoshone store begins at
-Greenwater. In the transient horde that poured into that town, he was
-the only one who hadn&rsquo;t come for quick, easy money. On his own since
-he was 11 years old, when he&rsquo;d gone to work in a Georgia mine, he
-wanted only a job and got it. In the excited, loose-talking mob he was
-conspicuous because he was silent, calm, unhurried.</p>
-<p>There were no law enforcement officers in Greenwater. The jail
-was 130 miles away and every day was field day for the toughs. Better
-citizens decided finally to do something about it. They petitioned
-George Naylor, Inyo county&rsquo;s sheriff at Independence to appoint or
-send a deputy to keep some semblance of order.</p>
-<p>Naylor sent a badge over and with it a note: &ldquo;Pin it on some
-husky youngster, unmarried and unafraid and tell him to shoot first.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Again the Citizens&rsquo; Committee met. &ldquo;I know a fellow who answers
-that description,&rdquo; one of them said. &ldquo;Steady sort. Built like a panther.
-Came from Georgia. Kinda slow-motioned until he&rsquo;s ready for the
-spring. Name&rsquo;s Brown.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The badge was pinned on Brown.</p>
-<p>Greenwater was a port of call for Death Valley Slim, a character
-of western deserts, who normally was a happy-go-lucky likable fellow.
-But periodically Slim would fill himself with desert likker, his belt with
-six-guns, and terrorize the town.</p>
-<p>Shortly after Brown assumed the duties of his office, Slim sent word
-to the deputy sheriff at Death Valley Junction that he was on his way
-to that place for a little frolic. &ldquo;Tell him,&rdquo; he coached his messenger,
-&ldquo;sheriffs rile me and he&rsquo;d better take a vacation.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After notifying the merchants and the residents, who promptly barricaded
-themselves indoors, the officer found shelter for himself in
-Beatty, Nevada.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_103">103</div>
-<p>So Slim saw only empty streets and barred shutters upon arrival
-and since there was nothing to shoot at he headed through Dead Man&rsquo;s
-Canyon for Greenwater. There he found the main street crowded to
-his liking and the saloons jammed. He made for the nearest, ordered
-a drink and whipping out his gun began to pop the bottles on the
-shelves. At the first blast, patrons made a break for the exits. At the
-second, the doors and windows were smashed and when Slim holstered
-his gun, the place was a wreck.</p>
-<p>Messengers were sent for Brown, who was at his cabin a mile away.
-Brown stuck a pistol into his pocket and went down. He found Slim
-in Wandell&rsquo;s saloon, the town&rsquo;s smartest. There Slim had refused to let
-the patrons leave and with the bartenders cowed, the patrons cornered,
-Slim was amusing himself by shooting alternately at chandeliers, the
-feet of customers and the plump breasts of the nude lady featured in
-the painting behind the bar. Following Brown at a safe distance, was
-half the population, keyed for the massacre.</p>
-<p>Brown walked in. &ldquo;Hello, Slim,&rdquo; he said quietly. &ldquo;Fellows tell me
-you&rsquo;re hogging all the fun. Better let me have that gun, hadn&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Like hell,&rdquo; Slim sneered. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll let you have it right through the
-guts&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As he raised his gun for the kill, the panther sprang and the battle
-was on. They fought all over the barroom&mdash;standing up; lying down;
-rolling over&mdash;first one then the other on top. Tables toppled, chairs
-crashed. For half an hour they battled savagely, finally rolling against
-the bar&mdash;both mauled and bloody. There with his strong vice-like legs
-wrapped around Slim&rsquo;s and an arm of steel gripping neck and shoulder,
-Brown slipped irons over the bad man&rsquo;s wrists. &ldquo;Get up,&rdquo; Brown
-ordered as he stood aside, breathing hard.</p>
-<p>Slim rose, leaned against the bar. There was fight in him still and
-seeing a bottle in front of him, he seized it with manacled hands,
-started to lift it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Slim,&rdquo; Brown said calmly, &ldquo;if you lift that bottle you&rsquo;ll never lift
-another.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The bad boy instinctively knew the look that pages death and Slim&rsquo;s
-fingers fell from the bottle.</p>
-<p>Greenwater had no jail and Brown took him to his own cabin.
-Leaving the manacles on the prisoner he took his shoes, locked them
-in a closet. No man drunk or sober he reflected, would tackle barefoot
-the gravelled street littered with thousands of broken liquor
-bottles. Then he went to bed.</p>
-<p>Waking later, he discovered that Slim had vanished and with him,
-Brown&rsquo;s number 12 shoes. He tried Slim&rsquo;s shoe but couldn&rsquo;t get his
-<span class="pb" id="Page_104">104</span>
-foot into it. There was nothing to do but follow barefoot. He left a
-blood-stained trail, but at 2 a.m. he found Slim in a blacksmith shop
-having the handcuffs removed. Brown retrieved his shoes and on the
-return trip Slim went barefoot. After hog-tying his prisoner Brown
-chained him to the bed and went to sleep.</p>
-<p>Thereafter, the bad boys scratched Greenwater off their calling list.</p>
-<p>Slim afterwards attained fame with Villa in Mexico, became a good
-citizen and later went East, established a sanatorium catering to the
-wealthy and acquired a fortune.</p>
-<p>Among the first arrivals in Greenwater was a lanky adventurer
-known to the Indians as Long Man and to whites for his ability to make
-money in any venture and an even more marvelous inability to keep it.
-He was Ralph Jacobus Fairbanks. Broke at the time, he was seeking
-the quickest way to a &ldquo;comeback.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Foreseeing that the biggest names in copper meant a rush, he had
-taken a look at the little stagnant spring with a green scum that was
-to give the town its name.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not enough water in it to do the family washing,&rdquo; he decided and
-with uncanny talent for seeing opportunity where others would
-starve to death, he was soon peddling water at a dollar a bucket. He
-had hauled it 40 miles uphill from Furnace Creek wash.</p>
-<p>A hopeful, but late arrival who expected to find the town crowded
-with killers was an undertaker who came with a huge stock of coffins.
-The prospect of a quick turnover seemed to guarantee success, but in
-two years Greenwater had exactly one funeral and he sold but one
-coffin. Disgusted he stacked the caskets in the center of his shop; left
-and was never again heard of.</p>
-<p>Fairbanks came into town one day with his sweat-stained 16 mule
-team, noticed the abandoned coffins, picked out the largest and best
-and gave Greenwater its first watering trough, which was used as long
-as the town lasted.</p>
-<p>Fairbanks soon made enough money to acquire a hotel, store, and
-a bar, which became a popular rendezvous. Fairbanks was born of
-well-to-do parents, in a covered wagon en route to Utah in 1857. Of
-the thousands who flocked into Greenwater, only he and Charles
-Brown were to remain in Death Valley country and wrest fortunes from
-America&rsquo;s most desolate region. To Greenwater he brought his wife,
-Celestia Abigail, who shared his spirit of adventure, but fortunately
-for him she possessed a caution which he lacked. Among their children
-was a beautiful and vivacious daughter, Stella.</p>
-<p>Fairbanks, who was of the quick, go-getting type, didn&rsquo;t care for
-Brown. Born in the North, he was critical of the slow-moving, silent,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_105">105</span>
-young Georgian and unacquainted with the Deep South&rsquo;s drawl, he
-referred to him as &ldquo;that damned foreigner.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The reputation of the Fairbanks camaraderie spread, and Mrs. Fairbanks,
-who understood the longing of a youngster for a home-cooked
-meal, invited Brown to dinner.</p>
-<p>There were other young fortune seekers in Greenwater who were
-also occasional guests at the Fairbanks dinners&mdash;among them a Yankee
-from Maine&mdash;Harry Oakes, of whom the world was to hear later. Allen
-Gillman, known as the Rattlesnake Kid, because of his stalking rattlesnakes
-to indulge his hobby of making hat bands and trinkets, later
-to become associated with Bernarr McFadden. Wealthy young mining
-engineers. Bank clerks with futures. Brown apparently had none.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll get out of the country like he came in&mdash;afoot and broke,&rdquo;
-rivals told Stella. So when romance came, there was still a long trail
-ahead.</p>
-<p>Then came Greenwater&rsquo;s first warning of trouble. A few miners
-were laid off; a few padlocks appeared on a few cabins; a few merchants
-complained. Soon it was noticed that the tinny pianos from which slim-fingered
-&ldquo;professors&rdquo; swept the two-step and the waltz were gathering
-dust while the girls lolled in empty honkies. But when Diamond Tooth
-Lil padlocked her door and joined the rush to a new copper strike at
-Crackerjack in the Avawatz Mountains the wiser knew that Greenwater
-was through.</p>
-<p>With no guests Fairbanks told off on his fingers, departed patrons,
-mine owners, doctors, lawyers. &ldquo;Just Charlie left. Wonder what&rsquo;s keeping
-him?&rdquo; Celestia Abigail knew. She knew that the big Georgian was
-desperately in love with Stella and didn&rsquo;t care how many of her suitors
-left.</p>
-<p>With mines closing and few official duties, Brown loaded a burro
-with supplies and with Joe Yerrin went on a prospecting trip. Their
-course led across Death Valley. They were caught in a heat that was
-a record, even for the Big Sink, and ran out of water. Fortunately they
-were within a few miles of Surveyor&rsquo;s Well&mdash;a stagnant hole north of
-Stovepipe. The burros were also suffering and Brown and Yerrin staggered
-to water barely in time to escape death.</p>
-<p>The well there is dug on a slant and looking down they saw a
-prospector kneeling at the water, filling a canteen and blocking passage.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Reckon you fellows are thirsty,&rdquo; he greeted. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll hand you up a
-drink. Have to strain it though. Full of wiggletails.&rdquo; He pulled his
-shirt tail out of his pants, stretched it over a stew pan, strained the
-water through it and handed the pan up to Brown. &ldquo;Now it&rsquo;s fit to
-drink,&rdquo; he said proudly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_106">106</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It was no time to be finicky,&rdquo; Charlie said. &ldquo;We drank.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Brown and Yerrin combed hill and canyon but failed to find anything
-of value. Yerrin knew of another place. &ldquo;You can have it,&rdquo;
-Brown said. &ldquo;I left a good claim.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Yerrin eyed him a long moment, then grinned: &ldquo;Stella, huh?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The sage in Greenwater streets was rank now and again Ralph Fairbanks
-looked out over the dying town. &ldquo;Ma, we&rsquo;re getting out,&rdquo; he said.
-He emptied his pockets on the table; counted the cash. &ldquo;Ten dollars
-and thirty cents. Can&rsquo;t get far on that&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He was interrupted by a knock at the door. There stood a stranger
-who wanted dinner and lodging for the night. During the evening the
-guest disclosed that he was en route to his mining claim near a place
-called Shoshone, 38 miles south. It was near a spring with plenty of
-water, warm, but usable. He wanted to put 50 miners to work but
-first he had to find someone willing to go there and board them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe we&rsquo;d go,&rdquo; Fairbanks said. &ldquo;What&rsquo;ll you pay for board?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A dollar and a half a day. Figures around $2250 a month.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ralph looked at Ma. She nodded. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a deal,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>The next morning the guest left.</p>
-<p>Fairbanks turned to his wife. &ldquo;I can haul these abandoned shacks
-down there in no time. Charlie&rsquo;s not working, I can get him to help.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ralph Fairbanks had stayed with Greenwater to the bitter end. Now
-he hauled it away.</p>
-<p>The road to the new site was over rough desert, gutted with dry
-washes. Brown slept in the brush, put the shacks up while Fairbanks
-went for others. Both worked night and day to get the place ready.
-Finally they had lodging for 50 men, a dining room, and quarters for
-the family. With $2250 a month they could afford a chef and Ma
-could take it easy. Stella could go Outside to a girl&rsquo;s school.</p>
-<p>Then like a bolt of lightning came the bad news. The Greenwater
-guest, they learned, was just an engaging liar, with no mine, no men.
-He was never heard of again.</p>
-<p>Without a dollar they were marooned in one of the world&rsquo;s most
-desolate areas. Stumped, Fairbanks looked at Brown. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been rich.
-I&rsquo;ve been poor. But this is below the belt. What&rsquo;ll we do?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can get a job with the Borax Company,&rdquo; Brown said. &ldquo;But you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We have that canned goods we brought to feed that liar&rsquo;s hired
-men. I&rsquo;ll figure some way to live in this God-forsaken hole.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>From the dining room, prepared for the $2250 monthly income, he
-lugged a table, set it outside the door facing the road. Then he went
-to the pantry, filled a laundry basket with the cans of pork and beans,
-tomatoes, corned beef, and milk brought from Greenwater. He arranged
-<span class="pb" id="Page_107">107</span>
-them on the table, wrenched a piece of shook from a packing
-crate and on it painted in crude letters the word, &ldquo;Store.&rdquo; He propped
-it on the table and went inside. &ldquo;Ma,&rdquo; he announced, &ldquo;we&rsquo;re in business.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>You could have hauled the entire stock and the table away in a
-wheelbarrow and every person in the country for 100 miles in either
-direction laid end to end would not have reached as far as a bush
-league batter could knock a baseball.</p>
-<p>The wheelbarrow load of canned goods went to the Indians living
-in the brush and the prospectors camped at the spring. Another replaced
-it and the &ldquo;store&rdquo; moved then into the dining room prepared for the
-non-existent boarders. Powder, a must on the list of a desert store, was
-added. The desert man, they knew, needed only a few items but they
-must be good. Overalls honestly stitched. Bacon well cured. Shoes
-sturdily built for hard usage.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If we sell a shoddy shirt, an inferior pick or shovel to one of our
-customers,&rdquo; they told the wholesaler, &ldquo;we will never again sell anything
-to him nor to any of his friends.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Soon the prospectors were telling other prospectors they met on
-the trails: &ldquo;Square shooters&mdash;those fellows. Speak our language....&rdquo;
-The squaws and the bucks told other squaws and bucks. Soon new
-trails cut across the desert to Shoshone and soon the store outgrew the
-dining room in the Fairbanks residence.</p>
-<p>From Zabriskie, now an abandoned borax town a few miles south of
-Shoshone, an old saloon and boarding house was cut into sections and
-hauled to Shoshone. It had been previously hauled from Greenwater
-where it had served as a labor union hall and club house. It was
-deposited directly across the road from the original store.</p>
-<p>So began in 1910 an empire of trade that is almost unbelievable.</p>
-<p>Charlie had at last coaxed the right answer from Stella but there
-wasn&rsquo;t enough in the business at the start to support two families, plus
-the score of children and grandchildren of Fairbanks. At Greenwater
-he had known all the moguls of mining and he had only to ask for a
-job to get one. Retaining his interest in the Shoshone store he became
-superintendent of the Pacific Borax Company&rsquo;s important Lila C. mine
-and thus formed a connection which grew into valuable friendships with
-the executives. The Shoshone business grew and soon required his
-entire time and that of Stella.</p>
-<p>Born in Richfield, Utah, Stella Brown grew up in Death Valley
-country and a reel of her life would show an exciting story of triumph
-over life in the raw; in desolate deserts and in boom towns where
-bandits and bawdy women rubbed elbows with the virtuous, millionaire
-with crook, and caste was unknown. If a girl went wrong; if an Indian
-<span class="pb" id="Page_108">108</span>
-was starving; a widow in need&mdash;there you would find her. Some day
-somebody will write the inspiring story of Stella Brown.</p>
-<p>Not all those who were told to see Charlie were seeking directions
-or suffering from toothache. When General Electric desperately needed
-talc, its agents were so advised. When Harold Ickes came out to promote
-President Roosevelt&rsquo;s conservation ideas and officials of the War Department
-sought critical material, they too were given the old familiar advice
-and took it, and one day I saw the President of the Southern Pacific
-Railroad stand around for an hour while Charlie waited for a Pahrump
-Indian to make up his mind about a pair of overalls.</p>
-<p>Today the store that started on a kitchen table requires a large
-refrigerating plant and lighting system, three large warehouses, two
-tunnels in a hill. About a dozen employees work in shifts from seven in
-the morning till ten at night, to take care of the store, cabins, and cafe.
-Three big trucks haul oil, gas, powder, and provisions to mines in the
-region. Out of canyon, dry wash, and over dunes they come for every
-imaginable commodity, and get it.</p>
-<p>A millionaire city man who vacations there sat down on the slab
-bench beside Brown, aimlessly whittling. &ldquo;Listen, Charlie,&rdquo; he said.
-&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you get out of this desolation and move to the city where
-you can enjoy yourself?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hell&mdash;&rdquo; Charlie muttered, and went on with his whittling.</p>
-<p>The new store stands upon the site where Ma Fairbanks&rsquo; kitchen
-table displayed the canned goods brought from Greenwater. Modern
-to the minute and air-cooled it would be a credit to any city.</p>
-<p class="tb">Again I heard the old familiar, &ldquo;See Charlie,&rdquo; and while he was
-telling someone how to get to a place no one around had ever heard of,
-I glanced over the Chalfant Register, a Bishop paper, and noticed a letter
-it had published from a lady in Wisconsin seeking information about
-a brother who had gone to Greenwater more than 40 years ago. She
-had never heard of him since.</p>
-<p>When Charlie joined me I called his attention to the letter. &ldquo;I saw
-it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Nobody answered and the editor sent the letter to me.
-I have just written her that the brother who came to find out what
-happened, died suddenly at Tonopah, only a few hours by auto from
-Greenwater. The other brother was killed in a saloon. I knew him and
-the man who killed him.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_109">109</div>
-<h2 id="c18"><span class="small">Chapter XVI</span>
-<br />Long Man, Short Man</h2>
-<p>Before Tonopah, the first, and Greenwater, the last of the boom
-camps, Indians roaming the desert from Utah westward were showing
-trails to two hikos, who were to become symbols for the reckless courage
-needed to exist in the wasteland. They were known as Long Man
-and Short Man.</p>
-<p>Previous pages have given part of the story of Long Man.</p>
-<p>Coming into Death Valley country in the late Nineties, Ralph Jacobus
-Fairbanks wanted to know its water holes, trails, and landmarks.
-He hired Panamint Tom, brother of Hungry Bill, as a guide. Because
-Tom&rsquo;s name was linked with Bill&rsquo;s in stories of missing men, Fairbanks
-carried his six-gun.</p>
-<p>Panamint Tom was also armed. When they reached the rim of
-Death Valley and started down, Fairbanks said, &ldquo;Tom, this is Indian
-country. You know it. I don&rsquo;t. You go first....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Taking no chance on a surprise night attack, he directed the layout
-of the camp so that their beds were safely apart. Each slept with his
-gun. Around the camp fire, Tom nonchalantly confessed that he&rsquo;d had
-to kill five white men.</p>
-<p>The mission accomplished, they started back. When they came
-out of the valley Tom said, &ldquo;Long Man, this is white man&rsquo;s country.
-You know it. I don&rsquo;t. You go first.&rdquo; In after years, referring to their
-trip, Tom said, &ldquo;Long Man, you heap &rsquo;fraid that time.&rdquo; &ldquo;I was,&rdquo; Fairbanks
-confessed. &ldquo;Me too,&rdquo; Tom said.</p>
-<p>When the Goldfield strike was made, Fairbanks saw that a supply
-station on the main line of travel was a surer way to wealth than the
-gamble of digging. He knew of a ranch with good water and luxuriant
-wild hay at Ash Meadows. Hay was worth $200 a ton. The owner had
-abandoned the ranch, however, and moved into the hills. Fairbanks
-could get little information concerning his whereabouts. &ldquo;Up there
-somewhere,&rdquo; he was told, with a gesture indicating 50 miles of sky line.
-But he wanted the hay and started out and by patient inquiry located
-<span class="pb" id="Page_110">110</span>
-his man just before daylight on the second day. &ldquo;What will you give
-for it?&rdquo; the man asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Fairbanks parried, &ldquo;you know it&rsquo;ll cost me as much as the
-ranch is worth to get rid of that wild grass.&rdquo; Having only a vague idea
-of its real worth he had decided to offer $4000, but sensed the man&rsquo;s
-eagerness to sell and started to offer $1000. Suddenly it occurred to
-him that someone else might have made an offer. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go $2000 and not
-a nickel more.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve bought a ranch,&rdquo; the owner said.</p>
-<p>Elated, Fairbanks wrote a contract by candlelight on the spot. Both
-signed and they started back to find a notary. &ldquo;I determined the fellow
-should not get out of my sight until the deed was recorded. If he
-wanted a drink of water, so did I. If he wished to speak to someone, I
-wanted a word with the same man.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Finally the deal was closed and Fairbanks started home. Outside,
-he met Ed Metcalf, chuckling.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s so funny, Ed?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Metcalf pointed to the departing seller. &ldquo;He was just telling me
-about being worried to death all morning for fear a sucker he&rsquo;d found
-would get out of his sight. He&rsquo;s been trying to unload his ranch for $500
-and some idiot gave him $2000.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Fairbanks also operated a freighting service to the boom towns in
-the gold belt as far north as Goldfield and Tonopah. Rates were fantastic
-and he made a fortune. He opened Beatty&rsquo;s first cafe in a tent.</p>
-<p>Money was plentiful and after a trip with a 16 mule team over rough
-roads to Goldfield, he was ready for a relaxing change to poker. When
-the white chips are $25, the reds $50, and the blues $500 the
-game is not for pikers and he would bet $10,000 as calmly as he would
-10 cents.</p>
-<p>In such a game one night he found himself sitting beside a player
-who had removed his big overcoat with wide patch pockets and hung
-it on his chair. Fairbanks noticed the fellow had a habit of gathering
-in the discards when he wasn&rsquo;t betting and his deal would follow. He
-also noticed intermittent movements of the fellow&rsquo;s deft fingers to the
-big patch pocket and soon saw that every ace in the deck reposed in
-the pocket.</p>
-<p>Later in the game, Fairbanks opened a jackpot. Every man stayed.
-The crook raised discreetly and most of the players stayed. Fairbanks
-bet $1000.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Have to raise you $5000,&rdquo; the crook said.</p>
-<p>Fairbanks met the raise. &ldquo;... and it&rsquo;ll cost you $5000 more,&rdquo; he
-said evenly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_111">111</div>
-<p>With the confidence that came from the cached aces, the sharper
-shoved out the five, smiled exultantly as he spread four kings and a
-deuce and reached for the pot.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not so fast,&rdquo; Fairbanks said as he laid four aces and a ten on the
-table.</p>
-<p>The crook gave him a quick look. Fairbanks&rsquo; eyes were steady.
-Neither said a word. The crook couldn&rsquo;t. He knew that Fairbanks&rsquo; long
-fingers had found the big patch pocket.</p>
-<p>When three men and a jackass no longer made a crowd in Shoshone,
-Ralph Fairbanks became restless. With a population of 20&mdash;half of it
-his own progeny, he felt that civilization was closing in on him.
-&ldquo;Charlie, I&rsquo;ve been in one place too long....&rdquo; He had now become
-&ldquo;Dad Fairbanks&rdquo; to all who knew him.</p>
-<p>The automobile was being increasingly used in desert travel and
-transcontinental trips were no longer a daring adventure or the result
-of a bet. Sixty miles south of Shoshone there was a wretched road that
-pitched down the washboard slope of one range into a basin, then up
-the gully-crossed slopes of another. Part of the transcontinental highway,
-it was a headache to the traveler. Radiators usually boiled down
-hill and up.</p>
-<p>To this desolate spot went Dad Fairbanks. The hot blasts from the
-dunes of the Devil&rsquo;s Playground and the dry bed of Soda Lake made
-summer a hell and the freezing winds from Providence Mountains
-turned it into a Siberian winter.</p>
-<p>Here in 1928 Dad Fairbanks built cabins and a store and installed
-a gas pump. Water was hauled in. &ldquo;Coming or going,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;when
-they reach this place they&rsquo;ve just got to stop, cool the engine, and fill
-up for the hill ahead.&rdquo; The place is Baker on Highway 91.</p>
-<p>Here, as at Shoshone, sales technique was tossed into the ash can.
-Stopping for dinner one day I met Dad coming out of the dining room.
-&ldquo;How&rsquo;s the fare?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you hungry?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hungry as a bear....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right. Go in. A hungry man can stand anything.&rdquo; Then in an
-undertone he added: &ldquo;Employment agent sent me the world&rsquo;s worst
-cook. Take eggs.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Later as we talked in the sheltered driveway a Rolls-Royce limousine
-drove up and a well-fed and smartly tailored tourist stepped out and
-spoke to Dad: &ldquo;Do you know me?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-<p>Dad looked at him hesitantly. &ldquo;Face is familiar.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You loaned me $300, 25 years ago.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I loaned a lotta fellows money.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_112">112</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But I never paid it back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A helluva lot of &rsquo;em didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; Dad said.</p>
-<p>The stranger reached into his pocket, pulled $1000 from a roll and
-handed it to Dad. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m Harry Oakes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Where&rsquo;s Ma?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So they went over to Dad&rsquo;s house and with Ma Fairbanks who had
-shared all of Dad&rsquo;s fortunes, good and bad, they sat down and Oakes
-talked of the long trail that led from 300 borrowed dollars to an annual
-income of five million.</p>
-<p>Harry Oakes had gone to Canada and learning that the legal title
-to a mining claim would expire at midnight on a certain date, he and
-his partner W. G. Wright sat up in a temperature of forty below, to
-relocate the Lakeshore Mine&mdash;Canada&rsquo;s richest gold property.</p>
-<p>Born in Maine, Harry Oakes became a subject of England and was
-at this time Canada&rsquo;s richest citizen, with an estimated fortune of
-$200,000,000.</p>
-<p>It was a long way from the Niagara palace back to Greenwater
-and Shoshone and as Ma Fairbanks and Dad and Harry sat in the
-plain little desert cottage, I couldn&rsquo;t keep from wondering why a man
-with $200,000,000 would wait 25 years to repay that $300.</p>
-<p>In his native town of Sangerville in Maine, Harry Oakes was criticized
-when, as a youngster with every opportunity to pursue a successful
-career according to the staid Maine formula, he became excited
-by gold. &ldquo;Quick easy money.&rdquo; &ldquo;Just a dreamer.&rdquo; He talked big, acted
-big, and was big.</p>
-<p>But Harry Oakes started out in life to make a fortune by finding
-a gold mine and you can&rsquo;t laugh aside the determination and courage
-with which he stuck to his purpose until he succeeded.</p>
-<p>Dad Fairbanks spent nearly 50 years in Death Valley country and
-it is a bit ironical that at last, the Baker climate drove him from the
-desert to Santa Paula and later, of all places, to Hollywood.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I should never have believed it of you,&rdquo; I kidded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hell&mdash;&rdquo; Dad retorted, &ldquo;I wanted solitude. Haven&rsquo;t you got enough
-sense to know that the lonesomest place on Godamighty&rsquo;s earth is a
-city?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He died in 1943 and at the funeral were the state&rsquo;s greatest men
-and its humblest&mdash;bankers, lawyers, doctors, beggarmen, muckers and
-miners, and with them, those he loved best&mdash;sun-baked fellows from the
-towns and the gulches along the burro trails. No man who has lived in
-Death Valley country did more to put the region on the must list of the
-American tourist and none won more of the regard and affections of the
-people.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_113">113</div>
-<h2 id="c19"><span class="small">Chapter XVII</span>
-<br />Shorty Frank Harris</h2>
-<p>No history of Death Valley has been written in this century without
-mention of the Short Man&mdash;Frank (Shorty) Harris&mdash;and none can be.
-Previous pages have given most of his story. After his death at least two
-hurried writers who never saw him have stated that Shorty discovered
-no mines, knew little of the country.</p>
-<p>From a page of notes made before I had ever met him, I find this
-record: &ldquo;Stopped at Independence to see George Naylor, early Inyo
-county sheriff and now its treasurer. We talked of early prospectors.
