CAMPS TRANSPORT. ETC 



391 



of the trail, he will stoJ> 

 and bro^Yse. If you press 

 the pony next you to get 

 at the offender, one of 

 them will go head over 

 heels down the slope, 

 and at every bump there 

 will be litde puffs, one 

 white, one brown. This 



v<;%«#\ I 



means that when that pony 

 reaches the bottom of that 

 hill he may still be alive, 

 but there will be no more 

 cocoa and no more baking 

 powder for that expedi- 

 tion. 



Some men remove packs 

 in the middle of the day, 

 and halt for lunch. This 

 I consider a mistake, and 

 a waste of time. An 



Good-bye to the groceries ' 



