wagons over the mountains by South Pass with no trouble."
"Wish I'd gone with that outfit. I'd know something about the mountains by this time," lamented Lander.
"It's not too late to learn if the A. F. C. don't get you before you get started," Papa comforted. "All their posts can be reached by water and they have no love for land travel. When M'sieu Ashley plunged into the mountains and set his men to trapping instead of using the Indians he made the A. F. C. open its eyes and grow very angry. The A. F. C. has more influence among the Indians than the government's Indian Department. There's no law beyond Fort Leavenworth except what you make and enforce yourself. To build posts in opposition is sorry business for the independent trader. He is undersold and discouraged and tricked in a hundred ways. The Indians do not believe the new man can last for more than a season and so they stick to the A. F. C."
"Stick so long as the liquor holds out," laughed Lander. "Fort Union was always sending word by express that they must have liquor."
"Ah, but those A. F. C. Such men! When it