-Naylor said: &lsquo;I have known all of the old time burro men and have the
-records. Shorty Harris has put more towns on the map and more
-taxable property on the assessors&rsquo; books than any of them.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I first met Shorty at Shoshone. Entering the store one day, Charles
-Brown told me there was a fellow outside I ought to know, and in a
-moment I was looking into keen steady eyes&mdash;blue as water in a canyon
-pool&mdash;and in another Shorty Harris was telling me how to sneak up on
-$10,000,000. Thus began an acquaintance which was to lead me
-through many years from one end of Death Valley to the other, with
-Shorty, mentor, friend, and guide.</p>
-<p>Of course I had heard of him. Who hadn&rsquo;t? In the gold country of
-western deserts one could find a few who had never heard of Cecil
-Rhodes or John Hays Hammond, but none who had not heard of
-Shorty Harris. Wherever mining men gathered, the mention of his
-name evoked the familiar, &ldquo;That reminds me,&rdquo; and the air thickened
-with history, laughter, and lies.</p>
-<p>He was five feet tall, quick of motion. Hands and feet small. Skin
-soft and surprisingly fair. Muscles hard as bull quartz. With a mask
-of ignorance he concealed a fine intelligence reserved for intimate
-friends in moments of repose.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_114">114</div>
-<p>It is regrettable that since Shorty&rsquo;s death, writers who never saw
-him have given pictures of him which by no stretch of the imagination
-can be recognized by those who had even a slight acquaintance with
-him. Authors of books properly examine the material of those who
-have written other books. In the case of Shorty this was eagerly done&mdash;so
-eagerly in fact, that each portrayal is the original picture altered
-according to the ability of the one who tailors the tale. All are interesting
-but few have any relation to truth.</p>
-<p>Shorty Harris was so widely publicized by writers in the early part
-of the century that when the radio was invented, he was a &ldquo;natural&rdquo;
-for playlets and columnists. It was natural also that the iconoclast appear
-to set the world right. He employed Shorty to guide him through Death
-Valley. &ldquo;I want to write a book,&rdquo; he explained, &ldquo;and I have only three
-weeks to gather material.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The trip ended sooner. &ldquo;What happened?&rdquo; I asked Shorty when I
-read the book and was startled to see in it a statement that Shorty became
-lost; had never found a mine; and never even looked for one.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did he say that?&rdquo; Shorty laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And more of the same,&rdquo; I said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, let&rsquo;s let it go for what it&rsquo;s worth.... He bellyached from
-the minute we set out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Those who knew Shorty best&mdash;Dad Fairbanks, Charles Brown, Bob
-Montgomery, George Naylor, H. W. Eichbaum, and the old timers on
-the trails had entirely different impressions. There was, however, around
-the barrooms of Beatty and other border villages a breed of later
-comers&mdash;&ldquo;professional&rdquo; old timers always waiting and often succeeding
-in exchanging &ldquo;history&rdquo; for free drinks. Though they may have never
-known Shorty in person, they were not lacking in yarns about him and
-rarely failed to get an audience.</p>
-<p>There were also among Shorty&rsquo;s friends a few who had another
-attitude. &ldquo;What has he ever done that I haven&rsquo;t?&rdquo; the answer being that
-nothing had been written about them.</p>
-<p>With variations the original pattern became the pattern for the succeeding
-writer. In the interest of accuracy it is not amiss to say that
-Shorty Harris was not buried standing up. The writer saw him buried.
-It is not true that he ever protested the removal of the road from the
-site of the place where he wished to be buried, because he never knew
-that he would be buried there. Nor did he have the remotest idea that
-a monument would be erected to him, because the idea of the monument
-was born after his death, as related elsewhere.</p>
-<p>He did not leave Harrisburg on July 4, 1905 to get drunk at
-<span class="pb" id="Page_115">115</span>
-Ballarat. Instead, he went to Rhyolite to find Wild Bill Corcoran, his
-grubstaker.</p>
-<p>He did enjoy the yarns attributed to him and their publication in
-important periodicals. But he was also painfully shy and ill at ease away
-from his home. Even at the annual Death Valley picnics held at Wilmington,
-near Los Angeles, he could never be persuaded to face the
-crowds.</p>
-<p>One cannot laugh aside the part he played nor the monument that
-honors one of God&rsquo;s humblest. His strike at Rhyolite brought two railroads
-across the desert, gave profitable employment to thousands of men,
-added extra shifts in steel mills and factories making heavy machinery
-and those of tool makers. The building trades felt it, banks, security exchanges,
-and scores of other industries over the nation&mdash;all because
-Shorty Harris went up a canyon. And it is not amiss to ask if these historians
-did their jobs as well.</p>
-<p>At my home it was difficult to get Shorty to accept invitations to
-dinners to which he was often invited by service clubs, but in the Ballarat
-cabin he was as sure of himself as the MacGregor with a foot upon
-his native heath and an eye on Ben Lomond.</p>
-<p>His passion for prospecting was fanatical. I asked him once if he
-would choose prospecting as a career if he had his life to live over.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t change places with the President of the United States.
-My only regret is that I didn&rsquo;t start sooner. When I go out, every time
-my foot touches the ground, I think &lsquo;before the sun goes down I&rsquo;ll be
-worth $10,000,000.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But you don&rsquo;t get it,&rdquo; I reminded him.</p>
-<p>He stared at me with a sort of &ldquo;you&rsquo;re-too-dumb&rdquo; look. &ldquo;Who in
-the hell wants $10,000,000? It&rsquo;s the game, man&mdash;the game.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Nor is the picture of his profligacy altogether true. Despite Shorty&rsquo;s
-disregard for money he had a canniness that made him cache something
-against the rainy day. At Lone Pine Charlie Brown was packing Shorty&rsquo;s
-suit case before taking him to a doctor. &ldquo;Shorty, what&rsquo;s this lump in the
-lining of your vest?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, there was a hole in it. Poor job of mending I guess,&rdquo; Shorty
-answered guilelessly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see,&rdquo; Charlie said and ripping a few stitches removed $600 in
-currency.</p>
-<p>Shorty&rsquo;s last years furnish a story of a man too tough to die. He had
-had three major operations, when in 1933 I received the following
-telegram: &ldquo;Wall fell on me. Hurry. Bring doctor. Shorty Harris.&rdquo; It
-had been sent by Fred Gray from Trona, 27 miles from Ballarat, nearest
-telegraph station.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_116">116</div>
-<p>My wife and I hurried through rain, snow, sleet; over washed out
-desert and mountain roads. Outside the cabin in the dusk, shivering in a
-cold wind, we found two or three of Shorty&rsquo;s friends and Charles and
-Mrs. Brown, who had also made a mad dash of 150 miles over roads&mdash;some
-of which hadn&rsquo;t been traveled in 30 years.</p>
-<p>Puttering around his cabin, Shorty had jerked at a wire anchored
-in the walls and brought tons of adobe down upon himself. He was
-literally dug out, his ribs crushed, face black with abrasions. With
-rapidly developing pneumonia he had lain for 60 hours without medical
-attention and with nothing to relieve pain. We learned later from Dr.
-Walter Johnson, who had preceded us, that if a hospital had been within
-a block it would have been fatal to move him. All agreed that Death sat
-on Shorty&rsquo;s bedside.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A cat has only nine lives,&rdquo; Fred Gray said gravely, and outside in
-the gathering gloom we planned his funeral. Because of the isolation of
-Ballarat and lack of communication we arranged that when the end
-came, Fred Gray would notify Brown and bring the body down into
-Death Valley for burial. There we would meet the hearse.</p>
-<p>Because bodies decompose quickly in that climate, time was important.
-While we planned these details, my wife, who had been at Shorty&rsquo;s
-bedside, joined us. &ldquo;Shorty&rsquo;s not going to die,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s planning
-that trip up Signal Mountain you and he have been talking about.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I tiptoed into the room. He was staring at the ceiling, seeing faraway
-canyons; the yellow fleck in a broken rock. Suddenly he spoke:
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m losing a thousand dollars a day lying here. Why, that ledge&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A week after returning to our home we received another telegram
-from Trona asking that we come for him. He had insisted upon being
-laid in the bed of a pickup truck and taken across the Slate Range to
-Trona, where we met him.</p>
-<p>At our home he lay on his back for weeks, fed with a spoon. Always
-talking of putting another town on the map. Always losing a million
-dollars a day. He was miraculously but slowly recovering when an
-Associated Press dispatch bearing a Lone Pine date made front page
-headlines with an announcement of his death.</p>
-<p>Though the report was quickly corrected, his presence at our house
-brought reporters, photographers, old friends, and the merely curious.
-At the time the Pacific Coast Borax Company&rsquo;s N.B.C. program was
-featuring stories based on his experiences over a nation-wide hook-up.
-Among the callers also were moguls of mining and tycoons of industry
-who had stopped at the Ballarat cabin to fall under the spell of his ever
-ready yarns.</p>
-<p>Among these guests, one stands out.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_117">117</div>
-<p>It was a hot summer day when I saw on the lawn what appeared
-to be a big bear, because the squat, bulky figure was enclosed in fur.
-Answering the door bell I looked into twinkling eyes and an ingratiating
-smile. &ldquo;They told me in Ballarat that Shorty Harris was here.&rdquo; I
-invited him in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just shed this coat,&rdquo; he said, stripping off the bearskin garment.
-&ldquo;... sorta heavy for a man going on 80.&rdquo; He laid it aside.
-&ldquo;It&rsquo;s double lined. Fur inside and out. You see, I sleep in it. Crossed
-three mountain ranges in that coat before I got here. May as well take
-this other one off too.&rdquo; He removed another heavy overcoat, revealing
-a cord around his waist. &ldquo;Keep this one tied close. Less bulky....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Under a shorter coat was a heavy woolen shirt and his overalls
-concealed two pairs of pants. He went on: &ldquo;I was with Shorty at
-Leadville. My name&rsquo;s Pete Harmon. We ought to be rich&mdash;both of
-us. Why, I sold a hole for $2500 in 1878. Thought I was smart.
-They&rsquo;ve got over $100,000,000 outa that hole. I was at Bridgeport
-when I heard Shorty was sick, so I says, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll just step down to Ballarat
-and see him.&rsquo; (The &lsquo;step&rsquo; was 298 miles.) When I got there Bob
-Warnack tells me he&rsquo;s in Los Angeles. When I get there they tell me
-he&rsquo;s with you. So I just stepped out here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He had &ldquo;stepped&rdquo; 481 miles to see his friend.</p>
-<p>I ushered him in and left them alone. After an hour I noticed Pete
-outside, smoking. I went out and urged him to return and smoke
-inside, but he refused. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not manners,&rdquo; he insisted.</p>
-<p>Later I happened to look out the window and saw him empty the
-contents of a small canvas sack into his hand. There were a few dimes
-and nickels and two bills. He unfolded the currency. One was a
-twenty. The other, a one. He put the coins in the sack and came
-inside. A few moments later, from an adjacent room I heard his soft,
-lowered voice: &ldquo;Shorty, I&rsquo;m eatin&rsquo; reg&rsquo;lar now and got a little besides.
-I reckon you&rsquo;re kinda shy. You take this.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;no, Pete. I&rsquo;m getting along fine....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I fancy there was a scurry among the angels to make that credit for
-Pete Harmon.</p>
-<p>Late in the afternoon Pete donned his coats. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d better be going.
-I&rsquo;ve got a lotta things on hand. A claim in the Argus. When the money
-comes in, well&mdash;I always said I was going to build a scenic railroad
-right on the crest of Panamint Range. Best view of Death Valley.
-It&rsquo;ll pay. How far is it to San Diego?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A hundred and forty miles....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, since I&rsquo;m this far along I&rsquo;ll just step down and see my old
-partner. Take care of Shorty....&rdquo; And down the road he went.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_118">118</div>
-<p>With humility I watched his passage, hoping that the good God
-would go with him and somehow I felt that of all those with fame and
-wealth or of high degree who had gone from that house, none had left
-so much in my heart as Pete.</p>
-<p>During this period of convalescence Shorty was often guest in homes
-of luxury and when at last I took him to Ballarat I was curious to see
-what his reaction would be to the squalor of the crumbling cabin.</p>
-<p>When we stepped from the car, he noticed Camel, the blind burro
-drowsing in the shade of a roofless dobe. &ldquo;Old fellow,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s
-dam&rsquo; good to see <i>you</i> again....&rdquo; I unloaded the car, brought water
-from the well and sat down to rest. Shorty sat in a rickety rocker
-braced with baling wire. I regarded with amusement the old underwear
-which he&rsquo;d stuffed into broken panes; the bare splintered floor; the
-cracked iron stove that served both for cooking and heating. The wood
-box beside it. The tin wash pan on a bench at the door.</p>
-<p>Then I noticed Shorty was also appraising the things about&mdash;the
-hole in the roof; the box nailed to the wall that served as a cupboard.
-A half-burned candle by his sagging bed. For a long time he glanced
-affectionately from one familiar object to another and finally spoke:
-&ldquo;Will, haven&rsquo;t I got a dam&rsquo; fine home?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>For ages poets have sung, orators have lauded, but so far as I&rsquo;m
-concerned, Shorty said it better.</p>
-<p>The last orders from the surgeon had been, &ldquo;Complete rest for
-three months.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the late afternoon we moved our chairs outside. The sun still
-shone in the canyons and after he had seen that all his peaks were in
-place, he turned to me: &ldquo;I&rsquo;m losing $5,000,000 a day sitting here.
-Soon as you&rsquo;re rested, we&rsquo;ll start. You&rsquo;ll be in shape by day after
-tomorrow, won&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I restrained a gasp as he pointed to the side of a gorge 8000 feet up
-on Signal Mountain. &ldquo;No trip at all....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>No argument could convince him that the trip was foolhardy and
-on the third day we started through Hall&rsquo;s Canyon opposite the Indian
-Ranch. The ascent from the canyon is so steep that in many places we
-had to crawl on hands and knees. The three and a half miles were made
-in seven hours, but on the return the inevitable happened. Shorty, exhausted,
-staggered from the trail and collapsed. When he rose, he
-wobbled, but managed to reach a bush and rolled under it. I ran to his
-side. It seemed the end. &ldquo;You go ahead,&rdquo; he said weakly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m through.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I had given him all my water and exacting a promise that he would
-remain under the bush, I started for help at the Indian Ranch, to bring
-him out.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_119">119</div>
-<p>Coming up, I had paid no attention to the trail and was uncertain
-of my way&mdash;which was further confused by criss-crossed trails of wild
-burros and mountain sheep. Coming to a canyon that forked, I was
-not sure which to take and panicked with fear took a sudden uncalculated
-choice and started up a trail. The desert gods must have guided
-my feet, for it proved to be the right one and an hour later I came upon
-the green seepage of water.</p>
-<p>I dug a hole; let the scum run off then drank slowly and lay down
-to rest. In my last conscious moment a huge rattler passed within a
-few inches of my face. But rattlers were unimportant then and I went
-to sleep.</p>
-<p>The swish of brush awoke me and I saw Shorty staggering down
-the trail. He fell beside the water and was instantly asleep. Time I knew,
-was the measure of life and I allowed him twenty minutes to rest, then
-awoke him and made him go in front. On a ledge, he slumped again,
-his body hanging over the cliff with a 1000 foot fall to rocks below.</p>
-<p>I managed to catch him by the seat of his trousers as he began to
-slip, and dragged him back on the trail. Somehow I got him to the
-bottom. There the canyon widens upon a level area covered with dense
-growth. Walking ahead I suddenly missed him. He had crawled from
-the trail and it required an hour to find him and this I did by the noise
-of his rattly breathing.</p>
-<p>I half carried, half dragged him to the car and lifted him in. He
-was asleep before I could close the door and remained unconscious for
-the entire 11 miles of corduroy road to Ballarat. There Fred Gray and
-Bob Warnack lifted him from the car and laid him on his bed. None of
-us believed that Shorty Harris would ever leave that bed alive.</p>
-<p>The next morning I tiptoed softly out of the room, went over to the
-old saloon and had breakfast with Tom, the caretaker. Afterward we
-sat outside smoking and talking of Hungry Hattie&rsquo;s feuding and her
-sister&rsquo;s mining deals, when we heard steady thumping sounds coming
-from Shorty&rsquo;s place. We looked. Bareheaded, Shorty Harris was chopping
-wood.</p>
-<p>Shorty was born near Providence, Rhode Island, July 2, 1856. He
-had only a hazy memory of his parents. His father, a shoemaker, died
-impoverished when Shorty was six years old. &ldquo;... I went to live with
-my aunt. If she couldn&rsquo;t catch me doing something, she figured I&rsquo;d
-outsmarted her and beat me up on general principles.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At nine he ran away and obtained work in the textile mills of
-Governor William Sprague, dipping calico. The village priest taught
-him to read and write and apart from this, his only school was the
-alley. The curriculum of the alley is hunger, tears, and pain but somehow
-<span class="pb" id="Page_120">120</span>
-in that alley he found time to play and learned that with play came
-laughter. Thenceforth life to Shorty Harris was just one long playday.</p>
-<p>In 1876 he started West and crawled out of a boxcar in Dodge
-City, Kansas. About were stacks of buffalo hides, bellowing cattle,
-&ldquo;chippies,&rdquo; gamblers, cow hands, and a chance for youngsters who had
-come out of alleys.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;... Among those I remember at Dodge City were my friends
-Wyatt Earp and a thin fellow with a cough. If he liked you he&rsquo;d go
-to hell for you. He was Doc Holliday&mdash;the coldest killer in the West.
-I had a job in a livery stable. Job was all right, but too much gunplay.
-Cowboys shooting up the town. Gamblers shooting cowboys.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Flushed with his pay check, Shorty wandered into a saloon and met
-one of the percentage girls&mdash;a lovely creature, not altogether bad. They
-danced and Shorty suggested a stroll in the moonlight. And soon Shorty
-was in love.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Shorty,&rdquo; she asked, &ldquo;why be a sucker? Why don&rsquo;t you go to Leadville?
-You might find a good claim.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m broke,&rdquo; he told her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got some money,&rdquo; she said, and reached into her purse.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m no mac,&rdquo; he snapped.</p>
-<p>Finally she thrust the bills into his pocket.</p>
-<p>At Leadville he went up a gulch. Luck was kind. He found a good
-claim and going into Leadville sold it for $15,000. Later it produced
-millions. Within a week he was penniless. &ldquo;Why, all I&rsquo;ve got to do is
-to go up another gulch,&rdquo; he told sympathetic friends.</p>
-<p>On this trip his feet were frozen and he was carried out on the back
-of his partner. Taken to the hospital, the surgeon told him that only
-the amputation of both feet could save his life.</p>
-<p>Telling a group of friends about it in the Ballarat cabin later, Shorty
-of course had to add a few details of his own: &ldquo;Dan Driscoll came to
-see me and I told him what the sawbones said. &lsquo;Why hell,&rsquo; Dan says.
-&lsquo;Won&rsquo;t be nothing left of you. You&rsquo;ve got to get outa here. When that
-nurse goes, I&rsquo;ll take you to a doc who&rsquo;ll save them feet.&rsquo; And the first
-thing I knew I was in the other hospital.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The doc whetted his meat cleaver, picked up a saw and was about
-to go to work, when he found there was nothing to dope me with. &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll
-fix it,&rsquo; Doc says, and wham&mdash;he slapped me stiff. I don&rsquo;t know what he
-did, but when I came to I was good as new.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After selling a second claim to Haw Tabor, Shorty was again in
-the money and remembered the girl in Dodge City. Returning, he
-looked her up, took her to dinner. They danced and dined and Shorty
-toasted her in &ldquo;bubble water.&rdquo; &ldquo;I reckon everybody in Dodge City
-<span class="pb" id="Page_121">121</span>
-thought a caliph had come to town. No little girl suffered for new toggery.
-No bum lacked a tip. In a week I was broke again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Going down to the freight yard to steal a ride on the rods I met
-the girl and the next I knew, I was begging her to marry me. &lsquo;Shorty,
-you don&rsquo;t know anything about my past, and still you want to marry
-me?&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;You don&rsquo;t know anything about my past either,&rsquo; I said.
-But it was no go.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Years afterward when Shorty and I were camped in Hall Canyon,
-I asked him if he would actually have married a girl like her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who am I to count slips?&rdquo; he bristled. &ldquo;I did ask her,&rdquo; and he
-swabbed a tear that had dried fifty years ago.</p>
-<p>In 1898, after working for a grubstake he started on the trip
-that led at last to Death Valley, by way of the San Juan country&mdash;one
-of the world&rsquo;s roughest regions. &ldquo;I walked through Arizona, to
-Northern Mexico&mdash;every mile of it desert. A labor strike in Colonel
-Green&rsquo;s mines threw me out of a job and I started back. Ran out of
-water and lived five days on the juice of a bulbous plant&mdash;la Flora
-Morada. Each bulb has a few drops.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;On the Mojave I ran out of water again. Finally saw a mangy old
-camel drinking at a pool. I had enough sense left to know there were
-no camels around and went on till I flopped. A fellow picked me up.
-I told him I&rsquo;d been so goofy I&rsquo;d seen a camel and water, but I knew
-it was just a mirage. &lsquo;You damned fool,&rsquo; he said. &lsquo;It was a camel and
-you saw water. Hi Jolly turned that camel loose.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Shorty reached Tintic, Utah, and from there walked over a waterless
-desert to the Johnnie mine, where he was given shelter, food, and
-clothing.</p>
-<p>Bishop Cannon of the Mormon Church sent him into the Panamint
-to monument a gold claim. &ldquo;I was the only fool they could find to cross
-Death Valley in mid summer. I found the claim but it proved to be
-patented land.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Shorty was recuperating from his last operation at my home when
-he came into the house one morning with fire in his eyes and a paper
-in his hand. &ldquo;Read that and let&rsquo;s get going.&rdquo; (It has been erroneously
-stated that Shorty couldn&rsquo;t read. Though he had little schooling and
-a cataract impaired his sight, he could read to the end.)</p>
-<p>The paper announced a strike in Tuba Canyon near Ballarat. &ldquo;Why,
-I know a place nobody ever saw but me and a few eagles....&rdquo; His
-losses increased from a thousand to a million dollars a day because
-he wasn&rsquo;t on the job, and in May we started for Ballarat by the longer
-route through Death Valley.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_122">122</div>
-<p>When we reached Jim Dayton&rsquo;s grave, he asked me to stop and
-getting out of the car, he walked into the brush, returning with a few
-yellow and blue wild flowers, laid them on Dayton&rsquo;s grave. &ldquo;God bless
-you, old fellow. You&rsquo;ll have to move over soon and make room for me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then turning to me, he said: &ldquo;When I die bury me beside old Jim.&rdquo;
-Raising his hand and moving his finger as if he were writing the words,
-he added: &ldquo;Above me write, &lsquo;Here lies Shorty Harris, a single blanket
-jackass prospector.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was his way of saying he had played his game&mdash;not by riding over
-the desert with a deluxe camping outfit, but the hard way&mdash;with beans
-and a single blanket. He was also saying, I think, goodbye to the Death
-Valley that he loved; its golden dunes, its creeping canyons and pots of
-gold.</p>
-<p>About one o&rsquo;clock in the morning, Sunday, November 11, 1934, the
-phone awakened me. At the other end of the line was Charles Brown.
-Shorty Harris lay dead at Big Pine. &ldquo;He just went to sleep and didn&rsquo;t
-wake up,&rdquo; Charlie said.</p>
-<p>Shorty had died Saturday morning, November 10, and Charlie had
-arranged for the remains to be brought down into Death Valley and
-buried beside James Dayton Sunday afternoon.</p>
-<p>Out of Los Angeles, out of towns and settlements, canyons, and hills
-came the largest crowd that had ever assembled in Death Valley, to wait
-at Furnace Creek Ranch for the hearse that would come nearly 200 miles
-over the mountains from Big Pine. It was delayed at every village and
-by burro-men along the road, who wanted a last look upon the face of
-Shorty.</p>
-<p>At one o&rsquo;clock the caravan arrived and then began the procession
-down the valley. The sun was setting and the shadows of the Panamint
-lay halfway across the valley when the grave was reached. Brown had
-sent Ernest Huhn from Shoshone the night previous, a distance of
-about 60 miles, to dig the grave.</p>
-<p>On the desert a man dies and gets his measure of earth&mdash;often with
-not so much as a tarpaulin. With this in mind Ernie had made the
-hole to fit the man, but with the coffin it was a foot too short. While
-waiting for the grave to be lengthened, the casket was opened and in
-the fading twilight Shorty&rsquo;s friends passed in file about the casket, while
-the Indians, silhouetted against the brush paid silent tribute to him
-whom their fathers and now their children knew as &ldquo;Short Man.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So began the first funeral ever held in the bottom of Death Valley.
-Drama, packed into a few moments of a dying day. No discordant
-ballyhoo. No persiflage.... &ldquo;The Lord is my shepherd. I shall not
-<span class="pb" id="Page_123">123</span>
-want....&rdquo; A bugler stepped beside the grave and silvered notes of
-taps went over the valley. The casket was lowered into the grave as
-the stars came out, and he was covered with the earth he loved. Thoughtful
-women placed wreaths of athol and desert holly and, with his face
-toward his desert stars, Shorty Harris holed-in forever.</p>
-<p>Going back to Shoshone with the Browns, I told Charlie of the
-time I had stopped at Jim Dayton&rsquo;s grave with Shorty. &ldquo;I made up my
-mind then that I would do something about his last wish. There&rsquo;s no
-liar like a tombstone, but Shorty deserves a marker.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll join you,&rdquo; Charlie said.</p>
-<p>Charlie consulted Park officials and they approved. Chosen to write
-the epitaph, I knew from the moment the task was assigned to me what
-it would be. In order to get the reaction of others to the use of the word
-&ldquo;jackass&rdquo; on the monument, I decided to try it out on the Browns. &ldquo;This
-epitaph,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;may be unconventional, but unless I am mistaken it
-will be quoted around the world.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I read it. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all right,&rdquo; Mrs. Brown laughed. Charlie approved.
-The epitaph, as predicted has been quoted and pictures of the plaque
-published around the world.</p>
-<p>It has been stated that the Pacific Coast Borax Company paid for
-the monument. Actually it was provided by the Park Service. I had
-the bronze tablet made in Pomona, California, and Charlie Brown
-insisted that he pay for it. &ldquo;Shorty left a little money,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Whatever
-is lacking, I will pay myself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On March 14, 1936, the monument was dedicated. Streamers of
-dust rolled along every road that led into the Big Sink trailing cars that
-were bringing friends from all walks of life to pay tribute to Shorty.
-At the grave the rich and the famous stood beside the tottering prospector,
-the husky miner, the silent, stoic Indian. Brown was master of
-ceremonies. Telegrams were read from John Hays Hammond and other
-distinguished friends. Old timers, whose memories spanned 30 years, one
-after another wedged through the crowd to tell a funny story that Shorty
-had told or some homely incident of his career.</p>
-<p>One was revealing: &ldquo;We had the no-&rsquo;countest, low-downest hooch
-drinking loafer on the desert at Ballarat. We called him Tarfinger. He
-came over to Shorty&rsquo;s cabin one day and said he was hungry. Shorty
-loaned him $5.00. When I heard about it I went over. I said, &lsquo;You
-know he&rsquo;s a no-good loafing thief.&rsquo; I figured I was doing Shorty a
-favor. Instead, he blew up. &lsquo;Well, he can get as hungry as an honest
-man, can&rsquo;t he?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_124">124</div>
-<p>They understood what O. Henry meant when he sang:</p>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">&ldquo;Test the man if his heart be</p>
-<p class="t0">In accord with the ultimate plan,</p>
-<p class="t0">That he be not to his marring,</p>
-<p class="t0">Always and utterly man.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p>The epitaph Shorty Harris wanted seemed fitting: &ldquo;<i>Above me write,
-&lsquo;Here lies Shorty Harris, a single blanket jackass prospector.&rsquo;</i>&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As I turned away I thought of the monuments erected to dead
-Caesars who had left trails of blood and ruin. Shorty Harris simply
-followed a jackass into far horizons, and by leaving a smile at every
-water hole, a pleasant memory on every trail, attained a fame which
-will last as long as the annals of Death Valley.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_125">125</div>
-<h2 id="c20"><span class="small">Chapter XVIII</span>
-<br />A Million Dollar Poker Game</h2>
-<p>Herman Jones, young Texan with keen blue eyes and a guileless
-grin, dropped off the train at Johnnie, a railroad siding, named for the
-nearby Johnnie mine. At the ripe age of 21 he had been through a
-shooting war between New Mexico cattle men, and needing money to
-marry the prettiest girl in the territory, he had come for gold.</p>
-<p>Finding it lonesome on his first night he sought the diversion of a
-poker game in a saloon and gambling house. He bought a stack of
-chips, sat down facing the bar and a moment later another stranger
-entered, inquired if he could join the game.</p>
-<p>Told that $20 would get a seat, the stranger standing with his back
-to the bar was reaching for his purse when Herman saw the bartender
-pick up a six-gun. With his elbows on the bar and his pistol in two
-hands, he aimed the gun at the back of the stranger&rsquo;s head and pulled
-the trigger.</p>
-<p>The victim dropped instantly to the floor, his brains scattered on
-the players. The poker session adjourned and Jones was standing outside
-a few moments later when he was tapped on the shoulder. &ldquo;Come
-on,&rdquo; he was told. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re giving that fellow a floater.&rdquo; Herman didn&rsquo;t
-know what a floater was, but decided it was best to obey orders and followed
-the leader into the saloon.</p>
-<p>Approaching the bartender, the spokesman pulled out his watch.
