shouldn't know better. We're teaching it in all our agricultural
   colleges, experiment stations, and demonstration trains. But the
   people won't take hold, and the immigrant, who has learned in a
   hard school, beats them out. Why, after I graduated, and before
   my father died--he was of the old school and laughed at what he
   called my theories--I traveled for a couple of years. I wanted to
   see how the old countries farmed. Oh, I saw.
   "We'll soon enter the valley. You bet I saw. First thing, in
   Japan, the terraced hillsides. Take a hill so steep you couldn't
   drive a horse up it. No bother to them. They terraced it--a stone
   wall, and good masonry, six feet high, a level terrace six feet
   wide; up and up, walls and terraces, the same thing all the way,
   straight into the air, walls upon walls, terraces upon terraces,
   until I've seen ten-foot walls built to make three-foot terraces,
   and twenty-foot walls for four or five feet of soil they could
   grow things on. And that soil, packed up the mountainsides in
   baskets on their backs!
   "Same thing everywhere I went, in Greece, in Ireland, in
   Dalmatia--I went there, too. They went around and gathered every
   bit of soil they could find, gleaned it and even stole it by the
   shovelful or handful, and carried it up the mountains on their
   backs and built farms--BUILT them, MADE them, on the naked rock.
   Why, in France, I've seen hill peasants mining their stream-beds
   for soil as our fathers mined the streams of California for gold.
   Only our gold's gone, and the peasants' soil remains, turning
   over and over, doing something, growing something, all the time.
   Now, I guess I'll hush."
   "My God!" Billy muttered in awe-stricken tones. "Our folks never
   done that. No wonder they lost out."
   "There's the valley now," Benson said. "Look at those trees! Look
   at those hillsides! That's New Dalmatia. Look at it! An apple
   paradise! Look at that soil! Look at the way it's worked!"
   It was not a large valley that Saxon saw. But everywhere, across
   the flat-lands and up the low rolling hills, the industry of the
   Dalmatians was evident. As she looked she listened to Benson.
   "Do you know what the old settlers did with this beautiful soil?
   Planted the flats in grain and pastured cattle on the hills. And
   now twelve thousand acres of it are in apples. It's a regular
   show place for the Eastern guests at Del Monte, who run out here
   in their machines to see the trees in bloom or fruit. Take Matteo
   Lettunich--he's one of the originals. Entered through Castle
   Garden and became a dish-washer. When he laid eyes on this
   valley he knew it was his Klondike. To-day he leases seven
   hundred acres and owns a hundred and thirty of his own--the
   finest orchard in the valley, and he packs from forty to fifty
   thousand boxes of export apples from it every year. And he won't
   let a soul but a Dalmatian pick a single apple of all those
   apples. One day, in a banter, I asked him what he'd sell his
   hundred and thirty acres for. He answered seriously. He told me
   what it had netted him, year by year, and struck an average. He
   told me to calculate the principal from that at six per cent. I
   did. It came to over three thousand dollars an acre."
   "What are all the Chinks doin' in the Valley?" Billy asked.
   "Growin' apples, too?"
   Benson shook his head.
   "But that's another point where we Americans lose out. There
   isn't anything wasted in this valley, not a core nor a paring;
   and it isn't the Americans who do the saving. There are
   fifty-seven apple-evaporating furnaces, to say nothing of the
   apple canneries and cider and vinegar factories. And Mr. John
   Chinaman owns them. They ship fifteen thousand barrels of cider
   and vinegar each year."
   "It was our folks that made this country," Billy reflected.
   "Fought for it, opened it up, did everything--"
   "But develop it," Benson caught him up. "We did our best to
   destroy it, as we destroyed the soil of New England." He waved
   his hand, indicating some place beyond the hills. "Salinas lies
   over that way. If you went through there you'd think you were in
   Japan. And more than one fat little fruit valley in California
   has been taken over by the Japanese. Their method is somewhat
   different from the Dalmatians'. First they drift in fruit picking
   at day's wages. They give better satisfaction than the American
   fruit-pickers, too, and the Yankee grower is glad to get them.
