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man000139-028
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    This material is made available to facilitate private study, scholarship, or research. It may be protected by copyright, trademark, privacy, publicity rights, or other interests not owned by UNLV. Users are responsible for determining whether permissions are necessary from rights owners for any intended use and for obtaining all required permissions. Acknowledgement of the UNLV University Libraries is requested. For more information, please see the UNLV Special Collections policies on reproduction and use (https://www.library.unlv.edu/speccol/research_and_services/reproductions) or contact us at special.collections@unlv.edu.

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    University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Libraries

    pert? pi *;? r? 3 t ujbui eq+ ,._X0 0j!lBl(C|)9v.i- M p t g r io u ' axe n<3f 4 / y / Y *. ^ z ' . a , / / V & § 22 0 Q'.Way r BPv? i V € f* 'tar. Tp| v *,(&?*jSj^^-r?*- - Y OU have heard the stories, so often told, Of the '‘boomer” trails, in the days of old; Of stretches of cactus and dwarf mes-quite j And waterless -valleys and blinding heat; Of fairy peaks in a phantom West, With opal flashes upon their crest And taunting ribbons above it all, Like splashes of gold on a mystic wall. 'Forty-nine and a wagon train, Winding its way through a cheerless plain— A quick alarm and a circle swung By the plunging beasts at the wagon tongue; Fitful flashes from hot carbine At feathered heads on the desert screen; A shattered stave in ,a water keg And the fluid drained to a single dreg. jtfany a brave of a copper hue, Answered the call of his Manitou* Many a steed of a mongrel strain, Sprawled in the dust with a scream of] pain. Of a mother, dead at the smoking wheel; True to the urchin his hand caressed, Cooing its glee on the silent breast; And he tells of a grav%e in the desert sand And “ taps” to the honor of Buck Du­rand! * • * * * . * * * It is out there yet, in a "pasture” sink, That tepid pool at the canyon’s brink; But white-faced cattle, as fat as moles, Wander afar to the sweeter holes And the brown mescal and the dwarf mesquite Have- vanished away in the march of wheat; And the echoes awake, in the flush of morn, To the blatant shriek of a motor horn. Straight as a die— from East to West— In a smooth up-lift to the mountain crest, The white trail crosses the blue divide, To the mystic lures of the other side. Scarce out of sight of a village spires, Or the trailing plumes from a “ Mogul’s” fires; Mapped in the blood of an early day When the whiter man fought for the Right O’ Way! 4wt > ? W m m Suddenly, sharp through the crash of Up from the wreck on the littered ground, . . ,, . Comes the rending plea in a mother s s| n fiig And the plaintive wall of a baby's cries. Heart stone cold as his hand caresf1? f , The fevered babe at it s mother s W orld gone red as he swapped carbine For the battered shell of a dry canteen. Scene now shifts to a stretch of sand And the burrowing figure of Buck Du- Moleing his way to a canyon s brink That shelters a pool m a desei t sink. He chooses the dip of a shallow swal~, ^ d inches his way like a creeping _i g jxeil Unnoted by all, save a buzzard's eye, In narrowing circles against the sky* A s yet, unseen in the sweeping view From the look-out posts of the lurking Now, as his* nostrils greet the stench Of the pungent damp in his narrow trench; Nnw. as hia fingers grope afar And dig, deep jjQwn. in the .slgaming H i s w r i s t i s c l u t c h e d b y a. s t r a l _ G r i p p i n g a n d h o t a s a n i r o n h a n d . ! L i f t i n g fils h e a d In a s ta r t le d graze. He sees a face in the vapored naze, Leering and cruel, a face from Hell, Disputing his right to the desert well. Ana, on beyond, in the canyon s bed, Is a spotted pony, with drooping head; A Sioux, adrift from his warring band, Han challenged the courage o f Buck Durand, The battle Is fought In a voiceless wrath, White man and red, in a mooted path; Red man of sinew, white of brawn, Issue of death, while the son looked on The red man fights for a scalp of hair, The white man answers a mother a prayer; _ . .___ One with the lost of a beast Insane, One for his kind at the wagon train. a d H a lf * H o u r ? ??'f-rag8 B y Chiis, B. Clark, Jr. The buzzard, aloft, with his watchful ' eye, ? . . Narrows hhii*s ssw* ing In the copper sky; For ther n the ec of the desert la spring, u*1 igear made from a turkey’, n wing. Wond cr' \vhy I ftt 1 to restlest; c IvfoGm it i) linin' still and br attic aII iS fcarin' easy. But 1 JUII can't sleep tonigbi A in't rin caICttjit in rnv blanket*, Don* kn«)\Y why they feci so X Os ||' % W arblin* Jim a->ingin "All! It 4i l a uf If out 0hi guar Hard Hl A ^ I L . S a s % 1 a* sm m s a , 1 Am