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Lost Leaf Publications

The Motor Rangers Through the Sierras (Illustrated)

The Motor Rangers Through the Sierras (Illustrated)

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"""Say Nat, I thought that this was to be a pleasure trip?""

Joe Hartley, the perspiration beading his round, good-natured countenance, pushed back his sombrero and looked up whimsically from the punctured tire over which he was laboring.

""Well, isn't half the pleasure of running an auto finding out how many things you don't know about it?"" laughingly rejoined Nat Trevor, the eldest and most experienced of the young Motor Rangers, as they had come to be called.

""V-v-v-variety is the s-s-spice——"" sputtered our old friend William, otherwise Ding-dong Bell.

[6]

""Oh, whistle it, Ding-dong,"" interjected Joe impatiently.

""Phwit!"" musically chirruped the stuttering lad. ""Variety is the spice of life,"" he concluded, his hesitating manner of speech leaving him, as usual, following the puckering of his lips and the resultant music.

""That's no reason why we should be peppered with troubles,"" grumbled Joe, giving the ""jack"" a vicious twist and raising the rear axle still higher. ""Here it is, only three days since we left Santa Barbara and I'm certain that I've fixed at least four punctures already.""

""Well, you'll be a model of punctuality when——"" grinned Nat aggravatingly, but Joe had sprung from his crouching posture and made for him threateningly.

""Nat Trevor, if you dare to pun, I'll—I'll—bust your spark plug.""

""Meaning my head, I suppose,"" taunted Nat from a safe distance, namely, a rock at the side of the dusty road. ""'Lay on, Macduff.'""

""Oh, I've more important things to go,"" concluded[7] Joe, with as much dignity as he could muster, turning once more to his tools.

While he is struggling with the puncture let us look about a little and see where the Motor Rangers, whom we left in Lower California, are now located. As readers of ""The Motor Rangers' Lost Mine"" know, the three bright lads with a companion, oddly named Sandrock Smith, had visited the sun-smitten peninsula to investigate some mysterious thefts of lumber from a dye-wood property belonging to Mr. Pomery, ""The Lumber King,"" Nat's employer. While in that country, which they only reached after a series of exciting and sometimes dangerous incidents, they stumbled across a gold mine in which Nat's father had, years before, been heavily interested.

Readers of that volume will also recall that Hale Bradford, the Eastern millionaire, and his unscrupulous associates had made a lot of trouble for Nat and his companions after the discovery. The exciting escape of Nat in a motor boat across the waters of the Gulf of California will also be called to mind, as well as the story of[8] how matters were finally adjusted and Nat became, if not a millionaire, at least a very well-to-do young man. The gift of the auto in which they were now touring was likewise explained. The splendid vehicle, with its numerous contrivances for comfortable touring, had been the present of Mr. Pomery to the lads, as a token of his esteem and gratitude for the conclusion to which they had brought the dishonest dealings of Diego Velasco, a Mexican employed by Mr. Pomery.

On their return to California proper, the lads had spent a brief time with their parents, and Nat had seen his mother ensconced in a pretty house on the outskirts of Santa Barbara. It had been a great delight to the lady to leave the tiny cottage in which straitened circumstances following the death of Nat's father, had compelled them to live. Joe Hartley, we know, was the son of a department store keeper of Santa Barbara, and Ding-dong Bell was the only child of a well-to-do widow. So much for our introductions.

Inactivity had soon palled on the active minds[9] of the Motor Rangers, and they had, with the consent of their parents, planned another trip. This time, however, it was to be for pleasure. As Nat had said, ""We had enough adventures in Lower California to last us a lifetime."" But of what lay ahead of them not one of the boys dreamed, when, three days before, they had started from Santa Barbara for a tour of the Sierras. Nat was desirous of showing that it was feasible to hunt and fish and tour the mountains in an automobile just as well as on horseback. The car, therefore, carried rifles and shot guns as well as fishing rods and paraphernalia for camping. We shall not give an inventory of it now. Suffice it to say that it was completely outfitted, and as the details of the car itself have been told in the previous volume we shall content ourselves with introducing each as occasion arises.

The particular puncture which Joe was repairing when this volume opens, occurred just as the lads were bowling over a rather rough road into Antelope Valley, a narrow, wind-swept canyon[10] between two steep ranges of mountains.
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