-&ldquo;Bob,&rdquo; he said quietly. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s six o&rsquo;clock. It won&rsquo;t be healthy around here
-after 6:30.&rdquo; He set a canteen on the bar and walked out.</p>
-<p>Without a word, the bartender pulled off his coat, gathered up the
-cash, called the painted lady attached to his fortune and said, &ldquo;Sell out
-for what you can get. I&rsquo;ll let you know where I am.&rdquo; Picking up his hat
-he left. No one ever learned the cause of the murder or the identity
-of the dead.</p>
-<p>With no luck in the Johnnie district or at Greenwater, Herman left
-<span class="pb" id="Page_126">126</span>
-the latter place on a prospecting trip in partnership with another luckless
-youngster previously mentioned&mdash;Harry Oakes.</p>
-<p>On a hill overlooking the dry bed of the Amargosa River about
-four miles north of Shoshone, he saw a red outcropping on a hill so
-steep he decided nothing that walked had ever reached the summit, and
-for that reason he might find treasure overlooked.</p>
-<p>Herman, being lean and agile, climbed up to investigate. Oakes
-remained under a bush below. Jones returned with a piece of ore showing
-color. A popular song of the period was called &ldquo;Red Wing&rdquo; and
-because he liked sentimental ballads, Herman named it for the song.
-Camp was made at the bottom of the hill. Oakes assumed the dish washing
-job to offset an extra hour which Herman agreed to give to work on
-the trail. Somebody told Oakes how to bake bread and while Herman
-was wheeling muck to the dump, Harry experimented with his cookery.
-The bread turned out to be excellent and Oakes took the day off to show
-it to friends.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the sort of fellow Harry was,&rdquo; Herman says. &ldquo;You just
-couldn&rsquo;t take him seriously.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Red Wing didn&rsquo;t pay and when abandoned, all they had to
-show for their labor was a stack of bills. On borrowed money, Oakes
-left the country. Herman remained to pay the bills.</p>
-<p class="tb">A few miles east of Shoshone is Chicago Valley, which began in a
-startling swindle, and ended in fame and fortune for one defrauded
-victim.</p>
-<p>A convincing crook from the Windy City found government land
-open to entry and called it Chicago Valley. It was a desolate area and
-the only living thing to be seen was an occasional coyote skulking across
-or a vulture flying over. The promoter needed no capital other than
-a good front, glib tongue, and the ability to lie without the flicker of a
-lash.</p>
-<p>A few weeks later Chicago widows with meager endowments, scrub
-women with savings, and some who coughed too much from long hours
-in sweat shops began to receive beautifully illustrated pamphlets that
-described a tropical Eden with lush fields, cooling lakes, and more to
-the point, riches almost overnight. For $100 anyone concerned would
-be located.</p>
-<p>Soon people began to swing off The Goose, as the dinky train
-serving Shoshone was called, and head for Chicago Valley. Among the
-victims was a widow named Holmes with a family of attractive, intelligent
-children. One of these was a vivacious, beautiful teen-ager named
-Helen.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_127">127</div>
-<p>The Holmes were handicapped because of tuberculosis in the
-family. This in fact had induced the widow to invest her savings.</p>
-<p>Herman Jones used to ride by the Holmes&rsquo; place en route to the
-Pahrump Ranch on hunting trips and owning several burros, he thought
-the Holmes&rsquo; children would like to have one. Taking the donkey over,
-he told Helen, &ldquo;You can use him to work the ranch too. Better and
-faster than a hoe....&rdquo; He brought a harness and a cultivator, showed
-her how to use the implement.</p>
-<p>It was inevitable that investors in Chicago Valley would lose their
-time, labor, and money.</p>
-<p>Thus when Helen Holmes returned the burro to Herman one day,
-Herman was not surprised when she told him she was on her way to
-Los Angeles to look for a job.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But what can you do?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish I knew. I can get a job washing dishes or waiting on table.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Shortly afterward he heard from her&mdash;just a little note saying she
-was a hello girl on a switchboard. &ldquo;Knew she&rsquo;d land on her feet,&rdquo;
-Herman grinned, and having a bottle handy he gurgled a toast to Helen.
-He had to tell the news of course and with each telling he produced the
-bottle.</p>
-<p>So he was in a pleasant mood when somebody suggested a spot of
-poker. To mention poker in Shoshone is to have a game and in a little
-while Dad Fairbanks, Dan Modine, deputy sheriff, Herman, and two or
-three others were shuffling chips over in the Mesquite Club.</p>
-<p>Herman had the luck and quit with $700. &ldquo;Fellows,&rdquo; he said as he
-folded his money, &ldquo;take a last look at this roll. You won&rsquo;t see it again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, you&rsquo;ll be back,&rdquo; Fairbanks said.</p>
-<p>But Herman didn&rsquo;t come back. Instead he went to Los Angeles,
-found Helen at the switchboard. She confided excitedly that she had
-a chance to get into the movies as soon as she could get some nice
-clothes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fine,&rdquo; Herman said. &ldquo;When can I see you?&rdquo; He made a date for
-dinner, had a few more drinks and when he met her he had a comfortable
-binge and a grand idea. &ldquo;... Listen Helen. You wouldn&rsquo;t
-get mad at a fool like me if I meant well, would you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why Herman&mdash;you know I wouldn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; she laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m a little likkered and it&rsquo;s kinda personal....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But you&rsquo;re a gentleman, Herman&mdash;drunk or sober....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been thinking of this picture business. I nicked Dad Fairbanks
-in a poker game. You know how I am. Lose it all one way or another.
-You take it and buy what you need and it&rsquo;ll do us both some good.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_128">128</div>
-<p>The refusal was quick. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s sweet of you Herman, but not that.
-I just couldn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You can borrow it, can&rsquo;t you ... so I won&rsquo;t drink it up?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The argument won and soon theater goers all over the world were
-clutching their palms as they watched the hair-raising escapes from
-death that pictured &ldquo;The Perils of Pauline&rdquo;&mdash;the serial that made Helen
-Holmes one of the immortals of the silent films. She died at 58, on July
-8, 1950.</p>
-<p>When Charlie Brown became Supervisor in charge of Death Valley
-roads, he wanted a foreman who knew the country. Herman Jones
-had hunted game, treasure, fossils, artifacts of ancient Indians all over
-Death Valley and knew the water courses, the location of subterranean
-ooze, the dry washes which when filled by cloudbursts were a menace.
-Brown made him foreman of the road crew.</p>
-<p>At Shoshone, Herman Jones, grey now, was tinkering with a battered
-Ford when a big Rolls-Royce stopped. He looked around at the
-slam of the door, stared a moment at the man approaching, dropped
-his tools, wiped his hands on a greasy rag. &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ll be&mdash;&rdquo; he laughed.
-&ldquo;Harry Oakes&mdash;where&rsquo;ve you been all these years?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, knocking around,&rdquo; grinned Oakes. &ldquo;Wanted to see this country
-again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They sat in the shade of a mesquite, talked over Greenwater days
-and the homely memories that leap out of nowhere at such a time.</p>
-<p>Oakes noticed Herman&rsquo;s Ford. Then he pointed to the $20,000
-worth of long, sleek Rolls-Royce. &ldquo;Herman, I&rsquo;m going back to New
-York in a plane. I want to make you a present of that car.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Herman Jones, dumbfounded for a moment, looked at his Ford,
-smiled, and shook his head. &ldquo;Thanks just the same, Harry. That old
-jalopy&rsquo;s plenty good for me.&rdquo; No amount of persuasion could make him
-accept it.</p>
-<p>Knowing that Herman Jones could use any part of $20,000, I marvelled
-that he didn&rsquo;t accept the proffered gift. Then I remembered that
-the Redwing had produced only sweat and debts and Jones had paid
-the debts through the bitter years.</p>
-<p>In the little town of Swastika in the province of Ontario, Canada,
-you will be told that Oakes was booted off the train there because he
-was dead-beating his way. The country had been prospected, pronounced
-worthless and nobody believed there was pay dirt except a
-Chinaman.</p>
-<p>Harry Oakes had an ear for anybody&rsquo;s tale of gold and listened to
-the Chinaman. He was 38 years old. Lady Luck had always slammed
-<span class="pb" id="Page_129">129</span>
-the door in his face but this time, (January, 1912) she flung it open.
-Eleven years later Oakes was rich.</p>
-<p>He had always talked on a grand scale even when broke at Shoshone.
-With a taste for luxury he began to gratify it. He bought a
-palatial home at Niagara Falls and served his guests on gold platters.
-As his fortune increased he gave largely to charities and welfare projects
-such as city parks, playgrounds, hospitals. These gifts lead one
-to believe that the belated payment of $300 borrowed from Dad
-Fairbanks was a calculated delay so that Harry Oakes could enjoy
-the little act he put on at Baker.</p>
-<p>During World War I he gave $500,000 to a London hospital, was
-knighted by King George V in 1939. He became a friend of the Duke
-of Windsor and at his Nassau residence was often the host to the Duke
-and his Duchess, the amazing Wallis Warfield, Baltimore girl who
-went from a boarding house to wed a British king.</p>
-<p>Sir Harry Oakes was murdered in the palatial Nassau home, July
-7, 1943, allegedly by a titled son-in-law who was later acquitted&mdash;a
-verdict denounced by many.</p>
-<p><i>In connection with the story of Helen Holmes told above, it should
-be explained that the original title was &ldquo;Hazards of Helen&rdquo; and following
-an old Hollywood custom, Pathe produced a new version called
-&ldquo;Perils of Pauline.&rdquo; In this the heroine&rsquo;s part was taken by Pearl White.</i></p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_130">130</div>
-<h2 id="c21"><span class="small">Chapter XIX</span>
-<br />Death Valley Scotty</h2>
-<p>A strictly factual thumbnail sketch of Walter Scott would contain
-the following incidents:</p>
-<p>He ran away from his Kentucky home to join his brother, Warner,
-as a cow hand on the ranch of John Sparks&mdash;afterward governor of
-Nevada. He worked as a teamster for Borax Smith at Columbus Marsh.
-He had a similar job at Old Harmony Borax Works.</p>
-<p>In the Nineties he went to work with Buffalo Bill&rsquo;s Wild West
-Show. He married Josephine Millius, a candy clerk on Broadway, New
-York, and brought her to Nevada.</p>
-<p>He became guide, friend, companion, and major domo for Albert
-Johnson&mdash;Chicago millionaire who had come to the desert for his
-health. He did some prospecting in the early part of the century, but
-never found a mine of value.</p>
-<p>America was mining-mad following the Tonopah and Goldfield
-strikes and Scotty went East in search of a grubstake. He obtained one
-from Julian Gerard, Vice President of the Knickerbocker Trust Company
-and a brother of James W. Gerard who had married the daughter
-of Marcus Daly, Montana copper king and who was later U.S. Ambassador
-to Germany.</p>
-<p>Scotty staked a claim near Hidden Spring and named it The Knickerbocker.
-He gave Gerard glowing reports of a mine so rich its location
-must be kept secret.</p>
-<p>Scotty appeared in Los Angeles unheard of, in a ten gallon hat and
-a flaming necktie and with the natural showman&rsquo;s skill, tossed money
-around in lavish tips or into the street for urchins to scramble over.</p>
-<p>This was the well-staged prelude to the charter of the famed Scotty
-Special for a record-breaking run from Los Angeles to Chicago. Though
-Scotty stoutly denies it, he was lifted to fame by a big and talented
-sorrel-headed sports editor and reporter on the Los Angeles Examiner,
-named Charles Van Loan, and John J. Byrnes, passenger agent of the
-Santa Fe railroad. Scotty meant nothing to either of these men, but the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_131">131</span>
-publicity Byrnes saw for the Santa Fe did, and the red necktie, the big
-hat, the scattering of coins, and the secret mine made the sort of story
-Van Loan liked.</p>
-<p>Here Scotty&rsquo;s trail is lost in the fantastic stories of writers, press
-agents, and promoters. Several years afterward when his yarns began
-to backfire, Scotty swore in a Los Angeles court that E. Burt Gaylord,
-a New York man, furnished $10,000 for the Scotty Special&rsquo;s spectacular
-dash across the continent&mdash;the object being to promote the sale of stock
-in the &ldquo;secret mine.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>More remarkable than any yarn Scotty ever told is the fact that
-although headlines made Scotty, headlines have failed to kill the Scotty
-legend.</p>
-<p>You may toss our heroes into the ash can, but we dust them off and
-put them back. Likable, ingratiating, Scotty will brush aside any attack
-with a funny story and let it go at that.</p>
-<p>In a law suit for an accounting against Scotty, Julian Gerard asserted
-he was to have 22&frac12;% of any treasure Scotty found. Judge Ben Harrison
-decided in Gerard&rsquo;s favor, but the only claim found in Scotty&rsquo;s name
-was the utterly worthless Knickerbocker and Gerard got nothing. The
-claim showed little sign of ever having been worked. A few broken
-rocks. A few holes which could be filled with a shovel within a few
-moments.</p>
-<p>Passing the claim once, I stopped to talk with a native: &ldquo;This is
-the scene of the Battle of Wingate Pass,&rdquo; he told me. &ldquo;In case you
-never heard of it, it was fought for liberty, Scotty&rsquo;s liberty&mdash;that is.
-Gerard got suspicious about Scotty&rsquo;s mine and decided to send his own
-engineers out to investigate. He ordered Scotty to meet them at Barstow
-and show them something or else. It worried Scotty a little, not
-long. He&rsquo;d learned about Indian fighting with Buffalo Bill and met
-the fellows as ordered. When he led them to his wagon waiting behind
-the depot, the Easterners took a look at the wagon, another look at
-Scotty and one at each other. The wagon had boiler plate on the sides,
-rifles stacked army fashion alongside. Outriders with six-guns holstered
-on their belts and Winchesters cradled in their arms.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Don&rsquo;t let it worry you,&rsquo; Scotty said. &lsquo;Piutes on the warpath. Old
-Dripping Knife, their Chief claims my gold belongs to them. Dry-gulched
-a couple of my best men last week.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Easterners turned white and Scotty gave &rsquo;em another jolt.
-&lsquo;Butchered my boys and fed &rsquo;em to their pigs. But we are fixed for &rsquo;em
-this trip. They sent word they aim to exterminate us. Maybe try it, but
-I&rsquo;ve got lookouts planted all along. Let&rsquo;s go....&rsquo; He shunted them
-aboard, shaking in their knees and headed out of Barstow.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_132">132</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The party had reached that hill you see when suddenly out of the
-brush and the gulches and from behind the rocks came a horde of &lsquo;redskins,&rsquo;
-yelling and shooting. Scotty&rsquo;s men leaped from their saddles and
-the battle was on. The Easterners jumped out of the wagon and hit the
-ground running for the nearest dry wash and that was the closest they
-ever got to Scotty&rsquo;s mine. You&rsquo;ve got to hand it to Scotty.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The story made front page from coast to coast and it was several
-days before the hoax was revealed. Unexplained though undenied, was
-the statement that Albert Johnson was in Scotty&rsquo;s party listed as &ldquo;Doctor
-Jones.&rdquo; It is assumed that he had no guilty knowledge of the hoax.</p>
-<p>The most astounding achievement of Scotty&rsquo;s career was attained
-when he interested in an imaginary Death Valley mine, Al Myers, a
-hard-bitten prospector and mining man who had made the discovery
-strike at Goldfield; Rol King, of Los Angeles, bon vivant and manager
-of the popular Hollenbeck Hotel, and Sidney Norman who as mining
-editor of the Los Angeles Times knew mines and mining men.</p>
-<p>These were certainly not the gullible type. But with a yarn of gold,
-Scotty induced them to hazard a trip into Death Valley in mid-summer
-when the temperature was 124 degrees.</p>
-<p>Scotty may have missed the acquisition of a good mine when he
-failed to find one lost by Bob Black. While hunting sheep in the Avawatz
-Range, Bob found some rich float. &ldquo;Honest,&rdquo; Bob said, &ldquo;I knocked
-off the quartz and had pure gold.&rdquo; He tried to locate the ledge but he
-couldn&rsquo;t match his specimen. Later he returned with Scotty, but a cloudburst
-had mauled the country. They found the corners of Bob&rsquo;s tepee, but
-not the ledge. They made several later attempts to find it, but failed.</p>
-<p>Bob always declared that some day he would uncover the ledge and
-might have succeeded if he hadn&rsquo;t met Ash Meadows Jack Longstreet
-one day when both were full of desert likker. Bob passed the lie. Jack
-drew first. Taps for Bob.</p>
-<p class="tb">All kinds of stories have been told to explain Albert Johnson&rsquo;s
-connection with Scotty. The first and the true one is that Johnson, coming
-to the desert for his health, hired Scotty as a guide, liked his yarns
-and his camping craft and kept him around to yank a laugh out of the
-grim solitude.</p>
-<p>But that version didn&rsquo;t appeal to the old burro men. They could
-believe in the hydrophobic skunks or the Black Bottle kept in the
-county hospital to get rid of the old and useless, but not in a Santa
-Claus like Albert Johnson. &ldquo;It just don&rsquo;t make sense&mdash;handing that
-sort of money to a potbellied loafer like Scotty....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Albert Johnson was able to afford any expenditure to make his
-<span class="pb" id="Page_133">133</span>
-life in a difficult country less lonely. He could have searched the world
-over and found no better investment for that purpose than Scotty.</p>
-<p>Genial, resourceful, and never at a loss for a yarn that would fit his
-audience, Scotty was cast in a perfect role. As a matter of fact, whatever
-it cost Johnson for Scotty&rsquo;s flings in Hollywood, or alimony for Scotty&rsquo;s
-wife, it probably came back in the dollar admissions that tourists paid to
-pass the portals of the Castle for a look at Scotty. Of course they seldom
-saw Scotty&mdash;never in later years. Mrs. Johnson was an intensely religious
-woman and didn&rsquo;t like liquor and that disqualified Scotty.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is Scotty&rsquo;s room,&rdquo; the attendant would say. &ldquo;And that&rsquo;s his
-bed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, isn&rsquo;t he here?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not today. Scotty&rsquo;s a little under the weather. Went over to his
-shack so he wouldn&rsquo;t be disturbed....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mrs. Johnson was killed in an auto driven by her husband in
-Towne&rsquo;s Pass when, to avoid going over a precipice, he headed the
-machine into the wall of a cut.</p>
-<p>In 1939 Albert Johnson testified that he first met Scotty in Johnson&rsquo;s
-Chicago office when a wealthy friend appeared with Scotty, who
-was looking for a grubstake. Johnson said he gave Scotty &ldquo;something
-between $1000 and $5000.&rdquo; When the attorney asked him to be more
-definite, Johnson replied that at the time, his income was between
-one-half million and two million dollars a year and the exact amount
-consequently was of no importance then. &ldquo;Since then,&rdquo; Johnson testified,
-&ldquo;I have given him $117,000 in cash and about the same in grubstakes,
-mules, food, and equipment.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They went together into the mountains as Johnson explained, &ldquo;because
-I was all hepped up with his ... claims.&rdquo; Further explaining
-his connection with Scotty, he said: &ldquo;I was crippled in a railroad accident.
-My back was broken. I was paralyzed from the hips down.
-Through the years I got to have a great fondness for him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Albert Johnson, whose fortune came from the National Insurance
-Company, died in 1948, leaving a will that contained no mention of
-Scotty.</p>
-<p>But one laurel none can deny Walter Scott. He did more to put
-Death Valley on the must list of the American tourists than all the
-histories and all the millions spent for books, pamphlets, and radio
-broadcasts.</p>
-<p class="tb">The almost incredible case of Jack and Myra Benson proves that
-P. T. Barnum was not wholly wrong in his dictum regarding the birthrate
-of suckers.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_134">134</div>
-<p>Newly married in Montana they loaded their car and set out to
-seek fortune in the West. &ldquo;We didn&rsquo;t know anything about gold,&rdquo; Jack
-confided. &ldquo;If anyone had told us to throw a forked stick up a hillside
-and dig where it fell, we would have done it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Near Parker, Arizona, they were having supper in camp when another
-traveler stopped and asked permission to erect his tent nearby.
-Myra invited him to share their supper and during the meal the stranger
-told them he was a chemist and that he had prospected over most of
-the West. He had found a clay that cured meningitis, he said, and this
-had led to fortune. In one town he had found the entire population,
-including doctors and nurses down and out. The clay had cured them
-within a week. Among the cured, was the son of a rich woman who
-had given him $5000.</p>
-<p>Grateful for the fate that had brought this man into their lives, the
-Bensons confided that they had hoped to reach the California gold
-fields, but car trouble had depleted their cash and asked if he knew of
-any place where they could pan gold.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go to Silver Lake, in San Bernardino County, California,&rdquo; he
-advised them, &ldquo;and your troubles will be over. On the edges of the
-lake is a thick mud. Get some tanks and boil it. You&rsquo;ll have a residue
-of gold.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jack and Myra set out over the Colorado Desert; then climbed the
-Providence Mountains to worry through the deep blow sand of the
-Devil&rsquo;s Playground. After three gruelling weeks they reached the lake.
-There they boiled the mud. Then an old prospector became curious
-about their unusual performance. The world slipped out from under
-the Bensons when he told them they were the victims of a liar.</p>
-<p>With $5.00 they headed for Death Valley; found themselves broke
-and gasless at Cave Spring. Jack knocked upon the door of a shack
-he saw there. The woman who opened the door was Jack&rsquo;s former
-school teacher, Mrs. Ira Sweatman, who was keeping house for her
-cousin, Adrian Egbert&mdash;there for his health.</p>
-<p>Those who traveled the Death Valley road by way of Yermo and
-Cave Spring will remember that every five miles tacked to stake or
-bush were signs that read: &ldquo;Water and oil.&rdquo; This was Adrian Egbert&rsquo;s
-fine and practical way of aiding the fellow in trouble.</p>
-<p>Myra and Jack later acquired a claim near Rhodes Spring, a short
-distance from Salsbury Pass road into Death Valley and moved there
-to develop it. I had been away from Shoshone with no contacts and
-returning was surprised to find Myra there. I inquired about Jack.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, haven&rsquo;t you heard?&rdquo; she asked, and from the expression in
-her eyes I knew that Jack was dead.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_135">135</div>
-<p>As best I could, I expressed my condolence, knowing how deeply
-she had loved.</p>
-<p>She said: &ldquo;He went up to the tunnel to set off three blasts. I heard
-only two. He was to come after the third blast. I knew something was
-wrong and went up. Bigod, Mr. Caruthers, Jack&rsquo;s head was blown off
-to hellangone....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Myra&rsquo;s language failed to mask the grief her welling eyes disclosed.</p>
-<p>Only once in her long, helpful life did Myra ever stoop to deception.
-The old age pension law was passed and Myra was entitled to and
-needed its benefits, but Myra wouldn&rsquo;t sign the application. She made
-one excuse after another, but finally Stella Brown got at the bottom of
-her refusal. Myra had been married to Jack for 40 years and just didn&rsquo;t
-want him to find out that she was a year older than he. Mrs. Brown
-at last persuaded her to put aside her vanity.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hell&mdash;&rdquo; Jack grinned when told about it. &ldquo;I knew her age when
-I married her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On cold winter nights Myra could always be found in the Snake
-House where a chair beside the stove was reserved for her. One night
-I said jestingly: &ldquo;You never play poker. What are you doing here?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She whispered: &ldquo;Wood&rsquo;s hard to get. I&rsquo;m saving mine.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then came one of those mornings when one&rsquo;s soul tingles with the
-feel of a perfect desert day and Myra was up early. She came to the
-store.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What got you up at this hour?&rdquo; Bernice asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I felt too dam&rsquo; good to stay indoors....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There were a few old timers in the store and these surrounded her&mdash;because
-she was the kind who could tell you that it was hotter than
-hell, in a thrilling way. She bought a few groceries and started back
-to her cabin. Friendly eyes followed her passage along a path across
-the playground of the little school. Children sliding down the chute
-or riding teeter boards, waved affectionately. Myra was seen to falter
-in her step, then sag to the sand. The children ran to her aid and in
-a moment Shoshone was gathering about her. Myra Benson was dead.</p>
-<p>Sam Flake, nearing 80, on the fringe of the crowd paid his simple
-tribute in a voice a bit shaky, but in language hard as the rock in the
-hills: &ldquo;Dam&rsquo; her old hide&mdash;us boys are going to miss Myra....&rdquo; He
-turned aside, his hand pulling at the bandana in his hip pocket and
-Shoshone understood.</p>
-<p>Though she was buried 500 miles away, every man, woman, and
-child in Shoshone wanted a token of love to attend her and about the
-grave that received her casket was a wilderness of flowers.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_136">136</div>
-<h2 id="c22"><span class="small">Chapter XX</span>
-<br />Odd But Interesting Characters</h2>
-<p>In these pages the reader has seen familiar names&mdash;the favored of
-Lady Luck&mdash;but what of those who failed&mdash;the patient, plodding kind
-of whom you hear only on the scene? They too followed jackasses into
-hidden hills; made trails that led others to fortunes which built cities,
-industries, railroad; endowed colleges and made science function for
-a better world. To these humbler actors we owe more than we can
-repay.</p>
-<p>For nearly half a century John (Cranky) Casey roamed the deserts
-of California and Nevada looking for gold. His luck was consistently
-bad. Grim, tall, erect, with a deep slow voice, he was noted for picturesque
-speech which gained emphasis from an utterly humorless face.
-Congenitally he was an autocrat&mdash;his speech biting.</p>
-<p>A prospector whom Casey didn&rsquo;t like died and friends were discussing
-the disposition of the remains. &ldquo;Chop his feet off,&rdquo; suggested
-Casey, &ldquo;and drive him into the ground with a doublejack....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>From others one could always hear tales of fortunes made or
-missed; of veins of gold wide as a barn door. But no trick of memory
-ever turned Casey&rsquo;s bull quartz into picture rock. &ldquo;Never found enough
-gold to fill a tooth,&rdquo; he would say.</p>
-<p>Casey&rsquo;s leisure hours were spent over books and magazines, chiefly
-highbrow&mdash;particularly books and journals of science.</p>
-<p>A tenderfoot was brought in unconscious from Pahrump Valley. A
-city doctor happened to be passing through and after an examination
-of the victim, turned to the men in overalls and hobnail shoes, who&rsquo;d
-brought him in: &ldquo;He&rsquo;s suffering from a derangement of the hypothalamus.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why in the hell don&rsquo;t you say he had a heat stroke?&rdquo; Casey barked.</p>
-<p>A notorious promoter had a city victim ready for the dotted line.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_137">137</span>
-&ldquo;Double your money in no time.... Samples show $200 to the ton....&rdquo;
-Assuming all prospectors were crooked he called to Casey sitting
-nearby: &ldquo;Casey, you know the Indian Tom claim?&rdquo; &ldquo;Yes, I know it,&rdquo;
-Casey thundered. &ldquo;Not a fleck of gold in the whole dam&rsquo; hill.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the thick silence that followed, the beaten rascal flushed, looked
-belligerently at Casey but Casey&rsquo;s big, hard fists he knew, could almost
-dent boiler plate and the long arms wrapped about a barrel, could
-crush it flat.</p>
-<p>In time Casey acquired an ancient flivver. Only his genius as a
-mechanic kept it going. There were lean years when it bore no license
-and he kept to little-traveled roads. The car, like Casey, was cranky
-and phlegmatic. One day as he was coming into Shoshone it balked
-in the middle of the road, coughed, shivered, and died. Inside the store
-it was 120 degrees. Out on the road where Casey stopped it was probably
-130. For two hours he patiently but vainly tried to coax it back to life.
