Good Hunting 



intends ultimately to lead. If he wishes 

 to try to ride a horse, he will have 

 every chance, if for no other reason than 

 that he will continually meet men whose 

 ideas of fun are met by the spectacle of a 

 tenderfoot on a bucking bronco. 



By degrees he will learn a good deal of 

 the ways of the life and of the country. 

 Then he must snatch the first chance that 

 goffers itself to take a position in con- 

 nection with the regular work of a ranch. 

 ^He may be employed as a regular hand to 

 'help cook on the ranch wagon, or taken 

 by a shepherd to do the hard and dirty 

 work which the shepherd would like to 

 put off on somebody else. When he has 

 k once got as far as this his rise is certain, 

 L if he is not afraid of labor, and keeps a 

 | lookout for the opportunities that offer. 

 .After a while he will have a horse him- 

 | self, and he will be employed as a second- 

 I rate man to do the ordinary ranch work. 



IO2 



