left him he might have bled to death.
Will of course was quite in his element now. If there was one thing in
which he excelled besides taking pictures it lay along the lines of
medicine and practical surgery.
Indeed, Frank himself was only too glad to take orders from the other
chum at such a time as this, although he too knew considerable about
caring for gunshot wounds, broken bones, and such accidental
happenings as are apt to occur in the woods.
While the two amateur surgeons labored to the best of their ability to
stop the bleeding, and set the broken bones, at least temporarily,
Bluff and Jerry had taken a little saunter around the place looking
for stuff that could be utilized in making the litter.
"Here's where a hickory tree was cut down a year or two back," said
the former, finally, "and all around the old stump new growth has set
in. Some of it is as much as an inch or more thick."
"Yes, and just the sort we want for our litter," Jerry admitted; "so
get busy with your hatchet, Bluff; and when you feel tired let me have
a show for my money."
As the camp hatchet was always kept exceedingly sharp it bit into
those hickory stems "like fury," according to Bluff; and one after
another they fell before the onslaught.
Then the straightest and strongest were selected for the outside
poles, which must be gripped by the four bearers. Across from these,
side sections were fastened by means of the strong cord. Next came
the placing of the strip of canvas which had really been fashioned
particularly for the very use to which it was now being put. All
around the edges brass eyelets had been inserted in the canvas.
Through the holes the twine was to be run, enclosing a portion of the
side poles with every loop. This procedure would result in giving them
a splendid litter.
"I guess Frank was right when he said no party should ever come out
into the woods without carrying along a strip of canvas fixed like
this one is," Jerry was saying as he laced away vigorously, admiring
his work as he went along.
"That's right," assented the other; "because when it's needed it's
always wanted in a big hurry. Besides, such a strip can be made useful
in many ways. If the ground is damp it comes in handy when you have to
sleep with only a blanket between you and the cold earth. In that way
it takes the place of a rubber poncho."
"There's one thing bad about all this, I'm afraid," ventured Jerry.
"I hope now," cried Bl
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