   Next, as they get stronger, they form in Japanese unions and
   proceed to run the American labor out. Still the fruit-growers
   are satisfied. The next step is when the Japs won't pick. The
   American labor is gone. The fruit-grower is helpless. The crop
   perishes. Then in step the Jap labor bosses. They're the masters
   already. They contract for the crop. The fruit-growers are at
   their mercy, you see. Pretty soon the Japs are running the
   valley. The fruit-growers have become absentee landlords and are
   busy learning higher standards of living in the cities or making
   trips to Europe. Remains only one more step. The Japs buy them
   out. They've got to sell, for the Japs control the labor market
   and could bankrupt them at will."
   "But if this goes on, what is left for us?" asked Saxon.
   "What is happening. Those of us who haven't anything rot in the
   cities. Those of us who have land, sell it and go to the cities.
   Some become larger capitalists; some go into the professions; the
   rest spend the money and start rotting when it's gone, and if it
   lasts their life-time their children do the rotting for them."
   Their long ride was soon over, and at parting Benson reminded
   Billy of the steady job that awaited him any time he gave the
   word.
   "I guess we'll take a peep at that government land first," Billy
   answered. "Don't know what we'll settle down to, but there's one
   thing sure we won't tackle."
   "What's that?"
   "Start in apple-growin' at three thousan' dollars an acre."
   Billy and Saxon, their packs upon the backs, trudged along a
   hundred yards. He was the first to break silence.
   "An' I tell you another thing, Saxon. We'll never be goin' around
   smellin' out an' swipin' bits of soil an' carryin' it up a hill
   in a basket. The United States is big yet. I don't care what
   Benson or any of 'em says, the United States ain't played out.
   There's millions of acres untouched an' waitin', an' it's up to
   us to find 'em."
   "And I'll tell you one thing," Saxon said. "We're getting an
   education. Tom was raised on a ranch, yet he doesn't know right
   now as much about farming conditions as we do. And I'll tell you
   another thing. The more I think of it, the more it seems we are
   going to be disappointed about that government land."
   "Ain't no use believin' what everybody tells you," he protested.
   "Oh, it isn't that. It's what I think. I leave it to you. If this
   land around here is worth three thousand an acre, why is it that
   government land, if it's any good, is waiting the 
					     					 			re, only a short
   way off, to be taken for the asking."
   Billy pondered this for a quarter of a mile, but could come to no
   conclusion. At last he cleared his throat and remarked:
   "Well, we can wait till we see it first, can't we?"
   "All right," Saxon agreed. "We'll wait till we see it."
   CHAPTER VI
   They had taken the direct county road across the hills from
   Monterey, instead of the Seventeen Mile Drive around by the
   coast, so that Carmel Bay came upon them without any
   fore-glimmerings of its beauty. Dropping down through the pungent
   pines, they passed woods-embowered cottages, quaint and rustic,
   of artists and writers, and went on across wind-blown rolling
   sandhills held to place by sturdy lupine and nodding with pale
   California poppies. Saxon screamed in sudden wonder of delight,
   then caught her breath and gazed at the amazing peacock-blue of a
   breaker, shot through with golden sunlight, overfalling in a
   mile-long sweep and thundering into white ruin of foam on a
   crescent beach of sand scarcely less white.
   How long they stood and watched the stately procession of
   breakers, rising from out the deep and wind-capped sea to froth
   and thunder at their feet, Saxon did not know. She was recalled
   to herself when Billy, laughing, tried to remove the telescope
   basket from her shoulders.
   "You kind of look as though you was goin' to stop a while," he
   said. "So we might as well get comfortable."
   "I never dreamed it, I never dreamed it," she repeated, with
   passionately clasped hands. "I. .. I thought the surf at the
   Cliff House was wonderful, but it gave no idea of this.--Oh!
   Look! LOOK! Did you ever see such an unspeakable color? And the
   sunlight flashing right through it! Oh! Oh! Oh!"
   At last she was able to take her eyes from the surf and gaze at
   the sea-horizon of deepest peacock-blue and piled with
   cloud-masses, at the curve of the beach south to the jagged point
   of rocks, and at the rugged blue mountains seen across soft low
   hills, landward, up Carmel Valley.