-Finally he stood aside, wiped the grease from his gnarled hands, calmly
-stoked his pipe and shoved the car from the road. Then he gathered an
-armful of boulders and with a blasting of cussing that shook Shoshone
-he let go with a cannonade of stones that completed its ruin.</p>
-<p>At the age of ten Casey had been taken from the drift of a city&rsquo;s
-backwash and put in an orphanage. Nothing was known of his parentage
-or of relatives. He came to the desert after a colorful career as a conductor
-on the Santa Fe. The late E. W. Harriman, having gained control
-of the Southern Pacific system had his private car attached to a Santa Fe
-train for an inspection tour. At a siding on the Mojave Desert, Harriman
-wanted the train held a few moments. His messenger went to Casey, explaining
-that Harriman was the new boss of the Southern Pacific.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is the Santa Fe,&rdquo; Casey bristled, looking at his watch. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
-due in Barstow at 11:05 and bigod I&rsquo;ll be there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Aboard his train he was a despot and a stickler for the rules, demanding
-that even his superiors obey them. This finally was his downfall
-and he came to the desert.</p>
-<p>Elinor Glyn, who made the best seller list with &ldquo;Three Weeks&rdquo; in
-the early part of the century, came to Rawhide and Tex Rickard,
-spectacular gambler undertook to show her a bit of life a la Rawhide.
-He took her to the Stingaree district and later to a reception in his
-own place. The state&rsquo;s notables were presented to the lady along with
-Nat Goodwin, Julian Hawthorne, and others internationally known.</p>
-<p>Tex saw Casey standing alone at the end of the bar and knowing
-he was a voracious reader he went to Casey: &ldquo;Come on and meet the
-author of Three Weeks....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve read it,&rdquo; Casey said. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ve hung folks for less.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_138">138</div>
-<p>Casey&rsquo;s method of getting a job when his grub ran out was unique
-and unfailing. He would storm into the store and turn loose on Charlie,
-in charge of the roads and long his friend. &ldquo;Who&rsquo;s keeping up these
-roads? Chuck holes in &rsquo;em big as the Grand Canyon ... disgrace&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Been waiting for you to come in,&rdquo; Charlie would say with a sober
-face. &ldquo;Get a shovel and fix &rsquo;em.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A good conscientious worker, Casey would put the road in shape,
-pay his debts and again head into the horizon.</p>
-<p>You who spin through Death Valley or along its approaches owe
-much to Casey, who made many of the original road beds the hard way&mdash;with
-pick and shovel.</p>
-<p>At last Casey got the old age pension and his latter years were the
-best. His home, a dugout in the bank of a wash near Tecopa. With no
-rent, with books and magazines and the solitude he loved, he lived
-happily. &ldquo;When I croak,&rdquo; he often said, &ldquo;just put me in my dugout.
-Toss a stick of dynamite in after me. Shut the door and cave in the
-goddam&rsquo; hill.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>One night he went to Tecopa. Friends were doing a spot of drinking
-and far behind in his score with the years, Casey joined them. There
-was nothing out of line. Just yarns and memories and Casey had a lot
-of these. Tonopah. Goldfield. Rawhide. Ely. Foundling days.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;... They put me in a religious school. Had no relatives. In those
-days they whaled hell outa you just to see you squirm. &lsquo;Casey,&rsquo; the
-teacher would ask, &lsquo;who swallowed the whale?&rsquo; How did I know? Then
-he&rsquo;d drag me off by the ear and blister my bottom. I shoved off one
-night. Been on the loose ever since.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As he drank from his bottle of beer he suddenly slumped&mdash;and died
-instantly. Because of the intense heat, Maury Sorrells, now Supervisor
-but then Coroner, ordered immediate burial.</p>
-<p>Someone recalled Casey&rsquo;s wish to be put in the dugout and the hill
-blown up and started for the dynamite. But Whitey Bill McGarn warned
-that it would violate the law. One-eyed Casey&mdash;no relation, but long a
-friend, suggested a wake until the grave was dug. &ldquo;It will be daylight
-then and we&rsquo;ll plant him in the wash right in front of his dugout.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This was done as the sun came over the hills and I like to think that
-somewhere in the after life, all is well with Casey.</p>
-<p class="tb">Ben Brandt, previously mentioned, was a big blond man with child-like
-blue eyes, huge gnarled hands and the strength of an ox. He wore
-enormous boots, but when he bought new ones he always complained
-that they lacked traction and would go immediately to the dump, salvage
-an old tire casing and add two inches of reinforcement to the soles,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_139">139</span>
-with half a pound of hobnails. Ben then was ready for travel&mdash;provided
-he could find his burros.</p>
-<p>Near remote Quail Springs Ben dug a 4&times;4 mine shaft 75 feet deep,
-without aid. Descending by ladder he would fill a 10 gallon bucket with
-dirt, climb out and bring it to the surface. Day after day, month after
-month Ben applied the power of two strong arms and two strong legs.
-&ldquo;With an engine you could do it in half the time,&rdquo; Ben was told.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got plenty of time,&rdquo; Ben drawled.</p>
-<p>Ben disdained gold in quartz formation. &ldquo;I like placer. It&rsquo;s a poor
-man&rsquo;s game. If you find gold you put it in your poke and you&rsquo;ve got
-spending money.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ben kept five burros and being industrious, never lacked a grubstake.
-He avoided argument except upon one subject, and that was
-burros versus Fords in prospecting. &ldquo;I can get anywhere with my burros.
-I find stalled flivvers all over the desert and my burros drag &rsquo;em in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ben believed that a burro had at least some of the intellectual powers
-of man. &ldquo;Read a clock good as you,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I worked my burro,
-Solomon, on a hoist. He didn&rsquo;t like it. I got up every morning at daylight,
-by an alarm clock. Slept out and kept the clock on a boulder at my
-head and got up when the alarm went off. One morning I woke up with
-the sun shining straight down in my eyes. It was noon. That burro had
-sneaked up and taken that clock down the canyon a mile away. Don&rsquo;t
-tell me they can&rsquo;t think! I sold him. Too smart.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I asked Ben once what he would do if he suddenly found a million
-dollar claim. &ldquo;I would build a monument a thousand feet high on top
-of Telescope Peak and dedicate it to burros.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Such a monument would inadequately express the debt today&rsquo;s
-world owes that little beast. Here are some of the things that link your
-life to the burro:</p>
-<p>The springs and the mattress in the bed you were born on. The talc
-that powdered you. The soap that bathed you. The ring you slipped on
-the finger of the girl you love. The paint on your house. The glass in
-your windows. The tile in your bathroom. The enamel ware in your
-kitchen. The prescription your druggist fills. The fillings the dentist puts
-into your teeth. The coin and the currency you spend. The auto you ride
-in and finally the casket in which you leave this world.</p>
-<p>Wars have been won or lost and the credit of nations stabilized because
-a burro carried a prospector&rsquo;s grub into faraway hills.</p>
-<p>Ben&rsquo;s burros strayed and he&rsquo;d just returned with them after a two
-days&rsquo; hunt. He was sitting on the bench mopping his brow when
-Louise Grantham, the girl with the mine in the Panamint, came up.
-She needed pack animals to get the ore down to the road. She&rsquo;d tried
-<span class="pb" id="Page_140">140</span>
-before, to trade her Ford pickup for Ben&rsquo;s burros, but he&rsquo;d never shown
-a flicker of interest. In a voice pitched for Ben&rsquo;s ears, she said to Ernie
-Huhn: &ldquo;If Ben didn&rsquo;t waste so much time hunting those jacks, he might
-find a mine.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ben cocked an ear, but made no comment.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now take that Quail Springs hole,&rdquo; Louise went on. &ldquo;If he had my
-pickup he could take off a wheel, put on a belt and haul up the muck in
-one tenth the time, and instead of hoofing it in the sun he could ride in
-a cool cab and haul his supplies in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There comes a weak moment in everyone&rsquo;s life and this was Ben&rsquo;s.
-He traded the burros for the Ford and one of the best prospectors on
-the desert was ruined forever.</p>
-<p>Ben had a mortal fear of women and nothing could convince him
-that any unattached woman wasn&rsquo;t always lying in wait for any loose
-man.</p>
-<p>Ben went into the Johnnie country to prospect and passing through
-I looked him up. He was living in a tin shack in the canyon leading to
-the old Johnnie Mine. I asked Ben about his luck.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Last prospecting I did was right out there.&rdquo; He pointed to the
-slope in front of his house. &ldquo;Good placer ground too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why did you quit?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Woman,&rdquo; Ben grumbled. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t know yet what come over me,
-but I took a woman for a partner.&rdquo; He pointed to a boulder a few
-hundred yards away. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s where I wanted to start digging. It&rsquo;s rich
-dirt. She wanted to start up there near her shack.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, what difference did it make?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see you don&rsquo;t know women. I hadn&rsquo;t been working up there by
-her house no time before she called me to get her a bucket of water.
-Bucket was half full. Next day she wanted a board in the kitchen floor
-nailed down. Didn&rsquo;t need any nail. &lsquo;There&rsquo;s some fresh apple pie on
-the table,&rsquo; she says. I told her I didn&rsquo;t like pie. I&rsquo;m crazy about pie but
-I knew her game. She calculated if I ate with her two&mdash;three times I&rsquo;d
-be a dead pigeon. So I told her she could have the claim and walked off.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ben struck a happier note when he informed me that he didn&rsquo;t need
-to work any more and at last had attained the one ambition of his life.
-&ldquo;Come inside and I&rsquo;ll show you.&rdquo; Beaming as only a man can when he
-sits on top of the world, he approached a table and it flashed over me
-that I would see a certified check for a fortune.</p>
-<p>There was a cloth over the table and he carefully wiped his big
-hands before touching it. He wet his big, broad thumb and forefinger
-and gave them an extra wipe on the sides of his shirt, a wide smile on
-his face and I had a vicarious thrill that a man who could barely read
-<span class="pb" id="Page_141">141</span>
-and write had at last achieved that which he most wanted in life. He
-started to remove the cloth, but paused. &ldquo;Always said if I ever struck
-it rich, first money I spent would be for one of these dinkuses.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He flipped the cloth aside. I stared incredulous. It was a portable
-typewriter.</p>
-<p>He replaced the cover with the gentle care of a mother putting her
-baby to bed and I left him, sure that God was in his heaven with an eye
-on Ben.</p>
-<p class="tb">Contemporary with Ben was Joe Volmer, who lived in a dugout in
-Dublin Gulch. I had seen royalty from afar and once I had dined with a
-sultan on horsemeat and fried bananas, but no king ever attained the
-majesty of Joe. He was tall, erect, wore a white sailor&rsquo;s hat and carried a
-cane. His mustache was always waxed to a needle point, after the manner
-of Kaiser Wilhelm. Though he increased his small pension by selling
-home brew, he always managed to give the impression that he was descending
-to your level when he accepted the two bits you left on his
-table.</p>
-<p>He was neat as he was lordly and forever scrubbing his pots and
-pans. He kept the dugout immaculate and when I first saw him standing
-on the ledge in front of his door, calmly surveying the valley below, he
-posed like an Alexander the Great, with the world conquered and trussed
-at his feet.</p>
-<p>I had never seen him until one day a tourist came into the store and
-asked Charlie for a stop-watch. Charlie told him he didn&rsquo;t carry stop-watches.
-Shortly after the tourist had gone, Joe came in for a stop-watch.
-&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t keep &rsquo;em,&rdquo; Charlie said. &ldquo;Helluva store,&rdquo; Joe barked and strode
-out.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A curious coincidence,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;Two calls for a stop-watch in the
-same day away out here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s no coincidence,&rdquo; Charlie said. &ldquo;Just Joe Volmer. He&rsquo;s in every
-day asking for something he knows I haven&rsquo;t got.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After Joe left, Jack Crowley came for his mail. Brown was in the
-cage set apart for the post office. He had just received several sheets of
-six-cent stamps&mdash;twice as many as he needed. &ldquo;Jack,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;when you
-see Joe tell him I&rsquo;m out of six-cent stamps.&rdquo; Within an hour Joe shoved
-a five dollar bill through the window. &ldquo;Give me five dollars&rsquo; worth of
-six-cent stamps,&rdquo; he ordered. Brown picked up the bill, filled the order
-and never again did Joe ask for merchandise not in stock.</p>
-<p>Joe sold a claim and decided he needed a refrigerator to keep the
-beer cold. So he picked up a Monkey Ward catalogue and ordered a
-big white enamel number large enough for a hotel. Joe thought a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_142">142</span>
-refrigerator was just a refrigerator and he strutted around telling everybody.
-He had to widen the dugout door and waiting customers were
-more than eager to help him get the machine in place. He loaded the
-shelves and told them to come back in a couple of hours and cool their
-innards.</p>
-<p>They came with their tongues hanging out. Joe set out the glasses
-and passed the bottles. Herman Jones picked one up and shook it. The
-cork hit the ceiling. &ldquo;Hotter&rsquo;n hell,&rdquo; Herman said. &ldquo;What sort of cooler
-is that?&rdquo; He went over and looked. &ldquo;Gas. You dam&rsquo; fool. Nearest gas is
-Barstow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Until Joe&rsquo;s death he used the refrigerator to store pots and pans.</p>
-<p>Discovered in his dugout in a serious condition, Joe was rushed to
-Death Valley Junction 28 miles away, where the Pacific Coast Borax
-Company maintained a hospital which was in charge of Dr. Shrum, who
-was rather realistic and somewhat cold blooded.</p>
-<p>Just as they had gotten Joe in the doctor&rsquo;s office, another patient was
-brought in. Dr. Shrum looked at the new comer and then at Joe. &ldquo;Take
-Joe out,&rdquo; he ordered. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s going to die anyway.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Joe was wheeled outside and a moment later was dead.</p>
-<p class="tb">George Williams, a Spanish American war veteran, retired to Shoshone
-on a pension of $50. Since food was cheap, George had more
-money than he knew what to do with. He kept five burros. He never
-prospected, but roamed the country and thought nothing of taking a
-300 mile trip across the roughest terrain in the region. After spending
-his summers in the high country, he would return to Shoshone in winter.
-There he had a five acre ranch fenced in and a neat cabin.</p>
-<p>Every day George would come to the store and buy a pound of
-chocolates. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got a sweet tooth,&rdquo; he would explain.</p>
-<p>Charlie, sure that no one could eat as much chocolate as George
-bought, was a bit curious as to what George did with it and trailed
-him one day through the mesquite to find George feeding the candy
-to his burros.</p>
-<p>George was not a drinker, but on one occasion he joined a party
-and went on a bender. He awoke next morning with a horrible hangover
-and was so humiliated that he left Shoshone and never returned. He
-went over to Sandy and died in the &rsquo;30s.</p>
-<p>One day George started to tell me a story as we sat on the bench. His
-burros were grazing in the nearby salt grass. Every time he reached the
-climax of his yarn, he would jump up to go after a straying burro. When
-he retrieved that one, another would wander off and George would
-leave me again.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_143">143</div>
-<p>For one entire summer I listened to the beginning of that yarn and
-every morning would remind him of it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where was I?&rdquo; he&rsquo;d say. &ldquo;Oh, yes, I was telling you about the girl
-climbing out of the fellow&rsquo;s window just before daylight. Well, she
-went&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then George would jump up and start for a burro, and I never
-learned what happened to the torrid romance after the girl crawled out
-of her lover&rsquo;s window.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_144">144</div>
-<h2 id="c23"><span class="small">Chapter XXI</span>
-<br />Roads. Cracker Box Signs</h2>
-<p>Any resemblance that a Death Valley highway bore to a road was
-a coincidence prior to 1926, and few tourists traveled over them unless
-two cars were along. &ldquo;Just follow the wheel tracks and keep your eyes
-peeled for the cracker box signs along the road,&rdquo; was the usual advice to
-the novice who didn&rsquo;t know that tracks left by Mormons&rsquo; wagons
-nearly a century before may be seen today.</p>
-<p>One of these led me to the bank of a mile-wide gash made by cloudbursts.
-To locate the missing link I climbed the nearest mountain and
-on a lonely mesa came at last upon a piece of shook nailed to a stake
-and stuck into the ground. But it had nothing to do with roads. A crude
-inscription read:</p>
-<dl class="undent"><dd>Montana Jim</dd>
-<dd>July 1888</dd>
-<dd>A dam good pal</dd></dl>
-<p>Reverently I stepped aside. Never again would I see a finer tribute
-to man. A few rocks bleached white in the sun outlined a sunken grave.
-Crossed upon it were Jim&rsquo;s pick and shovel. It was not difficult to recreate
-what had happened there. Jim and his friend looking for gold.
-Jim&rsquo;s faltering and the sun beating him down. Jim&rsquo;s partner knowing
-that Jim&rsquo;s moniker would identify him better than a surname to anyone
-who passed that way interested in Jim. Out in the desert 100 miles
-from human habitation he couldn&rsquo;t call an undertaker, so he dug a
-hole, wrapped Jim in his canvas, rolled him in and hoped that God
-would reach down for Jim.</p>
-<p>At that period it was not an uncommon experience for the early
-tourist to lose his way by doing the natural thing at a crossroads and take
-the one which showed the sign of most travel. Often he would find later
-<span class="pb" id="Page_145">145</span>
-that he had followed a trail to a mine miles away. Often too, it led to
-disaster.</p>
-<p class="tb">The story of roads begins at Shoshone with Brown. In his trips in
-and around the valley, he erected signs to prevent the traveler from
-losing his way and his life. &ldquo;I would like to see Death Valley country,&rdquo;
-people would say to him, &ldquo;but everyone tells me to stay out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Inyo county had little revenue and that was used in the more populous
-Owens Valley 150 miles west. The east side (the Shoshone area)
-was totally neglected. Letters and petitions protesting the unfair distribution
-of county funds were tossed into the waste basket. &ldquo;Roads in
-that cauldron? Who would use &rsquo;em? Nobody ever goes there but a few
-old prospectors.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This was true but it was also true that on Owens Valley&rsquo;s west side
-the lakes and forests of the High Sierras were attracting a paying crop
-of vacationists and the supervisors knew it would be political suicide to
-divert this traffic from its towns and resorts. The county-wide opinion as
-to chance for relief was expressed in the slang of the day by a loafer on
-the bench at Shoshone: &ldquo;About as much as a wax mouse would have
-against an asbestos cat in a race through hell. They have the votes and
-elect the supervisors.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The east side had never had a member on the board. In the Shoshone
-precinct were less than 40 voters. In Death Valley a few prospectors
-who would have battered down the gates of hell if they thought
-gold lay beyond, poked around in its canyons. A few Indians. A few
-workmen for the Borax Company. In 1924 Brown put his suitcase in his
-car, filled the tank and said to those about: &ldquo;Fellows, I&rsquo;m running for
-Supervisor.&rdquo; &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be the mouse,&rdquo; quipped a friend.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll let &rsquo;em know somebody lives over here anyway....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Skirting the urban strongholds of the gentlemen in office Brown
-knocked at every door in the district. He berated none nor claimed he
-had all the answers to an obviously difficult problem. &ldquo;... Roads
-built there will lead here. Everybody will gain....&rdquo; Then to the next
-cabin and the next canyon until he&rsquo;d seen every voter.</p>
-<p>Before the opposition knew he had been around, he was back in
-Shoshone selling bacon and beans.</p>
-<p>When the votes were counted the overlords of the west side gasped.
-&ldquo;Who the hell&rsquo;s this Brown? Didn&rsquo;t even know he was running....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Taking office January 1, 1925, he found that the beaten incumbent
-had spent all the money allocated for road maintenance in his own
-bailiwick before retiring. Nevertheless, Brown convinced the new board
-his election proved that the people of the entire county agreed with him
-<span class="pb" id="Page_146">146</span>
-that the Death Valley area could no longer be neglected and managed
-to get a niggardly appropriation which would not have built a mile of
-decent mountain road, and his district had three challenging mountain
-ranges to cross.</p>
-<p>With this appropriation he was expected to care for a mileage four
-times greater than that of the west side and was thus responsible for
-not only eastern approaches but maintenance of 150 miles of road from
-Darwin, all roads in the valley and those which furnished the north and
-south approaches. He managed to get $5000 after two years. With this
-he procured road machinery on a rental basis and succeeded in making
-a fair desert road. Then he began a one-man crusade to exploit Death
-Valley as a tourist attraction. &ldquo;We need only roads a tourist can travel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He worked just as diligently for all of Inyo&rsquo;s roads. &ldquo;We have one
-of the world&rsquo;s best vacation lands,&rdquo; he told the west-siders. &ldquo;You have
-an abundance of beautiful lakes and streams in a setting of mountains
-impressive as any in the world. On our side we offer the appeal of the
-Panamint, the Funeral Range, and spectacular Death Valley. Tourists
-will come to both of us if we give them a chance and they will be our
-best crop.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>By 1926 his crusade for roads had spread beyond Inyo county lines.
-San Bernardino county, through which passes Highway 66, a main
-transcontinental artery, joins Inyo on the south. Its board of supervisors
-was in session one day when Brown strode in. Most of them he knew.
-He wanted their advice, he told them. &ldquo;Your county and mine need more
-roads to bring more people. The easiest way into Death Valley is through
-your county from Baker. The distance from Baker to the Inyo county
-line is 45 miles. If you will build the road to the Inyo line, I will build
-it from that point to Furnace Creek, 71 miles. Such a road would open
-Death Valley to the public and the tourists who will travel will spend
-enough money in your towns to pay your share of the cost.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>San Bernardino supervisors agreed to consider it but were not enthusiastic.
-One of America&rsquo;s largest counties, San Bernardino had also
-one of its largest road problems.</p>
-<p>Brown kept plugging, arranging meetings, convincing residents that
-the county&rsquo;s portion of the road would be over flat country and over
-roads already passable, and its construction inexpensive.</p>
-<p>Finally San Bernardino county supervisors agreed and by April,
-1929, he had 71 miles of passable road. The result was that Death
-Valley was no longer remote as the Congo and tourists began to come.</p>
-<p>To Shoshone it meant a few more windshields to wipe; a few more
-cars to crawl under. Another soft answer to frame for the sightseer
-<span class="pb" id="Page_147">147</span>
-cursing the desolation. Another shed for the store that started on the
-kitchen table.</p>
-<p>In 1932 Brown went before the State Highway Commission and
-urged that all the roads he had built in Death Valley be taken over by
-the state. The law was passed.</p>
-<p>Death Valley became a National Monument February 11, 1933, by
-order of President Franklin Roosevelt. At that time America was groping
-its way through depression, worrying about its dinner and its debts
-as a result of the stock market crash of 1929.</p>
-<p>In the nation&rsquo;s hobo jungles the seasoned &ldquo;bindle stiff&rdquo; made room
-for the newcomer who had always lived on the right side of the tracks.
-Freight trains carried a new kind of bum when the adolescent female
-crawled into a car alongside an adolescent male, vainly seeking work
-anywhere at anything.</p>
-<p>To save them and others like them C.C.C. camps were organized
-and one of these recruited largely from New York City&rsquo;s Bowery, was
-sent to Death Valley with headquarters at Cow Creek, a few miles north
-of Furnace Creek Inn.</p>
-<p>The new park was under the supervision of Col. John R. White,
-later superintendent of the entire National Park System and to Ray
-Goodwin, assistant superintendent was assigned the task of building
-additional roads and trails to points of interest to connect with the State
-System which Brown had built.</p>
-<p>Then began in earnest the flow of tourist traffic to the &ldquo;God-forsaken
-hole&rdquo; for which Brown had worked for 14 long and difficult
-years. But he soon found that to the problems of a small desert community
-he had added those of a whole county. They were the aftermath
-of what has since been called in a marvelous understatement by Morrow
-Mayo, historian of Los Angeles, &ldquo;The Rape of Owens Valley.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the early part of the century, the city of Los Angeles had secretly
-acquired nearly all sources of water in Inyo and Mono counties. An
-amazed world applauded the engineering feat by which water was
-siphoned over mountain ranges to flow through ditches and tunnels, a
-distance of 259 miles.</p>
-<p>The enterprise was announced by its promoters as the answer to
-the desperate need for water. It is now known that this need was only
-a mask to hide a scheme to make Los Angeles pay the cost of bringing
-water to 108,000 acres of waterless land in San Fernando valley so
-that the owners could make a profit of a hundred million dollars through
-its subdivision and sale. This they did.</p>
-<p>The shameful story glorifies by comparison the cattle wars of the
-early West when one side hired its Billy the Kids to kill off the other&mdash;the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_148">148</span>
-only difference being that in the Owens Valley feud the Billy the
-Kids were the Big Names of Los Angeles who used unscrupulous
-politicians and laws cunningly passed instead of six-guns.</p>
-<p>As a consequence, Los Angeles owns the towns, ranches, and cattle
-ranges so that merchants, householders, ranchers, and renters have no
-title except in a relatively few instances, to the land upon which they
-live or to the house or store they occupy. Los Angeles could sell or lease
-or refuse to sell or lease land to cattlemen, homes to residents or stores
-to merchants and sell or refuse to sell water to those who had lived all
-their lives and would die on the devastated land.</p>
-<p>As a result, the relations between the city and the Displaced Persons
-of the two counties were those of victor and vanquished.</p>
-<p>In 1935 the city succeeded in getting an act passed by the legislature
-which prevented any town from becoming incorporated without the
-consent of 60 per cent of the property owners. The purpose of the act
-seemed fair enough when it was announced that it was designed to save
-the towns from both political demagogues and crackpots running amuck
-in California and it became a law.</p>
-<p>But there was more than the eye could see. Its real object had been
-to strengthen the strangle hold of the Los Angeles Water and Power
-board upon Owens Valley. Since it owned the towns it could now prevent
-their incorporation. There had been some feeling of security under
-a resolution of the Water and Power Board which had declared that
-merchants, cattlemen, and residents&mdash;all of them lessees, would be given
-preference in new leases and renewals of old ones.</p>
-<p>In 1942 the resolution became a scrap of paper, and ranchers, cattle
-men and householders were advised that their leases would hereafter
-be renewed by a method of secret bidding.</p>
-<p>Thus the residents of Owens Valley learned that the labor of years
-had brought no security. As one beaten old timer told me, &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve been
-kicked around so much I&rsquo;m used to it. I helped blow those ditches two-three
-times, to turn that water loose on the desert. I know when I&rsquo;m
-licked.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Resentment in Mono county, which provided more of the water
-taken by Los Angeles than Inyo, was even more aroused and smoldering
-hatreds were ready again to blow up a ditch. The two counties constitute
-the 28th Senatorial district.</p>
-<p>Brown&rsquo;s success in the Assembly had not gone unnoticed in the
-neighboring county of Mono. &ldquo;We need that fellow Brown,&rdquo; a prominent
-citizen said, and others repeated it.</p>
-<p>Again Charlie put his suitcase in his car, filled the tank. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve
-<span class="pb" id="Page_149">149</span>
-never had anybody from this side at Sacramento,&rdquo; he told a friend
-standing by. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m running for the Senate.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Know anybody up there?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going and get acquainted,&rdquo; he said and headed across the valley.</p>
-<p>Most of Mono county is isolated by the High Sierras. Again the
-door to door technique. No torches. No brass bands. Just the old eye-to-eye-talk-it-over
-system. As always he let the voter do the talking and he
-listened, but when he slid into his car the voter was ready to tell his
-neighbor: &ldquo;I like that fellow. Doesn&rsquo;t claim to know it all.&rdquo; He told his
-banker, his grocer, his butcher, baker, and barber.</p>
-<p>Result? I was in the Senate Chamber at Sacramento later, when I
-heard one of a group of men huddled nearby say, &ldquo;This is an important
-bill that concerns everybody on the east side of the Sierras. We&rsquo;d better
-see Charlie.&rdquo; I nudged the man reading a document at my side. &ldquo;Those
-fellows want to see you, Senator.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He had received the nomination of both the Democratic and Republican
-parties and had secured the passage of an act which denies
-a municipality holding more than 50 per cent of the property of another
-subdivision of the state, proprietary power over the security and stability
-of such subdivision. Moreover he was on the all-powerful Rules Committee,
-the Fish and Game, Local Government, Natural Resources, Social
-Welfare, and Election Committees, friend and frequent adviser of Governor
-Warren.</p>
-<p>Honeymooning Secretary Ickes was combining business with pleasure
-when he reached California and wanting to see how his Park System
-was functioning, he took his bride to see Death Valley. Besides, he had
-some plans affecting the Inyo area.</p>
-<p>The fight was having tough sledding in the legislature despite President
-Roosevelt&rsquo;s approval. Then he talked to people less biased. &ldquo;You&rsquo;d
-better see Charlie....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who the hell&rsquo;s Charlie?&rdquo; asked Harold.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Senator from Death Valley....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>With Ray Goodwin, Superintendent of the Death Valley Monument
-to guide him, he was taken to all the show places. &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Mr. Ickes,
-&ldquo;I want to see Brown.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At Shoshone Charlie&rsquo;s toggery is strictly for work which includes
-tending the gas pump, stove repairing, plumbing, and what-have-you.
