ON THE YUBA RIVER
On the following day Joe and his comrade
fell in with a party of men who, like themselves,
were on their way to the Yuba River. They were
permitted to join them, and made an arrangement for
a share of the provisions. This removed all
anxiety and insured their reaching their destination
without further adventure.
The banks of the Yuba presented a
busy and picturesque appearance. On the banks
was a line of men roughly clad, earnestly engaged in
scooping out gravel and pouring it into a rough cradle,
called a rocker. This was rocked from side to
side until the particles of gold, if there were any,
settled at the bottom and were picked out and gathered
into bags. At the present time there are improved
methods of separating gold from the earth, but the
rocker is still employed by Chinese miners.
In the background were tents and rude
cabins, and there was the unfailing accessory of a
large mining camp, the gambling tent, where the banker,
like a wily spider, lay in wait to appropriate the
hard-earned dust of the successful miner.
Joe and his friend took their station
a few rods from the river and gazed at the scene before
them.
“Well, Mr. Bickford,”
said Joe, “the time has come when we are to try
our luck.”
“Yes,” said Joshua.
“Looks curious, doesn’t it? If I
didn’t know, I’d think them chaps fools,
stoopin’ over there and siftin’ mud.
It ’minds me of when I was a boy and used to
make dirt pies.”
“Suppose we take a day and look
round a little. Then we can find out about how
things are done, and work to better advantage.”
“Just as you say, Joe, I must
go to work soon, for I hain’t nary red.”
“I’ll stand by you, Mr. Bickford.”
“You’re a fust-rate feller, Joe.
You seem to know just what to do.”
“It isn’t so long since
I was a greenhorn and allowed myself to be taken in
by Hogan.”
“You’ve cut your eye-teeth since then.”
“I have had some experience
of the world, but I may get taken in again.”
Joe and his friend found the miners
social and very ready to give them information.
“How much do I make a day?”
said one in answer to a question from Joshua.
“Well, it varies. Sometimes I make ten
dollars, and from that all the way up to twenty-five.
Once I found a piece worth fifty dollars. I
was in luck then.”
“I should say you were,”
said Mr. Bickford. “The idea of findin’
fifty dollars in the river. It looks kind of
strange, don’t it, Joe?”
“Are any larger pieces ever found here?”
asked Joe.
“Sometimes.”
“I have seen larger nuggets
on exhibition in San Francisco, worth several hundred
dollars. Are any such to be found here?”
“Generally they come from the
dry diggings. We don’t often find such
specimens in the river washings. But these are
more reliable.”
“Can a man save money here?”
“If he’ll be careful of
what he gets. But much of our dust goes there.”
He pointed, as he spoke, to a small
cabin, used as a store and gambling den at one and
the same time. There in the evening the miners
collected, and by faro, poker, or monte managed to
lose all that they had washed out during the day.
“That’s the curse of our
mining settlement,” said their informant.
“But for the temptations which the gaming-house
offers, many whom you see working here would now be
on their way home with a comfortable provision for
their families. I never go there, but then I
am in the minority.”
“What did you used to do when
you was to hum?” inquired Joshua, who was by
nature curious and had no scruples about gratifying
his curiosity.
“I used to keep school winters.
In the spring and summer I assisted my father on
his farm down in Maine.”
“You don’t say you’re
from Maine? Why, I’m from Maine myself,”
remarked Joshua.
“Indeed! Whereabouts in Maine did you
live?”
“Pumpkin Hollow.”
“I kept school in Pumpkin Hollow one winter.”
“You don’t say so? What is your
name?” inquired Joshua earnestly.
“John Kellogg.”
“I thought so!” exclaimed Mr. Bickford,
excited.
“Why, I used to go to school to you, Mr. Kellogg.”
“It is nine years ago, and you
must have changed so much that I cannot call you to
mind.”
“Don’t you remember a
tall, slab-sided youngster of thirteen, that used
to stick pins into your chair for you to set on?”
Kellogg smiled.
“Surely you are not Joshua Bickford?”
he said.
“Yes, I am. I am that same identical chap.”
“I am glad to see you, Mr. Bickford,”
said his old school-teacher, grasping Joshua’s
hand cordially.
“It seems kinder queer for you to call me Mr.
Bickford.”
“I wasn’t so ceremonious in the old times,”
said Kellogg.
“No, I guess not. You’d
say, ‘Come here, Joshua,’ and you’d
jerk me out of my seat by the collar. ‘Did
you stick that pin in my chair?’ That’s
the way you used to talk. And then you’d
give me an all-fired lickin’.”
Overcome by the mirthful recollections,
Joshua burst into an explosive fit of laughter, in
which presently he was joined by Joe and his old teacher.
“I hope you’ve forgiven me for those whippings,
Mr. Bickford.”
“They were jest what I needed,
Mr. Kellogg. I was a lazy young rascal, as full
of mischief as a nut is of meat. You tanned my
hide well.”
“You don’t seem to be any the worse for
it now.”
“I guess not. I’m
pretty tough. I say, Mr. Kellogg,” continued
Joshua, with a grin, “you’d find it a harder
job to give me a lickin’ now than you did then.”
“I wouldn’t undertake it now. I
am afraid you could handle me.”
“It seems cur’us, don’t
it, Joe?” said Joshua. “When Mr.
Kellogg used to haul me round the schoolroom, it didn’t
seem as if I could ever be a match for him.”
“We change with the passing
years,” said Kellogg, in a moralizing tone,
which recalled his former vocation. “Now
you are a man, and we meet here on the other side
of the continent, on the banks of the Yuba River.
I hope we are destined to be successful.”
“I hope so, too,” said
Joshua, “for I’m reg’larly cleaned
out.”
“If I can help you any in the
sway of information, I shall be glad to do so.”
Joe and Bickford took him at his word
and made many inquiries, eliciting important information.
The next day they took their places
farther down the river and commenced work.
Their inexperience at first put them
at a disadvantage, They were awkward and unskilful,
as might have been expected. Still, at the end
of the first day each had made about five dollars.
“That’s something,” said Joe.
“If I could have made five dollars
in one day in Pumpkin Hollow,” said Mr. Bickford,
“I would have felt like a rich man. Here
it costs a feller so much to live that he don’t
think much of it.”
“We shall improve as we go along.
Wait till to-morrow night.”
The second day brought each about
twelve dollars, and Joshua felt elated.
“I’m gettin’ the
hang of it,” said he. “As soon as
I’ve paid up what I owe you, I’ll begin
to lay by somethin’.”
“I don’t want you to pay
me till you are worth five hundred dollars, Mr. Bickford.
The sum is small, and I don’t need it.”
“Thank you, Joe. You’re
a good friend. I’ll stick by you if you
ever want help.”
In the evening the camp presented a lively appearance.
When it was chilly, logs would be
brought from the woods, and a bright fire would be
lighted, around which the miners would sit and talk
of home and their personal adventures and experiences.
One evening Mr. Bickford and Joe were returning from
a walk, when, as they approached the camp-fire, they
heard a voice that sounded familiar, and caught these
words:
“I’m from Pike County,
Missouri, gentlemen. They call me the Rip-tail
Roarer. I can whip my weight in wildcats.”
“By gosh!” exclaimed Joshua,
“if it ain’t that skunk from Pike.
I mean to tackle him.”