   "Might as well sit down an' take it easy," Billy indulged her.
   "This is too good to want to run away from all at once."
   Saxon assented, but began immediately to unlace her shoes.
   "You ain't a-goin' to?" Billy asked in surprised delight, then
   began unlacing his own.
   But before they were ready to run barefooted on the perilous
   fringe of cream-wet sand where land and ocean met, a new and
   wonderful thing attracted their attention. Down from the dark
   pines and across the sandhills ran a man, naked save for narrow
   trunks. He was smooth and rosy-skinned, cherubic-faced, with a
   thatch of curly yellow hair, but his body was hugely thewed as a
   Hercules'.
   "Gee!--must be Sandow," Billy muttered low to Saxon.
   But she was thinking of the engraving in her mother's scrapbook
   and of the Vikings on the wet sands of England.
   The runner passed them a dozen feet away, crossed the wet sand,
   never parsing, till the froth wash was to his knees while above
   him, ten feet at least, upreared a was of overtopping water. Huge
   and powerful as his body had seemed, it was now white and fragile
   in the face of that imminent, great-handed buffet of the sea.
   Saxon gasped with anxiety, and she stole a look at Billy to note
   that he was tense with watching.
   But the stranger sprang to meet the blow, and, just when it
   seemed he must be crushed, he dived into the face of the breaker
   and disappeared. The mighty mass of water fell in thunder on the
   beach, but beyond appeared a yellow head, one arm out-reaching,
   and a portion of a shoulder. Only a few strokes was he able to
   make are he was come pelted to dye through another breaker. This
   was the battle--to win seaward against the Creep of the shoreward
   hastening sea. Each time he dived and was lost to view Saxon
   caught her breath and clenched her hands. Sometimes, after the
   passage of a breaker, they enfold not find him, and when they did
   he would be scores of feet away, flung there like a chip by a
   smoke-bearded breaker. Often it seemed he must fail and be thrown
   upon the beach, but at the end of half an hour he was beyond the
   outer edge of the surf and swimming strong, no longer diving, but
   topping the waves. Soon he was so far away that only at intervals
   could they find the speck of him. That, too, vanished, and Saxon
   and Billy looked at each other, she with amazement at the
   swimmer's valor, Billy with blue eyes flashing.
   "Some swimmer, that boy, some swimmer," he praised. "Nothing
   chicken-hearted about him.--Say, I only know tank-swimmin', an'
   bay-swimmin', but now I'm goin' to learn ocean-swimmin'. If I
   could do that I'd be so proud you couldn't come within forty feet
   of me. Why, Saxon, honest to God, I'd sooner do what he done than
   own a thousan' farms. Oh, I can swim, too, I'm tellin' you, like a
   fish--I swum, one Sunday, from the Narrow Gauge Pier to Sessions'
   Basin, an' that's miles--but I never seen anything like that guy
   in the swimmin' line. An' I'm not goin' to leave this beach until
   he comes back.--All by his lonely out there in a mountain sea,
   think of it! He's got his nerve all right, all right."
   Saxon and Billy ran barefooted up and down the beach, pursuing
   each other with brandished snakes of seaweed and playing like
   children for an hour. It was not until they were putting on their
   shoes that they sighted the yellow head bearing shoreward. Billy
   was at the edge of the surf to meet him, emerging, not
   white-skinned as he had entered, but red from the pounding he had
   received at the hands of the sea.
   "You're a wonder, and I just got to hand it to you," Billy
   greeted him in outspoken admiration.
   "It was a big surf to-day," the young man replied, with a nod of
   acknowledgment.
   "It don't happen that you are a fighter I never heard of?" Billy
   queried, striving to get some inkling of the identity of the
   physical prodigy.
   The other laughed and shook his head, and Billy could
   not guess that he was an ex-captain of a 'Varsity Eleven, and
   incidentally the father of a family and the author of many books.
   He looked Billy over with an eye trained in measuring freshmen
   aspirants for the gridiron.
   "You're some body of a man," he appreciated. "You'd strip with
   the best of them. Am I right in guessing that you know your way
   about in the ring?"
   Billy nodded. "My name's Roberts."
   The swimmer scowled with a futile effort at recollection.