-He was flat on his back under the dripping oil of a balky car when Mr.
-Goodwin stepped from the limousine.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Charlie,&rdquo; Mr. Goodwin called, &ldquo;Mr. Ickes is here to see you.&rdquo; Receiving
-no answer, he walked over to the car and added that Mr. Ickes
-<span class="pb" id="Page_150">150</span>
-was in a hurry. Still, no answer. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s Secretary Ickes, Department of the
-Interior. This is important.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So&rsquo;s this,&rdquo; Brown grunted. When he&rsquo;d finished, he crawled out and
-wiping the grime from his hands, joined Goodwin at the waiting car.
-After being introduced to the bride and the self-styled &ldquo;Old Curmudgeon&rdquo;
-the latter explained his plan to add certain lands in Charlie&rsquo;s
-district, to the Forest Reserve. &ldquo;... You&rsquo;re opposing me. You&rsquo;re a
-Democrat, aren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I came from Georgia,&rdquo; Charlie drawled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re for Roosevelt, aren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Within reason,&rdquo; Charlie answered.</p>
-<p>Then Mr. Ickes, with the assurance of the perfectionist began to sell
-his idea.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you know of any reason why the area designated as Forest
-Reserve should not be protected as any other of our natural resources?&rdquo;
-he concluded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just one,&rdquo; Charlie said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; Ickes snapped.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your forest is nearly all brush land without a tree on it big enough
-to shade a lizard.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Charlie was similarly dressed when a well tailored and impatient
-tourist with a carload of friends whom he was evidently trying to impress,
-drove up for gas.</p>
-<p>Always unhurried, Charlie came to the pumps, slowly reached for
-the hose and as lazily checked the oil.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say, fellow&mdash;&rdquo; the tourist barked. &ldquo;Senator Brown is a friend of
-mine. Get a move on or you&rsquo;ll be looking for a job.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Without the flicker of an eyelid, Charlie quickened, jumped for a
-cleaning rag and briskly polished the windshield. When he brought the
-tourist&rsquo;s change he apologized for his slowness and begged him not to
-report it to Senator Brown. &ldquo;Jobs are hard to get and I have a wife and
-ten children to support.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Touched with remorse, the tourist looked at the change. &ldquo;Just give
-it to the kids and forget it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When the Pacific Coast Borax Company built its swanky Furnace
-Creek Inn on the western slope of the Funeral Range overlooking
-Death Valley, it began to look about for places that would give the
-most spectacular and comprehensive view of the Big Sink as a means of
-entertaining guests, and far enough away to keep them from boredom.</p>
-<p>All the old timers who had wandered over the ranges were called in.
-Each suggested the place that had impressed him more than others. Each
-of these places was visited and after weeks of deliberation a spot on
-<span class="pb" id="Page_151">151</span>
-Chloride Cliff toward the northern end of Death Valley was chosen and
-the bigwigs started back to Los Angeles.</p>
-<p>When they stopped at Shoshone for gas and water, Clarence Rasor,
-an engineer of the company was still thinking of the chosen site and
-asked Brown, long his friend, if he knew of any view of the valley better
-than the one at Chloride Cliff.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t pay much attention to scenery,&rdquo; he told Rasor. &ldquo;To me it&rsquo;s
-all just desert or mountain. But I know one view that made me stop and
-look. Kinda got me. The chances are most folks would rave over it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Could you find it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure could....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Rasor called the others, repeated Charlie&rsquo;s story and added: &ldquo;You&rsquo;re
-in a hurry, but knowing Charlie as I do, I believe we&rsquo;d better turn
-around and go back if he&rsquo;ll guide us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Charlie agreed. It was a long, tortuous climb, even to the base of
-the peak. There Charlie went ahead and then beckoned them. Holding
-to bushes they walked or crawled to stand beside him; took one look
-and caught their breath. A mile below them lay the awesome Sink.
-White salt beds spread like a shroud over its silent desolation. Billowed
-dunes, gold against the dark of lava rock. Here a pastelled hill. There
-a brooding canyon. Beyond, the colorful Panamint under the golden
-glow of the sun.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is the place,&rdquo; they said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;... You can tell &rsquo;em too,&rdquo; said Charlie pointing, &ldquo;that right
-down there is Copper Canyon. If such stuff interests them, they can see
-the footprints of the camels and elephants and a lot of historic junk like
-that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So you who thrill at Dante&rsquo;s View may thank Charles Brown of
-Shoshone.</p>
-<p>When first elected to the senate, his colleagues were quick to see the
-qualities that had appealed to voters when they elected him supervisor.
-He had frequently been before that body in his fight for roads and tax
-reforms. They knew too that better schools for all rural areas either
-wholly or largely were the result of his efforts, and soon he was on the
-Rules Committee&mdash;a place usually assigned to those who come from the
-more populous districts of the state, because its five members through its
-power to appoint all standing and special committees, largely decide
-what legislation reaches the governor.</p>
-<p>In 1950 Brown announced his candidacy for reelection under the
-state law that enables a candidate to seek the nomination of two parties.</p>
-<p>The slot machine had been outlawed in California by the previous
-legislature and Brown had been largely instrumental in securing the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_152">152</span>
-passage of the law. Since the slot machine is a three billion dollar
-business in the nation, the gamblers opposed him as part of a general
-plan to secure repeal of the law and reinstate the one-arm bandits.</p>
-<p>Since Mono county adjoins Nevada, gambling interests of that state
-contributed without stint, to retire Brown to private life. He had been in
-office for 25 years and opposed by this powerful group, guided by both
-brains and cunning, the odds apparently were against him. While the
-opposition boasted that he was through, Brown was calling at cabins in
-the hills and gulches, meeting friends on busy village streets and again
-when the vote was counted, it was discovered that voters have memories.
-He had won the nomination of both the Democratic and Republican
-parties by almost two to one and under the law, was re-elected.</p>
-<p>Due to his priority standing and the retirement of older senators,
-the big fellow who walked 150 miles to get a job at Greenwater in
-order to save the fare to eat on, automatically shares with two men the
-power to control the legislation of the state.</p>
-<p class="tb">Hell, like gold, is where you find it&mdash;either in people or places. A
-lady of wealth and aristocratic background in route to Furnace Creek&rsquo;s
-luxury inn, stopped at Shoshone for gas. Worn out by the long drive
-over the corduroy road, she looked about her and then at Charlie in
-greasy overalls. &ldquo;How on earth,&rdquo; she asked in genuine distress, &ldquo;do you
-make a living in this God-forsaken-hole?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s hard ma&rsquo;am,&rdquo; Charlie said gloomily. &ldquo;But we get a few pennies
-from tourists, a little flour from mesquite beans, and stay alive one way
-or another, hoping to get out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The gracious lady opened her purse, thrust a five dollar bill into
-Charlie&rsquo;s hand and went her way.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It really made her happy,&rdquo; Charlie chuckled, &ldquo;and I just didn&rsquo;t have
-the heart to give it back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>What is it that man wants of these &ldquo;God-forsaken-holes&rdquo; on the
-desert? I sought the answer one day when Shoshone was having a holiday.
-George Ishmael, as native as an Indian, was chosen to barbecue the
-steer. A well-to-do tourist begged the job of digging the big pit. &ldquo;Want
-to flex my muscles....&rdquo; Another cut the wood. At a depth of four
-feet, water was struck and rose a foot over the bottom. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s all right&rdquo;
-George said. He tossed a dozen railroad ties into the hole, floated them
-into position, covered them with dirt, built the fire, lowered the carcass
-of the steer, covered it with green leaves and filled the hole. &ldquo;An unforgettable
-feast,&rdquo; agreed the scores who had come from places 100 miles
-away.</p>
-<p>Sitting beside me was a prominent Los Angeles attorney, eminent
-<span class="pb" id="Page_153">153</span>
-in the councils of the Democratic party in both state and nation. &ldquo;Why,&rdquo;
-he asked, &ldquo;will a man wear himself out in the city when he can really
-live in a little place like this?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought of suicide at first,&rdquo; said Patsy, young matron with three
-healthy little stairsteps. &ldquo;My husband said &lsquo;for heaven&rsquo;s sake, go out for
-a month and have a good time.&rsquo; I went. Back in a week.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A Vermont girl said she had come to escape a straightlaced code that
-constantly reminded her sin was everywhere. &ldquo;Here I&rsquo;ve got an even
-break with the devil....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>All had found something that clicked with something inside of them
-which challenged something in civilization. Maybe it was expressed in
-the dogma of the Tennessee judge reared in the hill country of the Cumberland
-river. As he stepped from his plane on his annual vacation he
-was cornered by a reporter: &ldquo;Judge, you&rsquo;re 94 years old. What do you
-think of this modern world?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Best one I know about.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No criticism?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;None whatever. Maybe a few minor changes. Just now we are
-being educated out of common sense into ignorance; lawed out of
-patriotism; taxed into poverty; doctored to death and preached to
-hell....&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_154">154</div>
-<h2 id="c24"><span class="small">Chapter XXII</span>
-<br />Lost Mines. The Breyfogle and Others</h2>
-<p>The most famous lost mine in the Death Valley area is the Lost
-Breyfogle. There are many versions of the legend, but all agree that
-somewhere in the bowels of those rugged mountains is a colossal mass
-of gold, which Jacob Breyfogle found and lost.</p>
-<p>Jacob Breyfogle was a prospector who roamed the country around
-Pioche and Austin, Nevada, with infrequent excursions into the Death
-valley area. He traveled alone.</p>
-<p>Indian George, Hungry Bill, and Panamint Tom saw Breyfogle several
-times in the country around Stovepipe Wells, but they could never
-trace him to his claim. When followed, George said, Breyfogle would
-step off the trail and completely disappear. Once George told me about
-trailing him into the Funeral Range. He pointed to the bare mountain.
-&ldquo;Him there, me see. Pretty quick&mdash;&rdquo; He paused, puckered his lips.
-&ldquo;Whoop&mdash;no see.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Breyfogle left a crude map of his course. All lost mines must have
-a map. Conspicuous on this map are the Death Valley Buttes which are
-landmarks. Because he was seen so much here, it was assumed that his
-operations were in the low foothills. I have seen a rough copy of this
-map made from the original in possession of &ldquo;Wildrose&rdquo; Frank Kennedy&rsquo;s
-squaw, Lizzie.</p>
-<p>Breyfogle presumably coming from his mine, was accosted near
-Stovepipe Wells by Panamint Tom, Hungry Bill, and a young buck
-related to them, known as Johnny. Hungry Bill, from habit, begged for
-food. Breyfogle refused, explaining that he had but a morsel and
-several hard days&rsquo; journey before him. On his burro he had a small
-sack of ore. When Breyfogle left, Hungry Bill said, &ldquo;Him no good.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Incited by Hungry Bill and possible loot, the Indians followed Breyfogle
-for three or four days across the range. Hungry Bill stopped en
-route, sent the younger Indians ahead. At Stump Springs east of Shoshone,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_155">155</span>
-Breyfogle was eating his dinner when the Indians sneaked out
-of the brush and scalped him, took what they wished of his possessions
-and left him for dead.</p>
-<p>Ash Meadows Charlie, a chief of the Indians in that area confided
-to Herman Jones that he had witnessed this assault. This happened on
-the Yundt Ranch, or as it is better known, the Manse Ranch. Yundt
-and Aaron Winters accidentally came upon Breyfogle unconscious on
-the ground. The scalp wound was fly-blown. They had a mule team
-and light wagon and hurried to San Bernardino with the wounded man.
-The ore, a chocolate quartz, was thrown into the wagon.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I saw some of it at Phi Lee&rsquo;s home, the Resting Spring Ranch,&rdquo;
-Shorty Harris said. &ldquo;It was the richest ore I ever saw. Fifty pounds
-yielded nearly $6000.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Breyfogle recovered, but thereafter was regarded as slightly &ldquo;off.&rdquo;
-He returned to Austin, Nevada, and the story followed.</p>
-<p>Wildrose (Frank) Kennedy, an experienced mining man obtained a
-copy of Breyfogle&rsquo;s map and combed the country around the buttes in
-an effort to locate the mine. Kennedy had the aid of the Indians and
-was able to obtain, through his squaw Lizzie, such information as Indians
-had about the going and coming of the elusive Breyfogle.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Some believe the ore came from around Daylight Springs,&rdquo; Shorty
-said, &ldquo;but old Lizzie&rsquo;s map had no mark to indicate Daylight Springs.
-But it does show the buttes and the only buttes in Death Valley are
-those above Stovepipe Wells.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Kennedy interested Henry E. Findley, an old time Colorado sheriff
-and Clarence Nyman, for years a prospector for Coleman and Smith (the
-Pacific Borax Company). They induced Mat Cullen, a rich Salt Lake
-mining man, to leave his business and come out. They made three trips
-into the valley, looking for that gold. It&rsquo;s there somewhere.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At Austin, Breyfogle was outfitted several times to relocate the
-property, but when he reached the lower elevation of the valley, he
-seemed to suffer some aberration which would end the trip. His last
-grubstaker was not so considerate. He told Breyfogle that if he didn&rsquo;t
-find the mine promptly he&rsquo;d make a sieve of him and was about to do it
-when a companion named Atchison intervened and saved his life.
-Shortly afterward, Breyfogle died from the old wound.</p>
-<p>Indian George, repeating a story told him by Panamint Tom, once
-told me that Tom had traced Breyfogle to the mine and after Breyfogle&rsquo;s
-death went back and secured some of the ore. Tom guarded his secret.
-He covered the opening with stone and leaving, walked backwards,
-obliterating his tracks with a greasewood brush. Later when Tom
-returned prepared to get the gold he found that a cloudburst had filled
-<span class="pb" id="Page_156">156</span>
-the canyon with boulders, gravel and silt, removing every landmark and
-Breyfogle&rsquo;s mine was lost again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Some day maybe,&rdquo; George said, &ldquo;big rain come and wash um out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Among the freighters of the early days was John Delameter who
-believed the Breyfogle was in the lower Panamint. Delameter operated
-a 20 mule team freighting service between Daggett and points in
-both Death Valley and Panamint Valley. He told me that he found
-Breyfogle down in the road about twenty-eight miles south of Ballarat
-with a wound in his leg. Breyfogle had come into the Panamint from
-Pioche, Nevada, and said he had been attacked by Indians, his horses
-stolen, while working on his claim which he located merely with a
-gesture toward the mountains.</p>
-<p>Subsequently Delameter made several vain efforts to locate the
-property, but like most lost mines it continues to be lost. But for years
-it was good bait for a grubstake and served both the convincing liar
-and the honest prospector.</p>
-<p>Nearly all old timers had a version of the Lost Breyfogle differing
-in details but all agreeing on the chocolate quartz and its richness.</p>
-<p>That Breyfogle really lost a valuable mine there can be little doubt,
-but since he is authentically traced from the northern end of Death
-Valley to the southern, and since the chocolate quartz is found in many
-places of that area, one who cares to look for it must cover a large
-territory.</p>
-<p class="tb">One mine that had never been found turned up in a way as amazing
-as most of them are lost.</p>
-<p>At Pioche, Nevada, an assayer was suspected of giving greater
-values to samples than they merited. It is known as the &ldquo;come on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In order to trap the suspect, a prospector broke off a piece of old
-grindstone and ordered an assay. &ldquo;If he gives that any value, it&rsquo;s proof
-enough he&rsquo;s a crook,&rdquo; he told his friends.</p>
-<p>Proof of guilt came with the assayer&rsquo;s report. The grindstone was
-incredibly rich in silver, it said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got the goods on him now,&rdquo; the outraged prospector announced
-and it was decided to give the assayer a coat of tar and
-feathers. Wiser counsel was accepted, however, and it was decided to
-give him no more business. The fellow was faced with the alternative
-of starving or leaving the country, when he learned the reason of the
-boycott. Conscious of no error in his work, he made another and more
-careful assay. This time the samples yielded even higher values.</p>
-<p>It was agreed by all mining engineers of that day that rock like the
-samples never carried silver or gold. But the assayer knew his furnace
-<span class="pb" id="Page_157">157</span>
-hadn&rsquo;t lied and he couldn&rsquo;t believe grindstone makers were mixing silver
-with sand to make the stones. So he traced the grindstone to the quarry
-it came from. The result was the Silver King, one of the richest silver
-mines.</p>
-<p class="tb">THE LOST GUNSIGHT. The first lost mine in Death Valley,
-preceding that of Breyfogle&rsquo;s by four or five years, was the Gunsight.</p>
-<p>A survivor of the Jayhawkers or the Bennett-Arcane party of &rsquo;49
-(it is not clear to which he belonged) after escaping death in the valley,
-saw a deer or antelope and on the point of starvation, took his gun from
-its strap to shoot the animal. Seeing that the sight had been lost, he
-picked up a thin piece of shale and wedged it in the sight slot. Later
-he took the weapon to a gunsmith who removed the makeshift sight
-and upon examination found it to be almost pure silver. &ldquo;Where I
-picked it up,&rdquo; said the owner, &ldquo;there was a mountain of it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So begins the history of the Lost Gunsight and the story spread as
-stories will, until ten years later it reached the ears of Dr. Darwin
-French of Oroville, previously mentioned. The doctor became excited
-and in the spring of 1860 organized a party to locate the fabulous
-mountain of silver. Though he searched bravely he failed to find it.
-However, he brought back the first authentic account of what others
-with a flair for lost mines could expect in the way of weather, topography,
-Indians, edible game, vegetation, and water. On this trip, however,
-he discovered silver in the Coso Range.</p>
-<p>The following year, 1861, Dr. S. G. George who had been with the
-French party, decided he could find the Lost Gunsight and organized
-an expedition which crossed Panamint Valley, explored Wild Rose
-Canyon and reached the highest spot in Death Valley. But Dr. George&rsquo;s
-valiant efforts were no luckier than those of Dr. French.</p>
-<p>William Manly, author of &ldquo;Death Valley in Forty-Nine&rdquo; also tried
-but gained only another tragic experience and came nearer losing his
-life than he did with the Forty-Niners. Lost and without water and
-beaten to his knees, he was deserted by companions and escaped death
-by a miracle. How many have lost their lives trying to find the Gunsight
-no one knows. There are scores of sunken mounds on lonely mesas
-which an old timer will explain tersely: &ldquo;He was looking for the Gunsight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Dr. French, after his failure, pursued another and even more intriguing
-lost mine. With a ready ear for tales of treasure, he heard of
-a tribe of Indians in the Death Valley area who were making bullets
-for their rifles out of gold. Accordingly he organized another party
-to find the gold.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_158">158</div>
-<p>For eleven months Dr. French and his hand-picked comrades
-combed the country. The gold they found would have loaded no gun,
-but you may add the Lost Bullet to your list of lost mines. A member
-of this party was John Searles, for whom Searles&rsquo; Lake is named.</p>
-<p>Because early prospectors searched for Breyfogle&rsquo;s lost mine throughout
-the region where he was found scalped, an interesting digression is
-not amiss.</p>
-<p>A few miles east of Shoshone, there is a Gunsight mine named, of
-course, by the discoverer in the hope that he&rsquo;d found the one so long
-lost. It adjoins the Noonday and was a valuable property which belonged
-to Dr. L. D. Godshall of Victorville.</p>
-<p>The Noonday produced five million dollars and was operated until
-silver and lead took a price dive. A 12 mile railroad was built from
-Tecopa to haul the ore. The steel rails were later hauled away and the
-ties went into construction of desert homes, sheds, fences, and firewood.
-For years the two properties could have been bought for what-have-you.</p>
-<p>Then came Pearl Harbor and a young Kentuckian, Buford Davis,
-looking around for lead or any essential ores that Uncle Sam could use,
-dropped off at Shoshone. Charles Brown told him of the Gunsight and
-the Noonday. Davis inspected the properties, bought them for a relatively
-small down payment. He chose to begin operations on the
-Noonday and sent Ernie Huhn, an experienced miner to deepen the
-shaft.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Honest to God,&rdquo; Ernie told me, &ldquo;I hadn&rsquo;t dug a foot when I turned
-up the prettiest vein of lead I&rsquo;d ever seen.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the next six years the Noonday produced approximately a gross
-of nine million dollars and a net of probably six million dollars.</p>
-<p>These figures were given me by Don Kempfer, mining engineer and
-Shoshone resident, from estimates which he believed accurate.</p>
-<p>In 1947 with the rich rewards attained but as yet unenjoyed, Buford
-Davis made a hurried airplane trip to Salt Lake. Returning, he was only
-a few moments from a safe landing when the plane crashed and all
-aboard were killed.</p>
-<p>Today, (1950) the property belongs to Anaconda and is considered
-one of its most valuable mines.</p>
-<p>For those interested in lost mines I offer the list that follows. (The
-names are my own.)</p>
-<p class="tb">THE LOST CHINAMAN: When John Searles was struggling to
-make a living out of the ooze that is called Searles&rsquo; Lake he had a mule
-skinner known as Salty Bill Parkinson&mdash;a fearless, hard-bitten individual
-who was the Paul Bunyan of Death Valley teamsters.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_159">159</div>
-<p>While loading a wagon with borax, Salty Bill and Searles noticed
-a man staggering down from the Slate Range. They decided he was
-supercharged with desert likker and paid scant attention as he wobbled
-across the flat from the base of the range. A moment later he fell at
-their feet. They saw then that he was a Chinaman; that his tongue was
-swollen, his eyes red and sunken; that he clutched at his throat in a
-vain effort to speak. He could make no intelligible sound and lapsed
-into unconsciousness. They thought he had died and was left on their
-hands for burial.</p>
-<p>Salty Bill afterwards stated that he&rsquo;d said to Searles: &ldquo;&lsquo;Fremont, Carson, or the Mormons old Bill Williams, for whom Bill
-Williams River, Bill Williams Mountain, and the town of Williams,
-Arizona, are named was at Resting Springs.
-He&rsquo;ll spoil in
-an hour. I&rsquo;ll go for a shovel while you choose a place to plant him.&rsquo;
-I&rsquo;d actually turned to go when Searles called me back.&rdquo; Searles had
-seen some sign of life and after removing a canvas bag strapped to his
-body they took him to a nearby shed, gave him a few spoonfuls of water
-and eventually he was restored to consciousness. He lay in a semi-stupor
-all the afternoon and was obsessed with the idea that he was
-going to die. His chief concern was to get to Mojave so that he could
-take a stage for a seaport and die in China or failing, arrange for the
-burial of his bones with those of his ancestors.</p>
-<p>He had been working at Old Harmony Borax Works, picking cotton-ball
-borax with other Chinese employed by the company, but tiring
-of abuse by a tough boss, he&rsquo;d asked for his wages and walked out.
-Some Piutes told him of a short cut across the Panamint and this he
-took.</p>
-<p>En route he picked up a piece of rich float, stuck it into his bag.
-Farther on his journey he ran out of water and became hopelessly
-lost. He managed to reach the Slate Range, however, and from the
-summit saw Searles&rsquo; Lake. Though in no condition to stand the rough
-trip to Mojave he begged to be sent there and yielding finally, Salty
-Bill, ready to leave with his load, threw the Chinaman on his wagon
-and started on his trip.</p>
-<p>Before reaching Mojave, the Chinaman&rsquo;s condition became worse
-and Salty Bill stopped the team in answer to his yells. The canvas sack
-lay alongside the stricken Chinaman and reaching for it, he brought out
-a lump of ore.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Never in my life,&rdquo; said Salty Bill, &ldquo;have I seen ore like that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Chinaman gave the ore to Salty, thanked him for his friendly
-treatment, told him that at a place in the Panamint where &ldquo;the Big
-Timber pitches down into a steep canyon,&rdquo; he had found the float.
-Again he expressed his belief that he was going to die and exacted
-a promise from Salty that if death came before reaching Mojave, Salty
-would see that his remains be shipped to China, adding that any Chinaman
-<span class="pb" id="Page_160">160</span>
-in Mojave would provide money if needed. &ldquo;You find the gold
-and keep it,&rdquo; he told Salty. &ldquo;For me&mdash;no good. No can....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The journey was completed and Salty learned that the Chinaman
-did die at Mojave and that a countryman there saw that the remains
-were sent to the Flowery Kingdom.</p>
-<p>Salty Bill showed the ore to John Searles and Searles, usually indifferent
-to yarns of hidden ledges, was even more excited than Salty.
-For four or five years the two men made trips in search of the place
-where Big Timber pitches into a canyon. After these, other tireless
-prospectors sought the elusive ledge but the Lost Chinaman is still lost.</p>
-<p class="tb">THE LOST WAGON. Jim Hurley went to Parker, Arizona. Broke,
-he wanted quick money and was looking for placer. The storekeeper
-was a friend of Jim and had previously staked him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m looking for a place to wash out some gold, but I&rsquo;ve no money
-and no grub....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jim was told of a butte on the Colorado Desert. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s good placer
-ground and you ought to pan a few dollars without much trouble....&rdquo;
-He provided Jim with bacon and beans and feed for his burros.</p>
-<p>Jim set out, found the butte, but no gold and decided to try a new
-location. On the way out he saw behind some bushes an old wagon
-that seemed to be half buried in blow sand. Thinking it would be a
-good feeding place for his burros, he went over. On the ground nearby
-he saw the bleached skeleton of a man. He threw aside a half-rotted
-tarpaulin in the wagon bed and discovered fifteen sacks of ore.</p>
-<p>It was obvious that the wagon had stood there for a long time. He
-examined the ore and saw that it was rich and of a peculiar color. He
-loaded the ore on his burros, returned to Parker and sent it to the
-smelter. He received in return, $1800. Losing no time, Jim returned
-to find the source of the ore and though for the next five years he
-looked at intervals for a quartz to match that found in the wagon, he
-could find nothing that even resembled it. Where it came from no prospector
-on the desert would even venture an opinion, but all declared
-they had seen no quartz of that peculiar color and all of them knew
-the country from Mexico to Nevada.</p>
-<p>But Jim added to his store an adventure and a memory and there
-is no treasure in this life richer than a memory.</p>
-<p class="tb">THE LOST GOLLER. This, I believe, is a lost mine that really
-exists and though the location has been prospected from the days of Dr.
-Darwin French in 1860, none have looked for it except the one who
-<span class="pb" id="Page_161">161</span>
-lost it in 1850. He was John Goller, who came to California with the
-Jayhawkers.</p>
-<p>Goller was a blacksmith and wagon maker and was the first American
-to establish such a business in the pueblo of Los Angeles. After
-convincing the native Californian that his spoke-wheel wagon would
-function as effectively as the rounded slabs of wood, the only vehicles
-then used, he made a comfortable fortune and no one in the pueblo had
-a reputation for better character.</p>
-<p>Crossing the Panamint, Goller, though strong and husky, became
-separated from his companions and barely escaped with his life. Coming
-down a Panamint canyon he found some gold nuggets and filled his
-pockets with them. After crossing Panamint Valley and the Slate Range,
-he was found by Mexican vaqueros of Don Ignacio del Valle, owner of
-the great Camulos Rancho. After his recovery he proceeded to Los
-Angeles. In showing the nuggets to friends he said, &ldquo;I could have filled
-a wagon with them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Goller, because of his means was soon able to take vacations which
-were devoted to looking for the lost location, and though he searched
-for years he found no more nuggets. Finally he found a canyon which
-he believed might have been the site, but no wagon load of nuggets.</p>
-<p>John Goller was a solid, clear-thinking man&mdash;not the type to chase
-the rainbow. Gold is known to exist in the canyon and some mines have
-been operated with varying success, but none have been outstanding. It
-is quite possible that cloudbursts for which the Panamint is noted washed
-Goller&rsquo;s gold away or buried it under an avalanche of rock, dirt, and
-gravel. Manly, with his forgivable inclination to error refers to Goller
-as Galler and discounts the story.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Some day,&rdquo; said Dr. Samuel Slocum, a man who made a fortune
-in gold, &ldquo;somebody will find a fabulously rich mine in that canyon.&rdquo; It
-is located about 12 miles south of Ballarat and is called Goler canyon&mdash;one
-of the l&rsquo;s in Goller&rsquo;s name having been dropped.</p>
-<p class="tb">THE LOST SPOOK. A spiritualist with tuberculosis came to Ballarat
-and employed an Indian known as Joe Button as packer and guide.
