THEODORE ROOSEVELT [Copyright, 1533, by C. P. Putnam's Sons Published under arrangement with G. Pi Putnam's Sons, New York and London. ] tlic wide plains when I I the prong - buck dwell; I Jr I the hunter must some! L2LJ times face thirst, as wel| lßpsgl as Are and frost. Th<| ""ly time I ever really suffered from thirst wot while hunting prong-buck. It was late in the summer. I wasi with the ranch wagon on the way t(; join a round-up, and as we were out of meat 1 started for a day's hunt. After two or three hours' ride, ud winding coulies, and through the on went with me, driven by an all round plainsman, a man of iron nerves and varied past, the sheriff of out county. He was an old friend oi mine; at one time I had served as deputy-sheriff for the northern end ol the county. In the wagon we carried our food and camp kit, and our threi rolls of bedding, each wrapped in a thick, nearly waterproof canvas sheet we bad a tent, but we never needed it The load being light, the wagon was drawn by but a span of horses, a pail of wild runaways, tough, and gooei travellers. My foreman and I rod* beside the wagon on our wiry, un kempt, unshod cattle-ponies. They car ried us all day at a rack, pace, single foot or slow lope, varied by rapid gal loping when we made long circles aft er game; (lie trot, tln? favorite gaii with eastern park-riders, is disliked bj all peoples who have to do much ol their life-work in the saddle. The first day's ride was not attrac tive. The heal was intense and the dust stifling, as we had to drive somt loose horses for the first few miles and afterwards to rick- up and dowi the sandy river bed, where the cattle had gathered, to look over some yount: steers we had put on the range the preceding spring. When we did cami it was by u pool of stagnant water, ir. a creek bottom, and the mosquitoes were a torment. Nevertheless, a.' evening fell, it was pleasant to clirnl a little knoll nearby and gaze at the rows of strangely colored buttes. grass clad, or of bare earth and scoria, theii soft reels anel purples showing as through a haze, and their irregular out lines gradually losing their sharpness in the fading twilight. My foreman and 1 usually rode fai off to one side of the wagon, looking out for antelope. Of these we at ftrsl saw few, but they grew more plentiful as we journeyed onward, approaching a big. scantily wooded creek, where I had found the prong-horn abundant in previous seasons. They were very wary and watchful whether going sin gly or iu small parties, and the lay of the land made it exceedingly difficult to get within range. The last time i bad hunted in this neighborhood wa in the fall, at the height of the rutting season. Prong-bucks, even more than other game, sevui fairly maddened by erotic excitement. At the time of my former hunt they were in coaseles? motion; each master buck being inces santly occupied in herding his harem, and fighting would-be rivals, while sin gle bucks chased single does as gray hounds chase hares, or else, if no doe.- were in sight, from sheer excitement ran to and fro as if crazy, racing at full speed in one direction, then halt ing, wheeling, and tearing back again just as bard as they coulel go. At this time, however, the rut was still some week.' off, and all the bucks liail to do v.to feed and keep a look out for enemies. Try my best, I cotilil not get within less than four or five hundred yards, and though I took u number shots at these, or even longer iii. . >.es. I missed. If a man is out mere!, for a day's hunt, and has — ||jj jjsj | jj Il'i the levll I'K in arid tin: herd followed. all the time he wishes, lie will not scare the game ami waste cartridges by shooting at such long ranges, pre ferring to spend half a day or more in patient waiting anil earefill stalking; but If he Is traveling, anel is therefore cramped for time, he must take his chances. e\;>n at the cost of burning a gofxl deal of powder. I was tin-illv hcliied to success by a characteristic freak of the game I was following. No other animals are as keen-sighted, or are normally as wary as prong-horns; but no others are so whimsical and odd In their behavior at times, or so subpect. to fits of the most stupid curiosity anel panic. T.atr Jn the afternoon, on topping 11 rise I saw two to '1 bucks racing off about three hundred yards to one side; I scorched desolation of patches of Bad Lands, I reached the rolling prairie. The heat and drought had long burned t lie short grass elull brown; the bot toms of what had been pools were covered with hard, dry, cracked earth. The elay was cloudless, and the beat oppressive l . There were many ante lope, but I got only one shot, breaking a buck's leg; and though I followed it for a couple of hours I could not over take it. By this time It was late in the afternoon, and I was far away from the river; so I pushed for a creek, in the bed of which I had always found pools of water, especially to wards the head, as is usual with plains water nurses. To my chagrin, how ever, they all proved to be dry; and though 1 rode up the creek bed to ward the head, carefully searching for any sign of water, night closed on me before I found any. For two or three hours I stumbled on. leading my horse, in my fruitless search; then a tumble over a cut bank in the dark warned me that I might as well stay where 1 was for the rest of the warm night. Accordingly I unsaddled the horse, and tieel him to a sage brush; after awhile he began to feed on the dewy grass. At lirst I was too thirsty to sleep. Finally ! fell