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قراءة كتاب Boy Scouts in Glacier Park The Adventures of Two Young Easterners in the Heart of the High Rockies
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Boy Scouts in Glacier Park The Adventures of Two Young Easterners in the Heart of the High Rockies
Boy Scouts in Glacier Park
Books by
WALTER P. EATON
The Boy Scouts of Berkshire—A story of how the Chipmunk Patrol was started, what they did and how they did it. Colored frontispiece. 313 pages.
Boy Scouts in the Dismal Swamp—A story of Boy Scouting in the Dismal Swamp. Colored frontispiece. 304 pages.
Boy Scouts in the White Mountains—A story of a hike over the Franconia and Presidential Ranges. Colored frontispiece. 308 pages.
Boy Scouts of the Wildcat Patrol.—A Story of Boy Scouting. Colored frontispiece. 315 pages.
Peanut—Cub Reporter—A Boy Scout’s life and adventures on a newspaper. Colored frontispiece. 320 pages.
Boy Scouts in Glacier Park 336 pages.
Cloth bound. Price, $1.75 net each |
Boy Scouts in Glacier Park
The Adventures of Two Young Easterners
in the Heart of the High Rockies
By
WALTER PRICHARD EATON
Illustrated with Photographs by
FRED H. KISER
W. A. WILDE COMPANY
BOSTON CHICAGO
Copyrighted, 1918,
BY W. A. WILDE COMPANY
All rights reserved
BOY SCOUTS IN GLACIER PARK
To
FRED H. KISER
who photographs mountains so well because he loves them so much Best of companions on the high trails and around the evening camp-fire |
FOREWORD
Glacier Park is one of the newest, as well as one of the most beautiful, of our National Parks. It is peculiarly fitted to be a summer playground, both for men and women who prefer to travel on horseback and “rough it” by putting up at a hotel at night, and for the true mountain lovers, who delight to use their own legs in climbing, and to sleep under the stars. This book has been written primarily to show Young America just how interesting, exciting, full of outdoor adventure, and full, too, of real education, life in this National park can be. We can promise our boy readers, and their parents, too, that there isn’t any “faking” in this story. The trips we tell about are all real trips, and if you go to Glacier Park you can take them all—all, that is, except, perhaps, the climb up the head wall of Iceberg Lake. You have to have a real mountaineer as a guide, with a real Alpine rope, in order to make that trip. It was fortunate for Tom that one came along. Then, too, unless you stay in the Park over the winter, you haven’t much chance of riding down a mountain on a snow-slide. Possibly you wouldn’t want to. I never knew anybody who took that trip intentionally! Tom and Joe and the Ranger were unlucky enough to take it, and lucky enough to live to tell the tale.
This book isn’t written just to use the Rocky Mountains as a background for adventures which never really could happen to ordinary boys. It is written, on the contrary, to show what fine adventures can happen to ordinary boys, in one of the finest and most healthful and beautiful spots in this great country of ours, if only the boys have pluck, and have been good Scouts enough to learn how to take care of themselves in the open.
And it is written, too, in order to tell about Glacier Park, to make you want to go there and see it for yourself, to make you glad and proud that the United States has set aside for the use of all the public such a splendid playground, and to make you, if possible, more determined than ever to protect this, and all our other parks and State and National forests, from the attacks of the men who are always trying to get laws passed to let them spoil the meadows and the wildflowers with their sheep, or cut the forests for timber, putting their selfish gain above the welfare of the whole people.
W. P. E.
Twin Fires
Sheffield, Massachusetts
1918
CONTENTS
CHAPTER | PAGE | |
I. | Joe Gets Bad News About His Lungs—His “Pipes,” as Spider Called Them | 13 |
II. | Joe Learns How Many Friends He Has, and Achieves a Tent to Sleep In | 21 |
III. | Spider Finds a Way to Get to the Rocky Mountains, to “Pump Joe’s Pipes Full of Ozone” | 32 |
IV. | Tom and Joe Cross the Continent with Their Faces Glued to the Car Window and Reach the Rocky Mountains | 43 |
V. | The Scouts Learn Why the Rocky Mountains Have No Foot-Hills and Arrive at Many Glacier | 54 |
VI. | Tom Becomes Boss of the Tepee Camp, and the Scouts Pitch Their Tents in the Evergreens | 63 |
VII. |