-He told Joe to lead him to the driest spot in the country. Joe took him
-into the Cottonwood Range and left him. The invalid remained for several
-weeks, returned to Ballarat en route to San Bernardino, presumably
-for supplies. He was reticent as to his luck but he had several small sacks
-filled with ore and in his haste to catch the stage, dropped a piece of
-quartz from a loosely tied sack. It was almost solid gold and weighed
-eight ounces.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_162">162</div>
-<p>While in San Bernardino he died. His relatives sold the remaining
-ore, which yielded $7200. They tried to find the claim but failed.</p>
-<p>Shorty Harris heard of it months afterward and looked up Joe Button.
-With his own burros, Joe&rsquo;s pack horses, and an Indian known as
-Ignacio, he set out. Cloudbursts had washed out the previous trails, filled
-gulches, levelled hills and so transformed the country that the Indian
-was unable to find any trace of his previous course; gave up the hunt and
-turned back.</p>
-<p>Shorty cached his supplies and with the meager description Joe
-could give him, searched for weeks. At last he came upon a camp where
-he discovered a collection of pamphlets dealing with the occult, but no
-trails. It was apparent that these had been destroyed by floods and for
-two months Shorty searched for the diggings. A brush pile aroused his
-suspicions and removing it, he found the hole. &ldquo;The ore had Uncle Sam&rsquo;s
-eagle all over it,&rdquo; Shorty said, &ldquo;and the world was mine.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I returned to my camp, started spending the money. A million
-dollars for a rest home for old worn-out prospectors. Fifty thousand a
-year for all my pals....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Shorty ate his supper, spread his blankets and went to sleep with
-his dream. In the middle of the night he awoke. Something was running
-over his blanket. He raised up and in the moonlight recognized
-the only thing on earth he was afraid of&mdash;the &ldquo;hydrophobic skunk.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I started packing right now,&rdquo; Shorty said, &ldquo;and walked out. There&rsquo;s
-a mine there and whoever wants it can have it. I don&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">THE LOST CANYON has some evidence of reality. Jack Allen, a
-miner and prospector of almost superhuman endurance, got drunk at
-Skidoo and filled with remorse and shame the morning after, decided to
-leave and seek a job at the Keane Wonder Mine, about 40 miles northeast
-across Death Valley. To save distance, Allen took a short cut over
-Sheep Mountain and in going through a canyon he picked up a piece of
-quartz and seeing a fleck of color, he broke it. Excited by its apparent
-richness he filled his pockets, noted his bearings and went on his way.
-When he reached the Keane Wonder he took the ore to Joe McGilliland,
-the company&rsquo;s assayer, who became more excited than the finder.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll put it in the button for half,&rdquo; Joe said.</p>
-<p>Allen agreed. The assay showed values as high as $20,000 to the
-ton. He closed his office and ran out to find Jack working in the mine.
-&ldquo;Chuck this job,&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Go back to that claim quick as you can.
-Get your monuments up and record the notices.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jack Allen bought a burro, loaded his supplies and went back only
-to discover that a cloudburst had destroyed all his landmarks.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_163">163</div>
-<p>Both Shorty Harris and &ldquo;Bob&rdquo; Eichbaum, who established Stove
-Pipe Wells resort, considered this the best chance among all the legends
-of lost mines. It is wild, rough, and largely virgin country and because
-of that the hardiest prospectors always passed it by.</p>
-<p class="tb">THE LOST JOHNNIE. An Indian known as Johnnie used to come
-into York&rsquo;s store at Ballarat about once a month with gold in bullion
-form. He would sell it to York or trade it for supplies. Frequently he
-had credits amounting to a thousand or more dollars.</p>
-<p>Other Indians soon learned of Johnnie&rsquo;s mine and would trail him
-when he left town, but none were able to outsmart him. That it was
-near Arastre Spring was generally believed. Upon one occasion Johnnie
-was seen leaving the old arastre and disappear in the canyon. Immediately
-evidence that the arastre had been used within the hour was
-discovered. For years no prospector worked in that region without keeping
-his eyes peeled for Johnnie&rsquo;s bonanza.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_164">164</div>
-<h2 id="c25"><span class="small">Chapter XXIII</span>
-<br />Panamint City. Genial Crooks</h2>
-<p>The first search for gold in Death Valley country was in Panamint
-Valley.</p>
-<p>From the summit of the Slate Range on the road from Trona, one
-comes suddenly upon an enchanting and unforgettable view of the
-Panamint. If you are one who thrills at breath taking scenery you will
-not speak. You will stand and look and think. Your thoughts will be
-of dead worlds; of the silence spread like a shroud over all that you see.</p>
-<p>Below, a yellow road twists in and out of hidden dry washes, around
-jutting hills to end in the green mesquite that hides the ghost town of
-Ballarat. There the Panamint lifts two miles&mdash;its gored sides a riot of
-pastelled colors.</p>
-<p>If you have coached yourself with trivia of history it will require
-imagination&rsquo;s aid to accept the fact that from this wasteland came
-fortunes and industries of world-wide fame. From New York to San
-Francisco on envied social thrones, sit the children and grandchildren
-of those who with pick and shovel, here dug the family fortune in
-ragged overalls.</p>
-<p>Only recently a descendant of one of these, living in a city far removed,
-informed me her mansion was for sale, &ldquo;because the neighborhood
-is being ruined....&rdquo; A sheep herder newly rich on war profits,
-was moving in.</p>
-<p>Eleven miles north of Ballarat, Surprise Canyon, which leads to
-Panamint City, opens on a broad, alluvial fan that tilts sharply to the
-valley floor.</p>
-<p>In April, 1873, W. T. Henderson, whose first trip into Death Valley
-country was made to find the Lost Gunsight, came again with R. B.
-Stewart and R. C. Jacobs. In Surprise Canyon they discovered silver
-which ran as high as $4000 a ton and filed more than 80 location
-notices.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_165">165</div>
-<p>Henderson was an adventurer of uncertain character who had
-roamed western deserts like a nomad. During the Indian war that
-threatened extermination of the white settlers in Inyo county, Thieving
-Charlie, a Piute, was induced by outnumbered whites to approach his
-warring tribesmen under a flag of truce and succeeded in getting eleven
-of them to return with him to Camp Independence for a peace talk.
-Henderson, with two companions waylaid and murdered them.</p>
-<p>He had been a member of the posse organized by Harry Love to
-shoot on sight California&rsquo;s most famous bandit&mdash;Joaquin Murietta
-and boasted that he fired the bullet which killed the glamorous Joaquin.
-It was he who cut off and pickled the bandit&rsquo;s head as evidence to get
-the reward. At the same time he pickled the hand of Three Fingered
-Jack Garcia, Joaquin&rsquo;s chief lieutenant, and the bloodiest monster the
-West ever saw. Garcia had an odd habit of cutting off the ears of his
-victims and stringing them for a saddle ornament. The slaying of
-Joaquin was not a pretty adventure and as the details came out, Henderson
-renounced the honor.</p>
-<p>The grewsome vouchers which obtained the reward became the
-attraction for the morbid on a San Francisco street and there above the
-din of traffic one heard a spieler chant the thrills it gave &ldquo;for only two
-measly bits....&rdquo; The exhibit was destroyed in the San Francisco fire
-and earthquake of 1906.</p>
-<p>In his book, &ldquo;On the Old West Coast&rdquo; Major Horace Bell states
-that Henderson confided to him there was never a day nor night that
-Joaquin Murietta did not come to him and though headless, would
-demand the return of his head; that Henderson was never frightened
-by the apparition, which would vanish after Henderson explained why
-he couldn&rsquo;t return the head and his excuse for cutting it off.</p>
-<p>Bell quotes Henderson: &ldquo;I would never have cut Joaquin&rsquo;s head off
-except for the excitement of the chase and the orders of Harry Love.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>To give credence to the ghost story he says of Henderson, &ldquo;He was
-for several years my neighbor and a more genial and generous fellow I
-never met....&rdquo; Major Bell, it is known, was not always strictly
-factual.</p>
-<p>Following the Surprise Canyon strike, Panamint City was quickly
-built and quickly filled with thugs who lived by their guns; gamblers
-and painted girls who lived by their wits.</p>
-<p>An engaging sidewalk promoter known as E. P. Raines, who
-possessed a good front and gall in abundance, but no money, assured
-the owners of the Panamint claims that he could raise the capital necessary
-for development. He set out for the city, registered at the leading
-hotel, attached the title of Colonel to his name; exchanged a worthless
-<span class="pb" id="Page_166">166</span>
-check for $25 and made for the barroom. It was no mere coincidence
-that Mr. Raines before ordering his drink, parked himself alongside
-a group of the town&rsquo;s richest citizens and began to toy with an
-incredibly rich sample of ore. It was natural that members of the group
-should notice it. Particularly the multimillionaire, Senator John P. Jones,
-Nevada silver king.</p>
-<p>Soon the charming crook was the life of the party. His $25 spent,
-he actually borrowed $1000 from Jones. Having drunk his guests under
-the table, Mr. Raines went forth for further celebration and landed broke
-in the hoosegow. Hearing of his misadventure, his new friends promptly
-went to his rescue. &ldquo;... Outrage ... biggest night this town ever
-had....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>To make amends for the city&rsquo;s inhospitable blunder, Raines was
-taken to his hostelry, given a champagne bracer and made the honor
-guest at breakfast. &ldquo;Where&rsquo;s the Senator?&rdquo; he asked. Informed that
-Senator Jones had taken a train for Washington, Raines quickened
-&ldquo;Why, he was expecting me to go with him....&rdquo; He jumped up,
-fumbled through his pockets in a pretended search for money. &ldquo;Heavens&mdash;my
-purse is gone!&rdquo; Instantly a half dozen hands reached for the hip
-and Mr. Raines was on his way.</p>
-<p>It required but a few moments to get $15,000 from the Senator
-and his partner, Senator William R. Stewart, for the Panamint claims.
-He also sold Jones the idea of a railroad from a seaport at Los Angeles
-to his mines and this was partially built. The project ended in Cajon
-Pass. The scars of the tunnel started may still be seen.</p>
-<p>Jones and Stewart organized the Panamint Mining Company with
-a capital of $2,000,000. Other claims were bought but immediate
-development was delayed by difficulties in obtaining title because many
-of the owners were outlaws, difficult to find. A few were located in the
-penitentiary and there received payment. For some of the claims the
-promoters paid $350,000.</p>
-<p>On June 29, 1875, the first mill began to crush ore from the Jacobs
-Wonder mine. Panamint City became one of the toughest and most
-colorful camps of the West. It was strung for a mile up and down
-narrow Surprise Canyon. It was believed that here was a mass of silver
-greater than that on the Comstock and shares were active on the
-markets.</p>
-<p>The most pretentious saloon in the town was that of Dave Nagle,
-who later as the bodyguard of U. S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen J.
-Field, killed Judge David Terry, distinguished jurist, but stormy petrel
-of California Vigilante days. Judge Terry had represented, then married
-his client, the Rose of Sharon&mdash;Sarah Althea Hill&mdash;in her suit to
-<span class="pb" id="Page_167">167</span>
-determine whether she was wife or mistress of Senator Sharon, Comstock
-millionaire. Feuding had resulted with Field, the trial judge.
-Meeting in a railroad dining room, Judge Terry slapped Justice Field&rsquo;s
-face and Nagle promptly killed Terry.</p>
-<p>Poker at Panamint City was never a piker&rsquo;s game. Bets of $10,000
-on two pair attracted but little comment. Gunning was regarded as a
-minor nuisance, but funerals worried the town&rsquo;s butcher. He had the
-only wagon that had survived the steep canyon road into the camp. &ldquo;I
-bought it,&rdquo; he complained, &ldquo;to haul fresh meat, but since there&rsquo;s no
-hearse I never know when I&rsquo;ll have to unload a quarter of beef to haul
-a stiff to Sourdough Canyon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Panamint City attained an estimated population of 3,000. Harris
-and Rhine, merchants, having the only safe in the town permitted
-patrons to deposit money for safe keeping and often had large sums.
-On one occasion they had the $10,000 payroll of the Hemlock mine.</p>
-<p>A clerk arriving early at the store, suddenly faced two gentlemen
-who directed him to open the safe and pass out the money. &ldquo;Just as well
-count it as you fork it over,&rdquo; one ordered. The clerk had counted $4000
-when he was told to stop. &ldquo;This&rsquo;ll do for the present,&rdquo; the spokesman
-said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll come back and get the rest.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yeh,&rdquo; added his partner. &ldquo;Too damned many thugs in this town.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They sallied forth on a spending spree. The down-and-out along
-the mile-long street received generous portions of the loot and a widow
-whose husband had been killed in a mine explosion, received $500.</p>
-<p>These bandits, Small and McDonald, thereafter became incredibly
-popular and the legend follows that what they stole from those who
-had, they shared with those who hadn&rsquo;t.</p>
-<p>Wells-Fargo and Company offered a reward of $1000 for their
-capture, but their arrest was never accomplished. Invariably they were
-apprised of the approach of pursuers and simply retired to some convenient
-canyon. The bandits further endeared themselves to the citizenry
-when Stewart and Jones arranged for the importation of a hundred
-Chinese laborers.</p>
-<p>This aroused the ire of the white miners and a meeting was called
-to protest. &ldquo;This is a white man&rsquo;s town,&rdquo; was the cry of labor.</p>
-<p>Small and McDonald agreed. &ldquo;Just leave it to us,&rdquo; they told the
-leaders. &ldquo;No use in a lotta fellows getting hurt.&rdquo; They stationed themselves
-at the mouth of the canyon and when the coolies arrived, a
-sudden volley from the bandits&rsquo; six-guns brought the caravan to a halt.
-The frightened Chinamen leaped from the hacks and fled in panic
-across the desert and Panamint remained a white man&rsquo;s town.</p>
-<p>Engaged at work around their hideout, Hungry Bill stopped to beg
-<span class="pb" id="Page_168">168</span>
-for food. They told the Indian to wait until they finished their task.
-His sullen impatience angered Small who booted him down the trail.
-Hungry Bill left cursing and told a prospector whom he met that he
-would return shortly with his tribesmen and assassinate the entire
-population.</p>
-<p>Panamint City was warned but Small and McDonald declared that
-since they had started the trouble, they alone should end it. Accordingly,
-they set out for Hungry Bill&rsquo;s ranch to stop the attack before it
-started. But near Hungry Bill&rsquo;s stone corral they were ambushed by the
-Indians. The bandits shot their way into the corral and barricading
-themselves, killed and wounded about half of the renegades, after which
-the remainder fled.</p>
-<p>Panamint City harbored a hoard of unsung assassins who merely
-lay in wait, shot the unwary victim down, took his poke, rolled the
-body into a ravine, went up town to spend the money.</p>
-<p>One killer who came decided to dominate the field and with that in
-view he set forth to establish himself quickly as a gunman not to be
-trifled with. He chose to display his prowess upon an inoffensive, quiet
-faro dealer known as Jimmy Bruce, who, it was easy to see, &ldquo;was just
-a chicken-livered punk.&rdquo; The publicity of a well-done murder in such a
-setting would give prestige.</p>
-<p>Armed with two guns, the bully contrived to start an argument with
-Bruce. The indoor white of the gambler seemed to grow whiter as the
-rage of his towering tormenter reached the climax. The players moved
-out of range. The bartenders ducked under the counter. Patrons helpless
-to intervene, fled from the kill.</p>
-<p>A shot rang out. Cautiously, the bartenders lifted their heads. On
-the floor lay the bad man. Mr. Bruce was calmly lighting a cigar.</p>
-<p>There was consternation among the killers. They swore vengeance.
-After five of them had fallen before Bruce&rsquo;s gun, he was let alone.</p>
-<p>The silent faro dealer, it was learned too late, was surpassingly
-quick on the trigger.</p>
-<p>A spot somewhat distant from the regular cemetery was chosen for
-the burial place and it became known as Jim Bruce&rsquo;s private graveyard.</p>
-<p>Remi Nadeau, a French Canadian, was the first to haul freight into
-Panamint City. Nadeau was a genius of transportation. There was no
-country too rough, too remote, too wild for him. He came to Los
-Angeles in 1861 from Utah and teamed as far east as Montana.</p>
-<p>The Cerro Gordo mine, on the eastern side of Owens Lake in Inyo
-County began to ship ore in 1869 and Nadeau obtained a contract to
-haul the ore to Wilmington where it was shipped by boat to San Francisco.
-He soon had to increase his equipment to 32 teams, using more
-<span class="pb" id="Page_169">169</span>
-than 500 animals. For his return trip he bought such commodities as he
-could peddle or leave for sale at stations he built along the route.</p>
-<p>In 1872, the contract having expired, Judson and Belshaw, owners
-of the mine, received a lower bid and Nadeau was left with 500 horses
-on his hands and heavily in debt. He wanted to dispose of his outfit for
-the benefit of his creditors but they had confidence in him and persuaded
-him to &ldquo;carry on.&rdquo; Borax discovered in Nevada saved him.
-Meanwhile the lower bidder on the Cerro Gordo job proved unsatisfactory
-and Judson and Belshaw asked Nadeau to take the old job back.
-But now Nadeau informed them they would have to buy a half interest
-in his outfit and advance $150,000 to construct relay stations at Mud
-Springs, Mojave, Lang&rsquo;s Springs, Red Rock, Little Lake, Cartago, and
-other points. They gladly agreed.</p>
-<p>Shortly after Nadeau began hauling across the desert, he picked up
-a man suffering from gunshot and crazed from thirst. Taking the victim
-to his nearest station, he left instructions that he be cared for.</p>
-<p>Sometime afterward, one of Nadeau&rsquo;s competitors whose trains had
-been held up several times by outlaws, wondered why none of Nadeau&rsquo;s
-teams or stations had been molested. At the time, Nadeau himself didn&rsquo;t
-know that the fellow whom he&rsquo;d picked up on the desert was Tiburcio
-Vasquez, the bandit terror.</p>
-<p>Vasquez naively condoned his banditry. It disgusted him at dances
-he said, to see the senoritas of his race favor the interloping Americans.
-He had a singular power over women. When Sheriff William Rowland
-effected his capture, women of Los Angeles filled his cell with flowers.
-He was hanged at San Jose.</p>
-<p>Nadeau was now hauling ore from the Minnietta and the Modoc
-mines in the Argus Range on the west side of Panamint Valley. The
-Modoc was the property of George Hearst, the father of the publisher,
-William Randolph Hearst. These mines were directly across the valley
-from Panamint City and because of Nadeau&rsquo;s record for building roads
-in places no other dared to go, Jones and Stewart engaged him to haul
-out of Surprise Canyon, which was barely wide enough in places for a
-burro with a pack.</p>
-<p>On a hill, locally known as &ldquo;Seventeen&rdquo;&mdash;that being the per cent of
-grade, located on the old highway between Ballarat and Trona, one may
-see the dim outline of a road pitching down precipitously to the valley
-floor. This road was built by Nadeau and one marvels that anything
-short of steam power could move a load from bottom to top.</p>
-<p>Acquiring a fortune, Nadeau built the first three-story building in
-Los Angeles and the Nadeau Hotel, long the city&rsquo;s finest, retained favor
-<span class="pb" id="Page_170">170</span>
-among many wealthy pioneer patrons long after the more glamorous
-Angelus and Alexandria were built in the early 1900&rsquo;s.</p>
-<p>The first ore from the Panamint mines was shipped to England and
-because of its richness showed a profit, but difficulties arose in recovery
-processes which they did not know how to overcome. The mines would
-have paid fabulously under present day processes.</p>
-<p>Finis was written to the story of Panamint after two hectic years and
-in 1877 Jones and Stewart had lost $2,000,000 and quit. It would be
-more factual to state that since they had received from the public
-$2,000,000 to put into it, who lost what is a guess.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_171">171</div>
-<h2 id="c26"><span class="small">Chapter XXIV</span>
-<br />Indian George. Legend of the Panamint</h2>
-<p>The previous chapter records accepted history of the silver discovery
-at Panamint City. Indian George Hansen had another version which he
-told me at his ranch 11 miles north of Ballarat. It fits the period and
-the people then in the country.</p>
-<p>George, when a youngster lived in the Coso Range. East of the
-Coso there was no white man for 100 miles and renegades fleeing from
-their crimes and deserters from the Union army sought hideouts in the
-Panamint. Thus George was employed as a guide by three outlaws to
-lead them to safe refuge.</p>
-<p>George, a Shoshone, had both friends and relatives among the Shoshones
-and the Piutes and took the bandits into Surprise Canyon where
-a camp for the night was chosen. While staking out his pack animals,
-George discovered a ledge of silver ore. Breaking off a chunk, he stuck
-it into his pocket, saying nothing about it until they were out of the
-locality. Then he showed the specimen and to promote a deal, gave one
-of them a sample. They wanted to see the ledge but George refused to
-disclose it. Then George said the three fellows stepped aside and after
-talking in whispers told him they didn&rsquo;t like the country and returning
-with him to the Coso Range, went on their way. Two or three months
-later they were back to bargain.</p>
-<p>George had traded with the white man before. They had always
-given him a few dollars and a rosy promise. &ldquo;Now me pretty foxy. So
-I say, &lsquo;no want money. Maybe lose.&rsquo; Him say, &lsquo;what hell you want?&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Heap good job all time I live.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Okay,&rsquo; him say. &lsquo;We give you job.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I show claim.&rdquo; George paused, a look of smoldering hate in his
-dark eyes, then added: &ldquo;I get job. Two weeks. Him say, &lsquo;you fired.&rsquo; I get
-$50.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_172">172</div>
-<p>All Indians and many of the old timers believe that the ledge
-George found was that for which Jones and Stewart paid $2,000,000.</p>
-<p>George made another deal worthy of mention. The town of Trona
-on Searles&rsquo; Lake needed the water owned by George&rsquo;s relative, Mabel,
-who herded 500 goats and sold them to butchers at Skidoo, Goldfield,
-and Rhyolite where they became veal steak or lamb chops. Trona
-offered $30 a month for the use of the water. Mabel consulted
-George as head man of the Shoshones and advised Trona that the sum
-would not be considered. It must pay $27.50 or do without. A superstition
-regarding numbers accounted for the price George fixed for the
-water.</p>
-<p>My acquaintance with Indian George began on my first trip to
-Ballarat with Shorty Harris and was the result of a stomach ache Shorty
-had. I suggested a trip to a doctor at Trona instead.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, sir. I&rsquo;ll see old Indian George. If these doctors knew as much
-as these old Indians, there wouldn&rsquo;t be any cemeteries.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I asked what evidence he had of George&rsquo;s skill.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Plenty. You know Sparkplug (Michael Sherlock)? He was in a
-bad way. Fred Gray put a mattress in his pickup, laid Sparkplug on it
-and hauled him over to Trona. Nurses took him inside. Doctor looked
-him over and came out and asked Fred if he knew where old Sparkplug
-wanted to be buried. &lsquo;Why, Ballarat, I reckon,&rsquo; Fred said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you take him back quick. He&rsquo;ll be dead when you get
-there. Better hurry. He&rsquo;ll spoil on you this hot weather.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fred raced back, taking curves on Seventeen with two wheels
-hanging over the gorge, but he made it; stopped in front of Sparkplug&rsquo;s
-shack, jumped out and called to me to bring a pick and shovel. Then
-he ran over to Bob Warnack&rsquo;s shack for help to make a coffin. Indian
-George happened to ride by the pickup and saw Sparkplug&rsquo;s feet sticking
-out. He crawled off his cayuse, took a look, lifted Sparkplug&rsquo;s
-eyelids and leaving his horse ground-hitched, he went out in the brush
-and yanked up some roots here and there. Then he went up to Hungry
-Hattie&rsquo;s and came back with a handful of chicken guts and rabbit
-pellets; brewed &rsquo;em in a tomato can and when he got through he funneled
-it down Sparkplug&rsquo;s throat and in no time at all Sparkplug was
-up and packing his flivver to go prospecting. If you don&rsquo;t believe me,
-there&rsquo;s Sparkplug right over there tinkering with his car.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>George&rsquo;s age has been a favorite topic of writers of Death Valley
-history for the last 30 years.</p>
-<p>I stopped for water once at the little stream flumed out of Hall&rsquo;s
-Canyon to supply the ranch. He was irrigating his alfalfa in a temperature
-<span class="pb" id="Page_173">173</span>
-of 122 degrees. I had brought him three or four dozen oranges
-and suggested that Mabel would like some of the fruit.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Heavy work for a man of your age,&rdquo; I said.</p>
-<p>He bit into an orange, eating both peeling and pulp. &ldquo;Me papoose.
-Me only 107 years old.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There were less than a dozen oranges left when I began to cast
-about for a tactful way to preserve a few for Mabel. Seeing her chopping
-wood in the scorching sun I said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet Mabel would like an
-orange just now. Shall I call her?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;no&mdash;&rdquo; George grunted. &ldquo;Oranges heap bad for squaw,&rdquo; and
-speeding up his eating, he removed the last menace to Mabel.</p>
-<p>Once George told me of watching the sufferings of the Jayhawkers
-and Bennett-Arcane party:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Me little boy, first time I see white man. Whiskers make me think
-him devil. I run. I see some of Bennett party die. When all dead, we
-go down. First time Indians ever see flour. Squaws think it what make
-white men white and put it on their faces.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I asked George why he didn&rsquo;t go down and aid the whites. &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
-he asked, &ldquo;to get shot?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How many Shoshones are left?&rdquo; I asked George.</p>
-<p>He counted them on his fingers. &ldquo;Nineteen. Soon, none.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>George died in 1944 and it is safe I believe, to say that for 110
-years he had baffled every agency of death on America&rsquo;s worst desert.
-Because his ranch was a landmark and the water that came from the
-mountains was good, it was a natural stopping place and he was known
-to thousands. Following a curious custom of Indians George adopted
-the Swedish name Hansen because it had euphony he liked.</p>
-<p class="tb">The Panamint is the locale of the legend of Swamper Ike, first told
-I believe by Old Ranger over a nation-wide hookup, while he was M.C.
-of the program &ldquo;Death Valley Days.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A daring, but foolhardy youngster, with wife and baby, undertook
-to cross the range. Unacquainted with the country and scornful of its
-perils, he reached the crest, but there ran out of water. He left his wife
-and the baby on the trail, comfortably protected in the shade of a bluff
-and started down the Death Valley side of the range to find water.</p>
-<p>After a thorough search of the canyons about, he climbed to a
-higher level, scanned the floor of the valley. Seeing a lake that reflected
-the peaks of the Funeral Range he made for it under a withering sun.
-He learned too late that it was a mirage and exhausted, started back
-only to be beaten down and die.</p>
-<p>After waiting through a night of terror, the young mother prepared
-<span class="pb" id="Page_174">174</span>
-a comfortable place for her baby and went in search of her husband.
-She too saw the blue lake and made for it, saw it vanish as he had.