   "Bill--Bill Roberts," Billy supplemented.
   "Oh, ho!--Not BIG Bill Roberts? Why, I saw you fight, before the
   earthquake, in the Mechanic's Pavilion. It was a preliminary to
   Eddie Hanlon and some other fellow. You're a two-handed fighter,
   I remember that, with an awful wallop, but slow. Yes, I remember,
   you were slow that night, but you got your man." He put out a wet
   hand. "My name's Hazard--Jim Hazard."
   "An' if you're the football coach that was, a coupl 
					     					 			e of years
   ago, I've read about you in the papers. Am I right?"
   They shook hands heartily, and Saxon was introduced. She felt
   very small beside the two young giants, and very proud,
   withal, that she belonged to the race that gave them birth. She
   could only listen to them talk.
   "I'd like to put on the gloves with you every day for half an
   hour," Hazard said. "You could teach me a lot. Are you going to
   stay around here?"
   "No. We're goin' on down the coast, lookin' for land. Just the
   same, I could teach you a few, and there's one thing you could
   teach me--surf swimmin'."
   "I'll swap lessons with you any time," Hazard offered. He turned
   to Saxon. "Why don't you stop in Carmel for a while? It isn't so
   bad."
   "It's beautiful," she acknowledged, with a grateful smile,
   "but--" She turned and pointed to their packs on the edge of the
   lupine. "We're on the tramp, and lookin' for government land."
   "If you're looking down past the Sur for it, it will keep," he
   laughed. "Well, I've got to run along and get some clothes on. If
   you come back this way, look me up. Anybody will tell you where I
   live. So long."
   And, as he had first arrived, he departed, crossing the sandhills
   on the run.
   Billy followed him with admiring eyes.
   "Some boy, some boy," he murmured. "Why, Saxon, he's famous. If
   I've seen his face in the papers once, I've seen it a thousand
   times. An' he ain't a bit stuck on himself. Just man to man.
   Say!--I'm beginnin' to have faith in the old stock again."
   They turned their backs on the beach and in the tiny main street
   bought meat, vegetables, and half a dozen eggs. Billy had to drag
   Saxon away from the window of a fascinating shop where were
   iridescent pearls of abalone, set and unset.
   "Abalones grow here, all along the coast," Billy assured her;
   "an' I'll get you all you want. Low tide's the time."
   "My father had a set of cuff-buttons made of abalone shell," she
   said. "They were set in pure, soft gold. I haven't thought about
   them for years, and I wonder who has them now."
   They turned south. Everywhere from among the pines peeped the
   quaint pretty houses of the artist folk, and they were not
   prepared, where the road dipped to Carmel River, for the building
   that met their eyes.
   "I know what it is," Saxon almost whispered. "It's an old Spanish
   Mission. It's the Carmel Mission, of course. That's the way the
   Spaniards came up from Mexico, building missions as they came and
   converting the Indians"
   "Until we chased them out, Spaniards an' Indians, whole kit an'
   caboodle," Billy observed with calm satisfaction.
   "Just the same, it's wonderful," Saxon mused, gazing at the big,
   half-ruined adobe structure. "There is the Mission Dolores, in
   San Francisco, but it's smaller than this and not as old."
   Hidden from the sea by low hillocks, forsaken by human being and
   human habitation, the church of sun-baked clay and straw and
   chalk-rock stood hushed and breathless in the midst of the adobe
   ruins which once had housed its worshiping thousands. The spirit
   of the place descended upon Saxon and Billy, and they walked
   softly, speaking in whispers, almost afraid to go in through the
   open ports. There was neither priest nor worshiper, yet they
   found all the evidences of use, by a congregation which Billy
   judged must be small from the number of the benches. Inter they
   climbed the earthquake-racked belfry, noting the hand-hewn
   timbers; and in the gallery, discovering the pure quality of
   their voices, Saxon, trembling at her own temerity, softly sang
   the opening bars of "Jesus Lover of My Soul." Delighted with the
   result, she leaned over the railing, gradually increasing her
   voice to its full strength as she sang:
   "Jesus, Lover of my soul,
   Let me to Thy bosom fly,
   While the nearer waters roll,