into a sumber. and when I awoke at dawn I felt no thirst. For an hour or two more I continued my search for water in the creek bed: then abaneloned it and rode straight for the river. By the time we reached it my thirst had come back with redoubled force, my mouth was parched, and the horse was in riuite as bad a plighf; we rushed down to the brink, anel it seemed as if we could neither of us ever drink our fill of the tepid, rather muddy water. Of course this experience was merely un pleasant; thirst is not, a source of real danger in the plains country proper, whereas in the hideous eleserts that extend from southern Idaho through I'tah anel Nevada to Arizona, it ever menaces with death the hunter and ex plorer. In the plain: the weather Is apt to bo in extremes; the heat is tropical, the cold arctic, and the droughts are relieved by furious floods. These are generally more severe and lasting in the spring, aft or the melting of the snow; anel fierce local freshets follow the occasional cloudbursts. The large rivers then become wholly impassa ble, and even the smaller are formi dable obstacles. It is not easy to get cattle across a swollen stream, where the current runs like a turbid mill-race over the bed of shifting quicksand. Once five of us took/a thousanel head of trail steers across the Little Mis souri when the river was up, and it was no light task. The muddy current was boiling past the banks covered with driftwood and foul yellow froth, and the frightened cattle shrank from entering it. At last, by hard riding, with much kunl shouting and swing ing of ropes, we got the leaders in.and the whole herd followed. After them we went in our turn, the horses swim ming at one moment, and the next gtaggen'ing and floundering through th" quicksand. I was riding ray pet cutting horse, Muley. which has the provoking habit of making great bounds where the water is just not di"."i enough for swimming; once he all: I unseated mo. Some of the cat tle v- caught b the currents and rolled o\o;- a::d over; most of these we were able, with tho help of our ropes, to put on their feet again; only one was drowned, or rather choked in a qui -ksand. Many st\-am down stream, and in consequence struck a difficult lane 1 .?:".', where the river ran muler a citi bank; these we had to haul out with our ropes. Altbor-v'i I have often lind a horse down in quicksand or in crossing a swollen river, and have had to work hard to save him, I have never myself lost one under such circumstances. Yet once I saw the horse of one of my men drown under him elirectly in front of the ranch house, while he was try ing to cross the river. This was in early spring, soon after the ice had broken. When making long wagon trips over the great plains, antelope often offer the only source of meat supply, save for occasional water fowl, sage fowl, and prairie fowl —the sharp-tailed prairie fowl, be it understood. This is the characteristic grouse of the cat tle" country; the true prairie fowl is a bird of the farming land farther east. Towards the end of the summer of 'O2 T found it necessary to travel from iv. - ranch to the Black TTills. some two ' >:od miles sout' . The ranch wag CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1908 sprang to th * ground,. and flrod three | shots at them in vain, as they ran lik»> I quarter-horse;; until they disappeared | over a slight swell, in a minute, how ever, bark they came, suddenly ap- | pearlng over Ihe crest of the same I swell, immediately In front of me, and, a:; I fi er-wards found by pacing, some three hundred and thirty yards away. They stood side by side facing me, and remained motionless, unheed ing the crack of the Winchester; I aimed at the right-hand one, but a front shot of the kind, at such a dis tance, is rather difficult, and it was not until I flred for the fourth time that he sank back out of sip-lit. I could not tell whether I had killed him, and took two shots at his mate, as the latter went off, but without effect. Running forward, I found the first ®ne dead, the bullet having gone through him lengthwise; the other did j not seem satisfied even yet, and kept hangiriK round In the distance for i some minutes, looking at us. I had thus bagged one prong-buck, j as the net outcome of the expenditure > of fourteen cartridges. This was cer tainly not good shooting; but neither was it as bad as it would seem to the | man inexperienced in antelope hunting. i —€=? They stood side by si■'n hreid. nnd quanti ties of !"»•• ••• but by no means extraordinary her was nearest. As he stood fronting l with ills head down I tired into ) neck, breaking the bone, and he tu ed a tremendous back somefsa The other two halted a second in st ned terror; then one, a yearling, n ed past us up the valley down w' we had come, while the other, a 1 bull with small antlers, crossed i in front of me, at a canter, his i thrust out, his head —so «>ot looking compared to the delicate lines of an elk':'—turned towards Ilis movements seemed clumsy awkward, utterly unlike those deer; but he ban Tied his great ! cleverly enon;:!' id broke In headlong, rattling gallop as he down the hillside, crashing tii the saplings and leaping ove fallen logs. There was a spur a beyond, and up this he went swinging trot, halting when he r< the top, and turning to look once more. He was only a h yards away; and though I had tended to shoot him (for his he nnt good), tlie temptation wa and I was glad when, in anotl ond. the stupid heart turned ar went o'* v < valle at a i run. .7 J- ■ - "■ l