-Then she discovered his tracks and undertook to follow him, but she
-also was beaten down and fell dead within a few feet of his lifeless
-body.</p>
-<p>A band of wandering Cocopah Indians crossing the range, found
-the baby. They took the child to their own habitation on the Colorado
-river and named him Joe Salsuepuedes, which is Indian for &ldquo;Get-out-if-you-can.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Joe grew up as Indian, burned dark by the desert sun. But he had
-an idea he wasn&rsquo;t Indian. Learning that he was a foundling, picked up
-in the Panamint, he set out for Death Valley, possessed of a singular
-faith that somehow he would discover evidence that he was a white man.</p>
-<p>He obtained a job as swamper for the Borax Company. When he
-gave his name the boss said, &ldquo;Too many Joe&rsquo;s working here. We&rsquo;ll call
-you Ike.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Early Indians, as you may see in Dead Man&rsquo;s Canyon, the Valley of
-Fire, and numerous canyons in the western desert had a habit of scratching
-stories of adventure or signs to inform other Indians of unusual
-features of a locality on the canyon walls&mdash;often coloring the tracing
-with dyes from herbs or roots. Knowing this, Swamper Ike was always
-alert for these hieroglyphs on any boulder he passed or in any canyon
-he entered.</p>
-<p>One day Swamper Ike went out to look for a piece of onyx that he
-could polish and give to the girl he loved. While seeking the onyx he
-noticed a flat slab of travertine and on it the picture story of &ldquo;Get-out-if-you-can.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Swamper Ike had justified his faith.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_175">175</div>
-<h2 id="c27"><span class="small">Chapter XXV</span>
-<br />Ballarat. Ghost Town</h2>
-<p>In the early 1890&rsquo;s gold discovered on the west side of the Panamint
-in Pleasant Canyon caused the rush responsible for Ballarat. For more
-than 20 years the district had been combed by prospectors holed in at
-Post Office Spring, about one half mile south of the site upon which
-Ballarat was subsequently built. Here the government had a small
-army post and here soldiers, outlaws, and adventurers received their
-mail from a box wired in the crotch of a mesquite tree.</p>
-<p>The Radcliffe, which was the discovery mine was a profitable producer.
-The timbers and machinery were hauled from Randsburg over
-the Slate Range and across Panamint Valley, to the mouth of the
-canyon. There, under the direction of Oscar Rogers, it was packed on
-burros and taken up the steep grade to the mine site.</p>
-<p>Copperstain Joe, a noted half-breed Indian made the next strike.
-With a specimen, he went to Mojave where he showed it to Jim Cooper.
-For five dollars and a gallon of whiskey he led Cooper to the site.</p>
-<p>But his deal with Cooper interested me less than the cunning of his
-burro, Slick. Copperstain strode into a hardware store and asked for
-a lock. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s for Slick&rsquo;s chain. Picks a lock soon as I turn my back&mdash;dam&rsquo;
-him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The merchant showed him a lock of intricate mechanism, &ldquo;He won&rsquo;t
-pick this. Costs more, but worth it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care what it costs,&rdquo; Copperstain said and bought it. Later
-he looped the chain around the burro&rsquo;s feet, fastened the links with the
-lock and tethered Slick to a stake. &ldquo;That&rsquo;ll hold you&mdash;&rdquo; he said defiantly.</p>
-<p>The next morning he was back in the store, belligerent. &ldquo;Helluva
-lock you sold me. Slick picked it in no time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Impossible.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The burro&rsquo;s gone, ain&rsquo;t he?&rdquo; Copperstain bristled, and reaching
-<span class="pb" id="Page_176">176</span>
-into his pocket, produced the lock. &ldquo;See that nail in the keyhole? I
-didn&rsquo;t put it there. Slick just found a nail&mdash;that&rsquo;s all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The future of Pleasant Canyon seemed assured and it was decided
-to move the two saloons and grocery to the flats below, where a town
-would have room to grow.</p>
-<p>When citizens met to choose a name, George Riggins, a young
-Australian suggested the new town be given a name identified with gold
-the world over. Ballarat in his native country met the requirement and
-its name was adopted.</p>
-<p>Shorty Harris discovered The Star, The Elephant, the World Beater,
-The St. Patrick. In Tuba, Jail, Surprise, and Goler Canyons more strikes
-were made. It is curious that none were made in Happy Canyon.</p>
-<p>The production figures of early mines are rarely dependable and
-the yield is often confused with that obtained by swindlers from outright
-sale or stock promotion. My friend, Oscar Rogers, superintendent,
-told me the Radcliffe produced a net profit of approximately $500,000.
-Less authentic are figures attributed to the following:</p>
-<p>The O. B. Joyful in Tuba Canyon, $250,000; The Gem in Jail
-Canyon, $150,000; and Shorty Harris&rsquo; World Beater, $200,000.</p>
-<p>Among the noted of Ballarat residents was John LeMoyne, a
-Frenchman. He discovered a silver mine in Death Valley but the best
-service he gave the desert was a recipe for coffee. He walked into
-Ballarat one day and had lunch. The lady who owned the cafe asked
-if everything suited. &ldquo;All but the coffee,&rdquo; John said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How do you make your coffee?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Madame, there&rsquo;s no trick about making good coffee. Plenty coffee.
-Dam&rsquo; little water.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>From one end of Death Valley country to the other, coffee is judged
-by John LeMoyne&rsquo;s standard. You may not always get it, but mention
-it and the waiter will know.</p>
-<p>For years LeMoyne held his silver claim in spite of offers far beyond
-its value, which he believed was $5,000,000. But once when the
-urge to return to his beloved France was strong and Goldfield, Tonopah,
-and Rhyolite excited the nation, he weakened and decided to accept an
-offer said to have been $200,000. &ldquo;But,&rdquo; he told the buyers, &ldquo;it must
-be cash.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After a huddle, John&rsquo;s demand was met and a check offered. John
-brushed it aside. &ldquo;But this eez not cash,&rdquo; he complained. No, he
-wouldn&rsquo;t go to town to get the cash. He had work to do. &ldquo;You get eet.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Disgusted, the buyers left and John LeMoyne continued to wear
-his rags, eat his beans, and dream of La Belle France.</p>
-<p>A young Shoshone Indian came into Keeler excited as an Indian
-<span class="pb" id="Page_177">177</span>
-ever gets, looked up Shorty Harris and said: &ldquo;Short Man, your friend
-go out. No come back. Maybe him sick.&rdquo; It was midsummer, but
-LeMoyne had undertaken to reach his claim.</p>
-<p>In the bottom of the valley, Shorty identified LeMoyne&rsquo;s tracks by
-a peculiar hobnail which LeMoyne used in his shoes. He followed the
-tracks to Cottonwood Spring and there found an old French pistol
-which he knew had belonged to LeMoyne. Convinced he was on the
-right trail, he went on and after a mile or two met Death Valley Scotty.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know why you&rsquo;re here,&rdquo; Scotty said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve just found his body.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>LeMoyne was partially eaten by coyotes and nearby were his dead
-burros. Though tethered to the mesquite with slender cotton cords
-which they could easily have broken, the patient asses had elected to
-die beside him.</p>
-<p>And there ended the dream of the glory trail back to the France
-he loved. Those who believe in the jinx will find something to sustain
-their faith in the record of John LeMoyne&rsquo;s mine.</p>
-<p>After LeMoyne&rsquo;s death, Wild Bill Corcoran who had made and
-lost fortunes in the lush days of Rhyolite, set out from Owens Valley
-to relocate it. Never a ranting prohibitionist, Bill believed that the best
-remedy for snake bite was likker in the blood when the snake bit. When
-he reached Darwin he was not feeling well and stopped long enough for
-a nip with friends and to get a youngster to drive his car and help at
-the camp.</p>
-<p>It was midsummer, with record temperature but Bill wanted John
-LeMoyne&rsquo;s mine. Becoming worse in the valley he stopped in Emigrant
-Canyon and sent the boy back for a doctor. Bill crawled into an old
-shack under the hill. When the boy and the doctor came, they found
-Bill Corcoran on the floor, his hand stretched toward a bottle of bootleg
-liquor. His soul had gone over the hill.</p>
-<p>One after another, five others followed Bill to file on LeMoyne&rsquo;s
-claim and each in turn joined Bill over the hill.</p>
-<p>LeMoyne&rsquo;s Christian name was Jean. His surname has been spelled
-both Lemoigne and Lemoine. The claim from which Indians had formerly
-taken lead was filed upon by LeMoyne in 1882.</p>
-<p>Joe Gorsline, a graduate of Columbia, with a background of wealth,
-came to Ballarat during the rush, looked over the town. &ldquo;Wouldn&rsquo;t
-spend another day in this dump for all the gold in the mint,&rdquo; he announced.
-He had a few drinks, heard a few yarns, eyed a few girls in
-the honkies. It was all new to Joe, but something about the informalities
-of life appealed to him and in a little while he was renamed Joe Goose.</p>
-<p>Then the town&rsquo;s constable shot its Judge and Ballarat chose him to
-succeed the deceased. Not liking the laws of the code, he made a batch
-<span class="pb" id="Page_178">178</span>
-of his own, which were never questioned. While watching the flow of
-time and liquor, he &ldquo;went desert&rdquo; and put aside the things that might
-have been for the more alluring things-as-they-are.</p>
-<p>When Ballarat became a ghost town, Joe Gorsline took his body to
-the city, but his soul remained and years afterward when he died, a
-hearse came down the mountain and in it was Joe Gorsline, home again.
-He is buried in a little cemetery out on the flat and in the spring the
-golden sun cups, grow all around and you walk on them to get to his
-grave.</p>
-<p>Adding a cultural touch to Ballarat was an English nobleman who
-&ldquo;going desert&rdquo; tossed his title out of the window, donned overalls and
-brogans and promptly earned the approving verdict, &ldquo;An all right guy.&rdquo;
-Soon he was drinking with the toper and dancing with the demimonde.
-Like others, he did his own cooking and washing. He lived in a &rsquo;dobe
-cabin which, because it was on the main street, had its window shades
-always down.</p>
-<p>But there was one little custom of his British routine he never
-abandoned and this was discovered by accident. He stopped in John
-Lambert&rsquo;s saloon one evening before going to his cabin for dinner. He
-left his watch on the bar and had gone before Lambert noticed it. An
-hour later Lambert, having an opportunity to get away, took the watch
-to the cabin. John thus reported what he saw: &ldquo;He was eating his
-dinner and bigod&mdash;he had on a white shirt, wing collar, and swallow
-tail.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ballarat chuckled but no one suggested a lynching party. They
-knew how deep grow the roots in the soil one loves. &ldquo;Maybe,&rdquo; said
-Lambert, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s why John Bull always wins the last battle. They give
-up nothing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A familiar figure throughout Death Valley country was Johnny-Behind-the-Gun&mdash;small
-and wiry and as much a part of the land as the
-lizard. His moniker was acquired from his habit of settling disputes
-without cluttering up the courts. Johnny, whose name was Cyte, accounted
-for three or four sizable fortunes. Having sold a claim for
-$35,000 he once bought a saloon and gambling hall in Rhyolite, forswearing
-prospecting forever.</p>
-<p>Johnny advertised his whiskey by drinking it and the squareness of
-his game, by sitting in it. One night the gentleman opposite was overwhelmed
-with luck and his pockets bulged with $30,000 of Johnny&rsquo;s
-money. Having lost his last chip, Johnny said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll put up dis place.
-Ve play vun hand and quit.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Johnny lost. He got up, reached for his hat. &ldquo;Vell, my lucky friend,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_179">179</span>
-I&rsquo;ll take a last drink mit you.&rdquo; He tossed the liquor, lighted a cigar.
-&ldquo;Goodnight, chentlemen,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I go find me anudder mine.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Johnny had several claims near the Keane Wonder in the Funeral
-Mountains, held by a sufferance not uncommon among old timers, who
-respected a notice regardless of legal formalities.</p>
-<p>Senator William M. Stewart, Nevada mining magnate, had employed
-Kyle Smith, a young mining engineer to go into the locality and
-see what he could find. Smith, a capable and likable chap, in working
-over the districts, located several claims open for filing by reason of
-Johnny&rsquo;s failure to do his assessment work.</p>
-<p>It is not altogether clear what happened between Johnny and Smith,
-but Smith&rsquo;s body was found after it had lain in the desert sun all day.
-There being no witnesses the only fact produced by sheriff and coroner
-was that Smith was dead. Johnny went free. Other escapades with
-Johnny-Behind-the-Gun occurred with such frequency that he was finally
-removed from the desert for awhile as the guest of the state.</p>
-<p>In a deal with Tom Kelly, Johnny was hesitant about signing some
-papers according to an understanding. His trigger quickness was explained
-to Kelly who was not impressed. He went to Johnny and asked
-him to sign up. Johnny refused. Kelly said calmly, &ldquo;Johnny, do you see
-that telephone pole?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I see. Vot about?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you don&rsquo;t sign, you&rsquo;re going to climb it.&rdquo; Johnny signed. He
-put his gun away when he acquired a lodging house at Beatty, where
-he died in 1944.</p>
-<p>Reminiscing one day in the old saloon he had owned, Chris Wichts
-slapped the bar: &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve taken as much as $65,000 over this old bar in
-one month.&rdquo; He had none of it now but in a little cabin in Surprise
-Canyon with a stream running by his door, and a memory that retained
-only the laughs of his life, he didn&rsquo;t need $65,000.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A city fellow came into the cafe one day. Snooty sort. I told him
-we had some nice tender burro steaks. He flew off the handle. Said he
-wanted porterhouse or nothing. I served him. When he finished he
-apologized for being rude and said his porterhouse was good as he ever
-ate. I went into the kitchen and came back with a burro shank, shoved
-it in his face and said, &lsquo;Mister, you ate the meat off this burro leg.&rsquo; I
-thought he&rsquo;d murder me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>One day when Ballarat travel was heavy, a dapper passenger
-dropped off the stage, entered the saloon, bought a drink and paid for
-it with a $20 gold piece, getting $19.50 in change. When he&rsquo;d gone,
-Shorty Harris standing by said: &ldquo;Chris, that money doesn&rsquo;t sound right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Chris examined it. The gold piece had been split, hollowed out and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_180">180</span>
-filled with alloy. Chris worried awhile, then brightened when he noticed
-his place was full of loafers playing solitaire; pulling at soggy pipes;
-waiting for a &ldquo;live one.&rdquo; &ldquo;Boys,&rdquo; said Chris, &ldquo;old Whiskers ain&rsquo;t getting
-much play. Let&rsquo;s go down and see him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Whiskers was his competitor down the street.</p>
-<p>A few moments later the bat-wing doors of Whiskers&rsquo; place flew
-open and Chris and his bums swarmed in. Chris laid an arm on the bar.
-&ldquo;What&rsquo;ll it be fellows?&rdquo; Then he turned to the loafers along the walk
-&ldquo;Line up, you guys and have a drink.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They did and when the drinks were downed, Chris laid the phony
-gold piece on the bar, received his change and with his crowd returned
-to his bar. An hour later he was still laughing to himself over the trick
-he&rsquo;d played on Whiskers when his own sawed-off doors flapped open
-and Whiskers barged in, followed by his own mob of moochers.
-Whiskers ordered for the house and laid down the $20. Chris gulped
-and gave the change.</p>
-<p>That coin circulated in every store and saloon in Ballarat for more
-than a year. Everybody knew it was phony, but accepted it without
-question and came to regard it with something akin to affection. Then
-one day a gentleman in spats came along and the $20 gold piece
-left forever.</p>
-<p>Billy Heider, a slim, genial fellow who had been a hat salesman in
-a smart toggery shop in Los Angeles came not for gold but to escape
-alimony. His easy smile masked a stubbornness that nothing could
-conquer. &ldquo;... she got a smart lawyer and dated the Judge,&rdquo; Billy said.</p>
-<p>He hung his bench-made suit on a peg, slipped into overalls, cut off
-one sleeve of his tuxedo to cover a canteen, spread the rest on the floor
-beside his bed to step on in the morning and so&mdash;transition. Eventually
-he began to prospect, kept at it for 20 years; found nothing, but he
-beat alimony.</p>
-<p>Usually mines were &ldquo;salted&rdquo; in shaft or tunnel to separate the
-sucker from his money, but it remained for a Ballarat woman to find a
-simpler way.</p>
-<p>Michael Sherlock, known as Sparkplug, because of continual trouble
-with that feature of his automobile, gave me her formula: &ldquo;She owned
-a claim in Pleasant Canyon that had a showing of gold. She wanted
-$10,000 for it. A rich auto dealer came along to look at it. He was
-worth at least $5,000,000. She told him to take his mining engineer
-and get his own samples and when he got back she&rsquo;d have a chicken
-dinner waiting.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They got the samples, came down, parked the car in front of her
-house, got their bellies full of chicken and went back to the city. A
-<span class="pb" id="Page_181">181</span>
-couple of days later the millionaire was back. Couldn&rsquo;t get his money
-into her hands quick enough. Word went out there would be work
-enough for all comers and we figured on boom times. But he couldn&rsquo;t
-find ore to match her samples.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What happened?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;While he was eating chicken dinner that night, her Indian hired
-man went out to his auto and switched samples.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I asked Sparkplug why he didn&rsquo;t sue her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you had $5,000,000 would you want the whole dam&rsquo; state
-laughing at you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">Randsburg, which boomed in the early Eighties as a result of gold
-strikes in the Yellow Aster, the King Solomon, and later the Kelly silver
-mine, soon became one of the principal eastern gateways to the Panamint
-and to Death Valley by way of Granite Wells and Wingate Pass.</p>
-<p>A curious story of a man haunted by his conscience is that of
-William Dooley and told to me by Dr. Samuel Slocum, who had come
-to Randsburg from Arizona after making a fortune in gold.</p>
-<p>A howling blizzard had driven everyone from the streets and the
-campers in Fiddlers&rsquo; Gulch into Billy Hevron&rsquo;s saloon. Dr. Slocum, lost
-in the blinding snow and stumbling along the street, felt with his hands
-for walls he couldn&rsquo;t see, while a barroom noise guided him to the door.</p>
-<p>At the bar he saw William Paddock, mining engineer. &ldquo;Bill, you&rsquo;re
-the man I&rsquo;m looking for. I can&rsquo;t find anyone who can tell me how to
-get to Goler Canyon in Panamint Valley. You&rsquo;ve been there and I
-want you to draw me a map.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Paddock, finishing a drink ordered one for Slocum and introduced
-him to a man at his side: &ldquo;This is Mr. Dooley,&rdquo; Paddock said, and the
-doctor saw a great hulk of a man with black whiskers, small eyes, and
-an uneasy look. Before a word was spoken Slocum sensed Dooley&rsquo;s
-instant dislike of him.</p>
-<p>Slocum ordered a round of drinks. Dooley refused and walked to
-the farther end of the bar.</p>
-<p>Paddock followed Dooley after a moment, talked with him and
-returned to his drink. He said to Slocum: &ldquo;I&rsquo;m in a curious situation.
-I don&rsquo;t know much about Dooley, but down in Mexico he saved my
-life. Now it&rsquo;s my turn to save his. He just killed a man in Arizona and
-came here to hide out. I&rsquo;m taking him to Goler Canyon soon as this
-blizzard is over. He thinks you are a deputy U. S. Marshal and claims
-that he has seen you before and that you are no doctor.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He may have seen me in Arizona at Gold Hill,&rdquo; Slocum said.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_182">182</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The best way I can help you,&rdquo; Paddock continued, &ldquo;is to sign the
-road as I go and after a day or two you can follow us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On the day following Paddock&rsquo;s departure Doctor Slocum set out.
-The next day he came upon a newly-made grave, outlined with stone.
-On a redwood board used for the marker was carved this inscription:</p>
-<p class="center"><i>&ldquo;Here lies Bill Dooley who died by giving Wm. Paddock the dam&rsquo; lie.&rdquo;</i></p>
-<p>With no reason to shed tears, the Doctor following Paddock&rsquo;s signs,
-reached Goler Canyon, made camp and knowing that Paddock intended
-to occupy a stone cabin farther up the gulch, he started up the
-trail. He&rsquo;d gone only a short distance when he saw Paddock approaching,
-waving his arms in a signal for Slocum to go back. The Doctor
-stopped.</p>
-<p>When Paddock came down he said, &ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake, Doc, get back
-to your camp. Dooley is behind that big boulder above us with a
-Winchester trained on you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, I thought he was dead....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Paddock smiled grimly. &ldquo;He worked all night digging that
-grave. Said it would throw you off his trail. I can&rsquo;t get it out of his
-head you&rsquo;re a marshal.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Slocum had made a gruelling trip to free and open country and he
-had no intention of being driven out. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go up and talk to him,&rdquo; he
-said. Paddock warned him that it would be useless and might be fatal,
-but Slocum insisted and they went up the trail, Paddock going in front
-to shield him.</p>
-<p>Dooley was outside the cabin with a rifle in the crook of his arm,
-his finger on the trigger.</p>
-<p>Slocum was unarmed. He calmly assured Dooley he was not an
-officer; that he had no intention of disclosing Dooley&rsquo;s whereabouts,
-&ldquo;But this is free country and I intend to stay.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Dooley&rsquo;s reaction was a noncommittal grunt. However, violence
-was avoided. When the Doctor returned to his camp, Paddock decided it
-would be best to accompany him as a measure of safety. Explaining
-to Dooley that he would remain with the Doctor to inspect a claim, he
-remained as a body-guard for three days. On the fourth he went up to
-the stone cabin and discovered Dooley had loaded his wagon with all
-the camp equipment and supplies, including a green water keg and left
-for parts unknown.</p>
-<p>Just across the range was Hungry Bill&rsquo;s country. A year or so
-afterward Doctor Slocum, crossing the mountains into Death Valley,
-stopped at Hungry Bill&rsquo;s Six Spring Canyon Ranch and noticed a green
-<span class="pb" id="Page_183">183</span>
-cask. Hungry Bill said that he had found the keg floating on the ooze
-near Badwater. &ldquo;Somewhere under that ooze,&rdquo; Doctor Slocum said, &ldquo;lies
-Bill Dooley, his team, his wagon, and its load.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">An interesting character of this area was Toppy Johnson, who
-scouted for Senator George Hearst and later had charge of copper claims
-belonging to William Randolph Hearst, near Granite Wells.</p>
-<p>While there, Toppy employed Aunt Liza, a negro cook. Aunt Liza
-came from Randsburg with an enormous trunk. She was a good cook,
-but an awful thief and nearly everything Toppy owned except the furniture
-disappeared piece by piece. When his razor vanished he looked
-through the trunk and found the loot. He didn&rsquo;t want to lose Aunt Liza,
-so he removed a few of the more needed things, leaving the rest to be
-recovered by instalments. Thereafter it was a game of losing and
-retrieving.</p>
-<p>As strange a coincidence as I&rsquo;ve ever heard attended the end of
-Toppy Johnson. Sent to Mexico when Pancho Villa was overrunning
-the country, he fled to Mazatlan when Pancho announced he would
-shoot on sight both native and foreigners who were not in sympathy
-with his marauding.</p>
-<p>All boats were crowded with refugees, both native and alien, but
-Toppy was permitted to join the hundreds willing to sleep on deck.
-Toppy unwittingly chose a spot over the saloon where drunken celebrants
-soon began shooting at the ceiling.</p>
-<p>A shot penetrated the flooring of the craft&rsquo;s deck and Toppy&rsquo;s
-abdomen. An American physician sleeping alongside was awakened by
-Toppy&rsquo;s groans, attended him, but saw there was no hope. The physician
-asked his name, the object being to notify the victim&rsquo;s relatives.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If my doctor were only here,&rdquo; Toppy moaned, &ldquo;he could save me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who is your doctor?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Dr. Samuel Slocum, of Pasadena,&rdquo; Toppy said, and died.</p>
-<p>The physician was Dr. Slocum&rsquo;s nephew.</p>
-<p>Thirty-four miles south of Ballarat at the end of a narrow canyon
-leading from Wingate Pass road into Death Valley, one comes upon
-a breath-taking riot of color. Pink hills. Blue hills. Hills of dazzling
-white, mottled with black and green. Yellow hills. Maroon and jade
-hills.</p>
-<p>A gentleman of fine fancy and fluent tongue passed that way,
-learned that under the hills was a deposit of epsom salts. Then he went
-to Hollywood where salts met money. He talked convincingly of nature&rsquo;s
-drug store. &ldquo;Just sink a shovel into the ground and up comes two
-<span class="pb" id="Page_184">184</span>
-dollars&rsquo; worth of medicine recommended by every doctor in the country.
-No educating the public. Everybody knows epsom salts.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was no flaw in that argument and Hollywood dipped into its
-pockets. A mono rail was strung from Searles&rsquo; Lake over the Slate Range
-through Wingate Pass and up the slopes to the pink hills. There rose
-Epsom City. For awhile the balanced cars scooted along that gleaming
-rail, bearing salts to market&mdash;dreams of wealth to Hollywood.</p>
-<p>But the world had enough salts, Epsom City failed. Nothing is left
-to remind one of the incredible folly but a few boards and a pile of
-bones. The bones are those of wild burros slaughtered by vandals who
-in a project as inhuman as ever excited lust for money, went through
-the country and killed the helpless animals, to be sold to manufacturers
-of chicken and dog food.</p>
-<p>A singular character known as Dad Smith, who had come to California
-with John C. Fremont was one of the earliest settlers at Post
-Office Springs. Smith had been a scout with Kit Carson in the Apache
-wars in Arizona and returned to the lower Panamint in 1860, to hunt
-gold in Butte Valley, where, nearing 90 he dug a tunnel 100 feet in
-length. Found there delirious, with pneumonia, by Dr. Samuel Slocum,
-he was removed to the Doctor&rsquo;s camp where Mrs. Slocum nursed him
-through his convalescence. When he recovered he decided to give Mrs.
-Slocum a token of his gratitude.</p>
-<p>At the time, Barstow and Daggett were the most convenient stations
-for prospectors in the southerly area. At Daggett they likkered at Mother
-Featherlegs&rsquo;. At Barstow they bought at Judge Gooding&rsquo;s store or at
-Aunt Hannah&rsquo;s, and drank at Sloan and Hart&rsquo;s saloon. Dad&rsquo;s money,
-as was that of others, was left with them for safe keeping. So he walked
-every mile of a ten days&rsquo; round trip to get a box of chocolates for Mrs.
-Slocum. A little chore like that made no difference to Dad. He encountered
-a desert rain and arrived at the Slocum cabin drenched. They
-persuaded him to remain overnight and led him to a tent.</p>
-<p>Seeing that water dripped from Dad&rsquo;s blankets, Dr. Slocum went
-for dry bedding. When he returned, Dad had his own bedding spread
-on the ground. &ldquo;Here, Dad&mdash;take this dry bedding....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not on your life,&rdquo; Dad said as he crawled into his own. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d catch
-cold, sure as hell.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Two noted athletes of the period went into the Panamint for a vacation.
-When they asked for a guide, they were told to get Dad, but after
-looking him over they decided he lacked stamina, but engaged him
-when they could find no one else. The route was over the Panamint
-into Death Valley and back through Redlands Canyon&mdash;a trip to test
-the hardiest.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_185">185</div>
-<p>On the third day Dad returned alone. Asked about his companions,
-he grumbled: &ldquo;They&rsquo;re down and out. Now I&rsquo;ve got to haul &rsquo;em in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He took his burros, lashed the victims securely on the beasts and
-brought them in.</p>
-<p>Remembered by oldsters, was Archie McDermot, a big fellow of
-unbelievable strength who was an all-purpose employee of Dr. Slocum.</p>
-<p>While they were camped at Barstow one night, Archie went up town
-to pass a cheerful hour and during the course of the evening a brawl
-started and Archie suddenly found himself the object of a mass attack
-by five burly miners. Archie knocked them down as they came, threw
-them out and returned to his drinking. The constable went in to take
-Archie. Archie tossed him through the door. The officer didn&rsquo;t want to
-kill him, and collecting a posse of four brawny helpers, tried again.
-Archie pitched them out.</p>
-<p>Being a friend of Slocum, the constable now went to see the Doctor.
-&ldquo;Doc, can&rsquo;t you come down and do something about Archie? Knowing
-how you need him, I don&rsquo;t want to kill him....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Doctor Slocum went, discovered that Archie, after throwing everybody
-out of the place, had seized the long heavy bar, turned it on its
-side and was sitting on the edge with a bottle in each hand. Doctor
-Slocum regarded the wreckage and then Archie. &ldquo;Good Lord, Archie,
-what have you done?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing, Doc,&rdquo; Archie said. &ldquo;Just having a nip. Take one on the
-house....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What about this fight?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fight?&rdquo; repeated Archie. &ldquo;Oh, that&mdash;some fellows tried to start
-a little ruckus but I didn&rsquo;t pay much attention to it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But if Archie had no fear of a dozen live men, he was terrorized
-by a dead one.</p>
-<p>Doctor and Mrs. Slocum, with Archie, were leaving their camp in
-the Panamint. The thermometer under the canopy of the vehicle registered
-135 degrees&mdash;hot for an April day, even in Death Valley country.
-As they drove along, the Doctor noticed some clothing on a bush.
