Page:Edward Ellis--Alden the Pony Express Rider.djvu/186

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CHAPTER XII

A NOT UNCOMMON INCIDENT

IT would be interesting to trace the progress of the emigrant train westward for the following weeks, but, there would be a certain monotony in the narration. The routine went on for days with little variation. Making their way through the Laramie range, they went northward along the western slope, over the course of the Laramie River, after spending a night in camp near the old fort where they were hospitably treated by the garrison. Where the Laramie River rushes eastward through the mountain range, they turned in the opposite direction toward the famous South Pass, that wide gateway through the great Rocky Mountains. Beyond that they were to travel southwest and past Fort Bridger to Salt Lake City.

It was the glad summer time, but the travelers suffered little from the heat which is often unbearable in the deserts and valleys.

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