Boy Scouts on the Great Divide; Or, The Ending of the Trail
On a sunny September afternoon two shelter tents stood in a mountain valley, on the south bank of a creek which, miles and miles below, becomes the Sweetwater river.
Above the flap of each tent lifted a yellow pennant, in the center of which a blue beaver stood in an alert and listening attitude, his flat tail outstretched.
A campfire blazed in front of the two tents, and some distance away four bronchos fed noisily on the sweet grass of the valley. Tinned provisions and cooking utensils were scattered here and there in front of the blaze, and four boys wearing the khaki uniform of the Boy Scouts of America were busily engaged in preparing supper.
Those who have read the previous volumes of this series will require no introduction to Will Smith, George Benton, Charley (Sandy) Green, or Tommy Gregory. As will be remembered, they were all members of the Beaver Patrol, Chicago. Will Smith had recently been advanced to the important position of Scoutmaster, and George Benton had been elected to the position left vacant by the advancement of his chum, that of Patrol Leader. Besides carrying the badges of their offices and their patrol, the boys all wore medals showing that they had qualified in the Stalker, Ambulance, Seaman and Pioneer grades.
After rather striking adventures on Lake Superior and in the Florida Everglades the boys had been persuaded by Mr. Horton, a well-known criminal lawyer of Chicago, to undertake a mission in the interest of a client in whom he had become greatly interested. The lads had already arranged a vacation trip to the Great Divide, and it necessitated only a slight change in their program in order to make the investigation desired by the attorney, who had shown himself their friend on more than one occasion. In fact, the Superior trip had been taken at his expense.
Mr. Horton had presented the request which had changed the lads' vacation plans on the night before they left Chicago, and so no details whatever of the case had been given them. They had been asked to proceed to the city of Green River, in the state of Wyoming, and there secure burros, provisions and tents and travel to the valley lying south and west of Altantic peak.
Archibald Lee Fletcher
Boy Scouts on the Great Divide;
or, The Ending of the Trail
CONTENTS
Boy Scouts on the Great Divide;
or, The Ending of the Trail
A BOY SCOUT CAMP
THE RUNAWAY
THE CASE IS STATED
A CHASE IN THE NIGHT
A DETECTIVE AND A ROBBER
THE CALL OF THE BEAVER
ARRESTED AS SPIES
A MIDNIGHT BEAR HUNT
LYNCHING IS THREATENED
ONE DANGER TO ANOTHER
A WYOMING HOLD-UP
AN INTERRUPTED WIG-WAG
TOMMY GOES AFTER BEAR STEAK
A PAIR OF PRISONERS
AN UNDERGROUND CHANNEL
CULLEN LOSES HIS STAR
A MEETING UNDER GROUND
THE FINDING OF WAGNER
SHERIFF PETE'S WINK
DETECTIVES IN TROUBLE
CONCLUSION
The End.