-&ldquo;Seems strange,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s look around.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Archie skirmished through the bushes. Presently he returned, his
-face white, horror in his eyes. He grabbed the wagon wheel, his quivering
-bulk shaking the heavily loaded vehicle. &ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake, Doc.
-Go and look!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Doctor saw a sight as pitiable as it is ever man&rsquo;s lot to see&mdash;a
-young fellow dying from thirst on the desert. His protruding tongue
-split in the middle. Unable to speak, though retaining a spark of life.
-The fingers of both hands worn to stubs.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_186">186</div>
-<p>Kneeling, Doctor Slocum asked the victim where he came from;
-where he wished to go. No sign came from the staring eyes. Finally
-the Doctor said, &ldquo;We want to help you. We have water. We&rsquo;re going
-to take you home.&rdquo; At the mention of home, a feeble smile came, and
-two tears, the last two drops in that wasted body, rolled down his
-cheeks and dried in the desert sun and then he died. There was nothing
-to do but bury the body.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have to help me, Archie,&rdquo; the Doctor said.</p>
-<p>A look of terror came into Archie&rsquo;s eyes. &ldquo;Doc,&rdquo; he pleaded, &ldquo;ask
-me anything but that....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The man who&rsquo;d cleaned up Barstow, quailed in superstitious fear at
-the thought of touching the dead.</p>
-<p>They looked around for a place to dig a grave. But the country was
-covered with malpai and lava rock and they couldn&rsquo;t dig in it. The
-Doctor wrapped the body in a piece of canvas and Mrs. Slocum aided in
-lifting it into the wagon. She drove the team while the Doctor and
-Archie walked along, looking for loose earth and finally found a spot.
-Archie dug the grave. The Doctor lowered the body and Archie with
-shut eyes, filled the grave.</p>
-<p>A press story of the finding brought a flood of letters from all parts
-of the country. Such stories always do. From mothers, wives, sweethearts&mdash;but
-none from men. It&rsquo;s always the woman who cares.</p>
-<p>Such deaths are due to inexperience. This boy had no canteen. Just
-around the corner of a jutting hill was Lone Willow Spring.</p>
-<p>Though scarcely a vestige remains, there was once a town at Lone
-Willow. Saloons and an enormous dance hall lured the Bad Boys and
-there the trail ended for scores reported as missing men.</p>
-<p>Cyclone Wilson, a nephew of Shady Myrick who built a sizable
-export trade in gem stones, and for whom Myrick Springs is named,
-was taking a wagon load of Chinese coolies to work at Old Harmony.
-All Chinamen looked alike to Cyclone and he didn&rsquo;t know that these
-were newcomers. It was his custom to discharge his passengers at the
-foot of a steep hill near Lone Willow and require them to walk to the
-top.</p>
-<p>As usual, upon reaching this grade he set his brakes and waited
-for the coolies to get out. None moved, then he ordered them out. The
-Chinamen sat in stony silence. He repeated the order with no result
-other than jabber among themselves. Angered, Cyclone reached for his
-long blacksnake whip. It had a &ldquo;cracker&rdquo; on the end of which was a
-buckshot. With unerring accuracy he aimed the whip at the nearest
-coolie and overboard he went. The others leaped out and drawing
-knives from their big loose sleeves, massed for assault.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_187">187</div>
-<p>Cyclone reached for a pistol&mdash;always carried on the wagon seat,
-and started shooting. His toll was five Chinamen.</p>
-<p>The cause of the murders, it was later learned, was due entirely to
-the fact that none of the Chinamen had understood a word Cyclone
-had spoken.</p>
-<p>A Chinaman at Lone Willow, who spoke English made his countrymen
-bury the dead.</p>
-<p class="tb">Today Ballarat is a ghost town and soon every trace of it will be
-gone. Roofless walls lift like prayerful arms to gods that are deaf.</p>
-<p>In the late afternoon when the shadows of the Argus Range have
-crept across the valley, a few old timers come out of leaning dobes and
-stand bareheaded to look about. The afterglow of a sun is upon the
-peaks and the afterglow of dreams in their hearts. They people the
-empty streets with men long dead, some in unmarked graves in the
-little cemetery on the flat just beyond the town. Some on the trails,
-God only knows where. These dead they see pass in and out of the
-old saloons. These dead they hear again. Glasses tinkle, slippered feet
-dance again.</p>
-<p>Tomorrow? Their pale eyes lift to the canyons and though dimmed
-a little, they see one hundred billion dollars.</p>
-<p class="tb">What of Shoshone? It remains with changes of course. The shanties
-hauled from Greenwater have been hauled somewhere else. No longer
-do I step from my car as I have so often and call to those on the bench.
-&ldquo;Move over, fellows&rdquo; and hear their familiar greeting: &ldquo;Where the hell
-<i>you</i> been?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Instead, I drive to an air conditioned cabin and stroll back to the
-former site of the bench, so long the social center. There I see a sign
-over a door which reads, &ldquo;Crowbar&rdquo; and I enter a dreamy cavern with
-dimmed, rosy lights, hear the music of ice against glass and refuse to
-believe the startling sight of an honest-to-goodness old timer tending
-bar in a clean white shirt.</p>
-<p>Likewise I balk at the white lines I walk between as I cross the
-asphalt road to the store.</p>
-<p>But above Shoshone the same blue skies stretch without end over
-a world apart, and under them are the same uncrowded trails; the same
-far horizons for the vagabond&rsquo;s foot and the peace &ldquo;which passeth all
-understanding.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_189">189</div>
-<h2 id="c28"><span class="small">INDEX</span></h2>
-<p class="center"><a href="#index_A" class="ab">A</a> <a href="#index_B" class="ab">B</a> <a href="#index_C" class="ab">C</a> <a href="#index_D" class="ab">D</a> <a href="#index_E" class="ab">E</a> <a href="#index_F" class="ab">F</a> <a href="#index_G" class="ab">G</a> <a href="#index_H" class="ab">H</a> <a href="#index_I" class="ab">I</a> <a href="#index_J" class="ab">J</a> <a href="#index_K" class="ab">K</a> <a href="#index_L" class="ab">L</a> <a href="#index_M" class="ab">M</a> <a href="#index_N" class="ab">N</a> <a href="#index_O" class="ab">O</a> <a href="#index_P" class="ab">P</a> <span class="ab">Q</span> <a href="#index_R" class="ab">R</a> <a href="#index_S" class="ab">S</a> <a href="#index_T" class="ab">T</a> <span class="ab">U</span> <a href="#index_V" class="ab">V</a> <a href="#index_W" class="ab">W</a> <span class="ab">X</span> <a href="#index_Y" class="ab">Y</a> <span class="ab">Z</span></p>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_A"><b>A</b></dt>
-<dt>Amargosa River, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></dt>
-<dt>American Potash and Chemical Co., <a href="#Page_33">33</a></dt>
-<dt>Archilette Spring, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></dt>
-<dt>Augerreberry, Pete, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_B"><b>B</b></dt>
-<dt>Ballarat, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></dt>
-<dt>Ballarat Mines, production figures, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></dt>
-<dt>Beatty, Monte, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></dt>
-<dt>Benson, Myra, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>-134-135</dt>
-<dt>Benson, Jack, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>-134-135</dt>
-<dt>Bennett, Bellerin&rsquo; Teck, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></dt>
-<dt>Bennett, Charles, freighter, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></dt>
-<dt>Bennett&rsquo;s Well, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></dt>
-<dt>Black Mountain, story of, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>-61</dt>
-<dt>Bodie, toughest of the Gold Towns, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></dt>
-<dt>Borax, discovery of, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></dt>
-<dt>Bradbury Well, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></dt>
-<dt>Bowers, Sandy, gets a fortune for a board bill, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></dt>
-<dt>Brannan, Sam, Mormon leader, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></dt>
-<dt>Brandt, &ldquo;Arkansas&rdquo; Ben, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></dt>
-<dt>Breyfogle, Jacob; stories of, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></dt>
-<dt>Brown, Charles, Deputy Sheriff at Greenwater; store at Shoshone; road builder, supervisor, superintendent of Lila C. Mine at Dale; elected to senate; <a href="#c17">Chap. XV</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></dt>
-<dt>Brown (nee Fairbanks) Stella, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>-105, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></dt>
-<dt>Brougher Wils, at Tonopah, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></dt>
-<dt>Bruce, Jimmy, private graveyard, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></dt>
-<dt>Bullfrog Mine, discovered, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>-54-55</dt>
-<dt>Butler, James, discoverer of Tonopah silver, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>-49-50, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></dt>
-<dt>Bulette, Julia, famed madam of Virginia City, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_C"><b>C</b></dt>
-<dt>Cahill, Washington, Borax Co. official, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-36</dt>
-<dt>Calico Mountains, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></dt>
-<dt>Calico, stories of, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></dt>
-<dt>Carrillo, Jose Antonio, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></dt>
-<dt>Carson, Kit, guide and scout in Shoshone country, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>-94-95</dt>
-<dt>Casey, John &ldquo;Cranky,&rdquo; noted desert character, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>-138</dt>
-<dt>Cave Spring, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></dt>
-<dt>Cazaurang, Jean, wealthy miser, death of, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>-101</dt>
-<dt>China Ranch, stories of, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></dt>
-<dt>Clark, W. A., <a href="#Page_60">60</a></dt>
-<dt>Clark, &ldquo;Patsy,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_60">60</a></dt>
-<dt>Coleman, W. T., <a href="#Page_27">27</a>-28, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></dt>
-<dt>Comstock, &ldquo;Pancake,&rdquo; famous lode named for; buys a woman; suicide, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></dt>
-<dt>Corcoran, &ldquo;Wild Bill,&rdquo; famous prospector; death of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></dt>
-<dt>Counterfeit gold piece, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>-180</dt>
-<dt>Cross, Ed, partner and co-discoverer of Bullfrog Mine, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_D"><b>D</b></dt>
-<dt>Dayton, James, superintendent Furnace Creek Ranch, death of, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-36, <a href="#Page_122">122</a></dt>
-<dt>Dante&rsquo;s View, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></dt>
-<dt>Davis, Buford, buys Noonday Mine; death of, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></dt>
-<dt>Death Valley, cause of; history of, geology, temperatures; first settlers, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></dt>
-<dt>Decker, Judge, convivial Ballarat Justice of Peace, murdered, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></dt>
-<dt>Delameter, John, early freighter, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></dt>
-<dt>Diamond Tooth Lil, glamorous madam, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>-63</dt>
-<dt>Dooley, William, bad man, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>-182-183</dt>
-<dt>Driscoll, Dan, partner of Shorty Harris, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a></dt>
-<dt>Dublin Gulch, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></dt>
-<dt>Dumont, Eleanor, (Madame Moustache), charmer of the Forty Niners, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_E"><b>E</b></dt>
-<dt>Eichbaum, Bob, toll road, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></dt>
-<dt>Egbert, Adrian, at Cave Spring, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></dt>
-<dt>Epsom City, salts deposit; mono rail, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_F"><b>F</b></dt>
-<dt>Fairbanks, Ralph Jacobus, at Ash Meadows; at Greenwater; at Shoshone, stories of; death; <a href="#c18">Ch. XVI</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>-105, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-111</dt>
-<dt>Fairbanks, Celestia Abigail, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></dt>
-<dt>Fennimore, James, &ldquo;Old Virginny&rdquo;; named Virginia City; swapped Ophir Mine for blind pony, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></dt>
-<dt>Flake, Sam, old timer, poker student, death, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></dt>
-<dt>Fremont, John C., <a href="#Page_93">93</a></dt>
-<dt>French, Dr. Darwin, seeks Lost Gunsight, names Darwin Falls and town of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></dt>
-<dt>Funston, General Frederick, identifies and names Death Valley flora, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_G"><b>G</b></dt>
-<dt>Gayhart, W. C., assayer, part owner of Tonopah Discovery Mine, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>-50</dt>
-<dt>George, &ldquo;Rocky Mountain,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_76">76</a></dt>
-<dt>Godey, Alex, Fremont scout, fights Indians at Resting Springs, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></dt>
-<dt class="pb" id="Page_190">190</dt>
-<dt>Goldfield, named, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></dt>
-<dt>Goodwin, Ray, park official, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></dt>
-<dt>Gorsline, Joe, Ballarat Judge, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>-178</dt>
-<dt>Gower, Harry, Borax Co. official, mgr. Furnace Creek Ranch, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></dt>
-<dt>Grandpa Springs, hole-in for old time prospectors, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></dt>
-<dt>Grantham, Louise, girl prospector, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></dt>
-<dt>Gray, Fred, Ballarat prospector, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></dt>
-<dt>Gray, W. B., <a href="#Page_77">77</a></dt>
-<dt>Greenwater, copper strike, stories of, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></dt>
-<dt>Gunsight Mine, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>-22, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>-158</dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_H"><b>H</b></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Happy Bandits&rdquo; (Small and McDonald), <a href="#Page_164">164</a>-165, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>-168</dt>
-<dt>Harris, Frank &ldquo;Shorty,&rdquo; <a href="#c19">Ch. XVII</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></dt>
-<dt>Harrisburg, scene of gold strike, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></dt>
-<dt>Harmon, Pete, misses millions, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></dt>
-<dt>Hellgate Pass, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></dt>
-<dt>Heider, Billy, flees alimony, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></dt>
-<dt>Heinze, August, Copper King, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></dt>
-<dt>Henderson, W. T., names Telescope Peak, kills Joaquin Murietta, famous bandit, and pickles head; sees victim&rsquo;s ghost, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>-165</dt>
-<dt>Hilton, Frank, finds body of James Dayton, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></dt>
-<dt>Hoagland George, burial of, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>-73</dt>
-<dt>Holmes, Helen, story of thriller, &ldquo;Perils of Pauline,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_127">127</a></dt>
-<dt>Hungry Hattie, Ballarat character, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></dt>
-<dt>Huhn, Ernest (Siberian Red), diligent prospector, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></dt>
-<dt>Hungry Bill, Panamint chief, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></dt>
-<dt>Hunt, Capt. Jefferson, Mormon guide; prominent in California culture, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_I"><b>I</b></dt>
-<dt>Ickes, Harold, visits Shoshone, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-150</dt>
-<dt>Indians of the desert, conflicting opinions of, <a href="#c9">Ch. VII</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></dt>
-<dt>Indian George Hansen, owner of Indian Ranch, discovered silver at Panamint City, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>-172-173</dt>
-<dt>Ishmael, George, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_J"><b>J</b></dt>
-<dt>Johnnie Mine, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></dt>
-<dt>Johnson, Albert, owner and builder of Scotty&rsquo;s Castle, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></dt>
-<dt>Johnson, Bob, tamps friend&rsquo;s grave, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>-73</dt>
-<dt>Johnson, Toppy, supt. of desert mine of W. R. Hearst, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></dt>
-<dt>Jones, Herman, discovered Red Wing Mine, road builder, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></dt>
-<dt>Jones, J. P., Nev. silver king at Panamint city, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></dt>
-<dt>Johnny-Behind-the-Gun, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>-179</dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_K"><b>K</b></dt>
-<dt>Kellogg, Lois, owner of Manse Ranch, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></dt>
-<dt>Kempfer, Don, mining engineer, official of Sierra Talc. Co., <a href="#Page_158">158</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_L"><b>L</b></dt>
-<dt>Lee, Philander, owner of Resting Springs Ranch, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></dt>
-<dt>Lee, Cub, built first house at Shoshone, slays wife and son, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></dt>
-<dt>Lee, John D., established Lee&rsquo;s Ferry; executed for massacre of emigrants at Mountain Meadows, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></dt>
-<dt>Lee, &ldquo;Shoemaker,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_98">98</a></dt>
-<dt>Legend of Swamper Ike, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>-174</dt>
-<dt>Le Moyne, Jean, recipe for coffee, story of mine, death, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>-177</dt>
-<dt>Lone Willow, murders at, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></dt>
-<dt>Longstreet, Jack, Ash Meadows bad man, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></dt>
-<dt>Lost Mines, all of <a href="#c24">Ch. XXII</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>-163</dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_M"><b>M</b></dt>
-<dt>Main, Eddie, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></dt>
-<dt>McDermot, Archie, Strong Man, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></dt>
-<dt>McGarn, &ldquo;Whitey Bill,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></dt>
-<dt>Manly, William Lewis, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></dt>
-<dt>Manse Ranch, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></dt>
-<dt>Metbury Spring, first name of Shoshone, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></dt>
-<dt>Myers, Al, discoverer of Gold Field, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></dt>
-<dt>Modine, Dan, deputy sheriff, early owner of China Ranch, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></dt>
-<dt>Montgomery, Bob, owner of Montgomery Shoshone Mine, buys Skidoo discovery claim on sight, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>-56</dt>
-<dt>Murray, Billy, saves John S. Cook Bank and Goldfield from &ldquo;run,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_51">51</a></dt>
-<dt>Murietta, Joaquin, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></dt>
-<dt>Myrick, Shady, exports gem stones, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_N"><b>N</b></dt>
-<dt>Nadeau, Remi, genius of transportation, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></dt>
-<dt>Nagle, Dave, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></dt>
-<dt>Naylor, George, sheriff, treasurer, supervisor of Inyo Co., <a href="#Page_102">102</a></dt>
-<dt>Nels, Dobe Charlie, at Bodie; at Shoshone, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>-75</dt>
-<dt>Noble, Levi, geologist, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>-40-41</dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_O"><b>O</b></dt>
-<dt>Oakes, Sir Harry; in Alaska; at Greenwater; at Shoshone; makes strike in Canada; builds palace at Niagara Falls; knighted by King George V; slain by son-in-law, it is said&mdash;a renegade French count, in Bahamas, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>-112</dt>
-<dt>Oddie, Tasker, mining tycoon, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>-50, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></dt>
-<dt>Owens Valley, rape of, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>-148</dt>
-<dt class="pb" id="Page_191">191</dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_P"><b>P</b></dt>
-<dt>Pacific Coast Borax Co., organized, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>-29</dt>
-<dt>Pahrump Ranch, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></dt>
-<dt>Panamint City, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>-167-168</dt>
-<dt>Panamint Tom, story of, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></dt>
-<dt>Perry, J. W. S., supt. Borax Co., designer of 20 mule team wagons, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></dt>
-<dt>Pietsch, Henry, shot Ballarat judge, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></dt>
-<dt>Plato, Joe, on the Comstock Lode, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></dt>
-<dt>Post Office Spring, early army post, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_R"><b>R</b></dt>
-<dt>Radcliffe Mine, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></dt>
-<dt>Raines, E. P., genial crook, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>-166</dt>
-<dt>Randsburg, gold discovered at, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></dt>
-<dt>Rasor, Clarence, Borax Co. official, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></dt>
-<dt>Resting Springs, named by Mormons, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></dt>
-<dt>Rich, Charles, Mormon pioneer, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></dt>
-<dt>Rickard, sports promoter, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Rocky Mountain&rdquo; George, prospector, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></dt>
-<dt>Rogers, John, Bennett-Arcane party, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></dt>
-<dt>Rosie, squaw, love life of, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></dt>
-<dt>Ryan, Joe, desert philosopher, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>-71, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></dt>
-<dt>Rhyolite, discovery of gold, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>-55</dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_S"><b>S</b></dt>
-<dt>Saratoga Springs, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></dt>
-<dt>Schwab, Charles M., at Rhyolite; at Greenwater, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></dt>
-<dt>Scott, Bob, discoverer of Confidence Mine, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></dt>
-<dt>Scott, Mary, squaw, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></dt>
-<dt>Scott, Walter, &ldquo;Death Valley Scotty,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#c21">Ch. XIX</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></dt>
-<dt>Scrugham, James, Governor and U.S. Senator of Nevada, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></dt>
-<dt>Searles, John, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>-33, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></dt>
-<dt>Sherlock, Michael, &ldquo;Sparkplug,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_180">180</a></dt>
-<dt>Skidoo, gold strike, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>-56</dt>
-<dt>Slim, Death Valley, bad man, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>-103</dt>
-<dt>Slim, Jackass, <a href="#c4">Ch. II</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>; <a href="#c13">Ch. XI</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>-65</dt>
-<dt>Slocum, Dr. Samuel, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>-186</dt>
-<dt>Smith, Francis M. (&ldquo;Borax Smith&rdquo;), <a href="#Page_29">29</a>-33, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></dt>
-<dt>Smith, &ldquo;Dad,&rdquo; Old Man of the Mountains; came with Kit Carson, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></dt>
-<dt>Smith, Pegleg, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>-98-99</dt>
-<dt>Snake House, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></dt>
-<dt>Sorrells, Maury, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></dt>
-<dt>Stewart, Wm. R., Nevada Senator, mines at Panamint City, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></dt>
-<dt>Stiles, Ed, first driver of 20 mule team, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></dt>
-<dt>Stump Springs, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></dt>
-<dt>Stovepipe Wells, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_T"><b>T</b></dt>
-<dt>Teck, Bellowin&rsquo;, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></dt>
-<dt>Tecopa Cap, Indian Chief, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></dt>
-<dt>Tecopa Hot Spring, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></dt>
-<dt>Tecopa, John, discoverer of Johnnie Mine, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></dt>
-<dt>Telescope Peak, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></dt>
-<dt>Temperature in Death Valley, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></dt>
-<dt>Tonopah, discovery of silver, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></dt>
-<dt>Towne&rsquo;s Pass, named, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></dt>
-<dt>Trona, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></dt>
-<dt>Twenty-mule team, first driver, design of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></dt>
-<dt>Tule Hole, story of, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>-37</dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_V"><b>V</b></dt>
-<dt>Vasquez, Tiburcio, bandit terror, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></dt>
-<dt>Volmer, Joe, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_W"><b>W</b></dt>
-<dt>Wagons, <a href="#Page_20">20</a> mule team, design of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></dt>
-<dt>Wamack, Bob, at Confidence Mine, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></dt>
-<dt>Weed, Tom, noted Indian, death of, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>-90</dt>
-<dt>Wichts, Chris, noted Ballarat character, story of, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></dt>
-<dt>Williams, George, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></dt>
-<dt>Williams, Bill, preacher and plunderer, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>-97</dt>
-<dt>Wilson, Cyclone, massacre of Chinamen at Lone Willow, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></dt>
-<dt>Wingfield, George, famous gambler, luck of, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></dt>
-<dt>Winters, Aaron and Rosie, discovered borax in Death Valley, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></dt>
-<dt>Wolfskill, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_Y"><b>Y</b></dt>
-<dt>Younger, Tillie, member of Jesse James guerrillas, dies at Shoshone, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></dt>
-<dt>Yundt, John, Lee and Sam, owners of Manse Ranch, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>-100</dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="box">
-<h2><span class="small"><i>The Author</i></span></h2>
-<p>Nearly every newspaperman looks forward to the time when
-he can get away from the pressure of his journalistic job and
-retire to a little cottage by the sea, or a cabin in the mountains,
-and write a book.</p>
-<p>The only difference between William Caruthers&mdash;Bill, to his
-friends&mdash;and a majority of the others is that he did write his book
-on the spot, preserved it and after retiring to his orange grove
-near Ontario, California he got around to the job of revision,
-which resulted in these pages.</p>
-<p>Born on the banks of the Cumberland River in Tennessee,
-Caruthers&rsquo; career as a journalist began when he became editor of
-the local weekly paper at the age of 16. He took the job, he
-explains, because no one else wanted it.</p>
-<p>His family wanted him to be a lawyer, and in compliance
-with their wishes he returned to school and was admitted to
-the bar in Tennessee when he was 19. But he wanted to be a
-newspaperman, and vowed that when he won his first $2,000 fee
-he would quit law. Successful as a young lawyer, the time
-soon came when he won a tough case against a big insurance
-company&mdash;and that was his chance. He closed his law office
-forever.</p>
-<p>For a time he was editor of Illustrated Youth and Age, the
-largest monthly in the South. He wrote feature articles for the
-Nashville American, Nashville Banner, the old New York World,
-the Christian Science Monitor, fiction for Collier&rsquo;s Weekly and
-other important magazines. His writings have appeared in most
-Western magazines.</p>
-<p>After coming to California he first went to work on the
-Los Angeles Examiner, quitting that job to become a publisher
-and his little magazine, <i>The Bystander</i> gained nationwide
-circulation. While editing this magazine he became editor of
-Los Angeles&rsquo; first theatrical magazine, <i>The Rounder</i>, which was
-a &ldquo;must&rdquo; on the list of early movie stars and soon discovered that
-the most lucrative field for a journalist was in ghost writing. As
-a &ldquo;ghost&rdquo; he addressed big political conventions, assemblies of
-governors and mayors and in one instance, a jury as the prosecutor.
-One eastern industrialist paid him a fabulous fee when the address
-Caruthers wrote for him brought a great ovation.</p>
-<p>Finally his physician warned him to slow down. It was then&mdash;in
-1926&mdash;that he came to the desert, and, during the intervening
-25 years, has spent much of his time in the Death Valley region.
-He has witnessed the transition of Death Valley from a prospector&rsquo;s
-hunting ground to a mecca for winter tourists. This is a
-book of the old days in Death Valley.</p>
-</div>
-<h2><span class="small">Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</span></h2>
-<ul><li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>Corrected a few palpable typos.</li>
-<li>Added page numbers to plates (in roman numerals).</li>
-<li>Included a transcription of the text within some images.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li></ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Loafing Along Death Valley Trails, by
-William Caruthers
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOAFING ALONG DEATH VALLEY TRAILS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 51899-h.htm or 51899-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/1/8/9/51899/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 26b5204..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/map1_hr.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/map1_hr.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index be6c50b..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/map1_hr.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/map1_lr.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/map1_lr.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 22111d2..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/map1_lr.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg002.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg002.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e76ef6a..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg002.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg002a.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg002a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 1cef604..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg002a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg002b.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg002b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 1423da4..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg002b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg002c.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg002c.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 6d1232b..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg002c.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg003.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg003.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index b9285d3..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg003.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg003a.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg003a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index bd03208..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg003a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg003b.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg003b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d9aa936..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg003b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg003c.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg003c.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 3318e4b..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg003c.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg004.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg004.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 7f31d28..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg004.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg004c.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg004c.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 59563df..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg004c.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg004d.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg004d.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 776903e..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg004d.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg004e.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg004e.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 32c575f..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg004e.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg005.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg005.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 268825d..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg005.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg005a.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg005a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e35e3e0..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg005a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg005b.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg005b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index bb90d3c..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg005b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg005d.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg005d.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 5ce701c..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg005d.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg006.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg006.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 6dbac3f..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg006.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg006a.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg006a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index f2541e9..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg006a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg006b.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg006b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 8fc1d65..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg006b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg006c.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg006c.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d1f87dc..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg006c.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg007.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg007.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 2583caf..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg007.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg007a.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg007a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index aa9fd1c..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg007a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg007c.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg007c.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index cdf084a..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg007c.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg007d.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg007d.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 7534e35..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg007d.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg007e.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg007e.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 75066a1..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg007e.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg008.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg008.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index ae3faca..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg008.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg008a.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg008a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 520f199..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg008a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg008b.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg008b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 756a158..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg008b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg008c.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg008c.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 4fd15fc..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg008c.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg008d.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg008d.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index b229264..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg008d.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg008e.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg008e.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index cc54d15..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg008e.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg009.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg009.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 87b69fb..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg009.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg009a.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg009a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index f7609e4..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg009a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg009a2.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg009a2.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 84ac3d1..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg009a2.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg009b.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg009b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 37d96f4..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg009b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg009c.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg009c.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 9e821bb..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg009c.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg010.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg010.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 87b91da..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg010.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg010a.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg010a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 28b9c7d..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg010a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg010b.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg010b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 3776d89..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg010b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg010c.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg010c.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index efe2bc7..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg010c.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg011.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg011.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 154fe32..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg011.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg011a.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg011a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 02e9f33..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg011a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg011b.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg011b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 53dafd1..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg011b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg011c.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg011c.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index fe40bb3..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg011c.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg012.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg012.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 3abc7a9..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg012.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg012a.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg012a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d51fe3d..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg012a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg012b.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg012b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 7267c6b..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg012b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg012c.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg012c.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index f9b1bf3..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg012c.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg013.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg013.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e3405fc..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg013.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51899-h/images/pmg013a.jpg b/old/51899-h/images/pmg013a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 57ca27f..0000000
--- a/old/51899-h/images/pmg013a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