 Ranger Bill, warrior of the woodland, struggling against extreme odds, traveling dangerous trails, fighting the many enemies of nature. This is the job of the guardian of the forest, Ranger Bill. Pouring rain, freezing cold, blistering heat, snow, floods, bears, rattlesnakes, mountain lions. Yes, all this in exchange for the satisfaction and pride of a job well done. You know, boys and girls, the frontiers of exploration aren't closed today. We often think that they are, but the truth of the matter is there are still many new explorations to be made. Some are through the microscope, some with the satellite exploring the heavens, some with the deep-sea diving bell, and others right here on the good old solid earth. Yes, the surface of the earth still has many places to be explored. Some of them exceedingly dangerous and unknown. If you'll join us at Ranger Headquarters, you'll find out about a new exploration going on close to Naughty Pine. It's the story Glacier Cave Inn. Oh, what good reading and paper today, Bill. Well, the Gazette is a fine write-up on a new cave the archaeologists have discovered. Where is it? Up next to the Big Slime. You know, the small glacier way up at the northern end of the shady mountain range. Oh, sure, I remember. We were up there one summer when we were on patrol. Sure a tough place to get to. That's right, pal. It's rugged country. Oh, about that. Probably become world-famous because of this. Say, these scientists are from our own state university. How did scientists find Cave Bill? Well, it seems as though they've been watching Big Slime move a large mass of rock for some years. The glacier finally moved it far enough to cause it to avalanche down the mountainside. Then the explorers noticed a small cave opening in one place where the rock had been. Just goes to show you. You can't tell when something new will open up. And here it's been closed by all the time. And here, let me read it. Well, sure worth it. Yes, another one of them there holds in the mountain. Probably won't amount any things we go. Why not too sure, Stumpy? That isn't what it says here in the paper. They've already found some evidence of ancient civilization here in North America dating way back to an early age. That's right, old timer. Looks like a terrific discovery. Maybe one of the greatest of this day in age. If that's so, Naughty Pine may have many visitors from all over the world. Could be. Hard to realize just how important this could be. Depends on what they actually find in the cave, of course. Well, it won't affect us any. So, yes, no need for us to worry about it. Dr. Swift, I think we make a great discovery. Little did we realize when we went into the small mouth of the cave that it would open into this amazing underground cathedral. That's right, Professor Anderson. And think of the evidence of ancient North American civilization we've found. Perhaps there's more in the cave, or caves, as the case may well be now. We haven't any idea how far back this cave goes. Dr. Swift, this is a miracle of God. He has made this magnificent place over the centuries. And I say let's forget about God, Professor. You're a brilliant scientist, except for this foolish religious talk. This key was made from water running through here for thousands of years and washing the soft stone away and leaving these beautiful formations. Beyond that, we know nothing. Let us not argue now, Doctor. Someday I will demonstrate to you that there is a God. But now we have much more important things to do than to argue. You're a young man with lots to learn. You mark my words. Someday God will show himself to you in a real way. Until that time comes, you are right. It is foolishness to argue. Yes. Let's join the rest of the party, Professor. We have months of exploration before us. I can see them just ahead, crawling along the floor of the cavern very slowly. Just to make sure it is sound. We will join them, yeah? Yes, at once. Paul, you watch the seismograph carefully. If the glacier moves, suddenly we could be trapped by a rock slide here in the cave. Yes, Dr. Swift, I'm keeping a sharp eye on it. And don't move the machine any more than necessary. Let's get a hundred feet ahead here and then you move it. Let it down and don't move it again until we're another hundred feet ahead. All right, sir. To my mind, there might be serious danger in this cave. It's unknown to us and we don't know its moods and its temperaments. Dr. Swift, can you come here at once? I think I have found a skeleton of an early North American man. Ah, good, Professor. I'm coming at once. Watch your step, Doctor. The floor of this cave is treacherous. Where are you, Professor? I'm here by this overhanging rock, Dr. Swift. This is a whole skeleton and a very good one. We are making great discoveries. I see you now. Say, that looks like a good specimen from here. Let me take a close look at it. How do you think of it? You were right. This is a perfect specimen of an early North American man. We must prepare this very carefully for shipment. I'd have to men bring a shipping box. It would be best to pack it right away. An excellent idea. We must handle it with utmost care. Yeah. I want men to bring a packing material for the skeleton we found. Anything wrong? I don't know, sir. This seismograph either isn't working properly or there's some earth movements close by. See how the needle trembles and keeps shifting? Yeah. You're sure it's grounded properly? I'm sure it's, sir. Dr. Swift checked it with me. I'm afraid there might be trouble. The same shifting which uncovered the mount of the cave could also bring us into great danger. Look, sir, there it goes again. Paul, I think we better call back all those inside. The big slide is beginning to move fast. There it is again, sir. The earth is shaking. Let's call the men. Is Dr. Swift with you? He was in there, professor. He didn't come with us. Why? The graft is almost shaking with the movements of the mountain. It's dangerous. Let's call him again, Paul. That's a sweat! That's a sweat! Come out of the cave! Danger! I run and get him. No, no, no. You mustn't. It's too dangerous. Dr. Swift! Come on! Dr. Swift! Well, we've read these newspapers to pieces, fellas. Guess we'll have to wait for the next edition for more information concerning the cave. Yeah, now. Boy, this sure is interesting. I wish we could go out there to the big slide and see it. Yeah, it wouldn't be such a good idea. Now, you're going to tell me if there are many dangers in there, and I doubt if they'd let us in and bring everything. It'd be a very tough job to get there, too, in rugged country. Much ice and snow make it worse. I wonder who's calling us and how much you're doing around about here. Ranger-Edquarters, Bill Jefferson, speaking. Hello, Bill. This is Todd. Oh, how are you, Todd? How are things at the university? What about? Something wrong? Any special significance about that? Well, in my place, sir, if so... Yes, you've got a point there, all right. It's a possibility. Have there any method of communication with them? Radio or code flash or something? Well, Bill... See, I think the boys and I will take a look at the new cave right away. Well, you do tell us. Okay, old boy. We'll go right out and take a look, just to make sure. In the meantime, let's not sprout any more gray hairs than necessary, huh? Yeah, thank you, sir. Yes, I'll do that, Todd. Take it easy now. Thanks again, Bill. Goodbye. Goodbye. Did I misunderstand you, or did you say we were going out to the new cave? No, we are. Let's get our cold-weather gear together, fellas. There may be a rough job ahead. What's the situation, Dr. Anderson? Everyone is safe except Dr. Swift. He's unconscious, and his leg is hopelessly caught under the rocks. If only he had come away when you sounded a warning, Paul. I can't understand it. The rest of you heard me, so he must have, too. He was probably concentrating so much on our discovery of the skeleton that he did not hear the first warning. Then the whole overhang rock came down on him, so we've got to get a doctor at once. I'll go for help, Professor. No, no, no. You stay with the doctor. Give him all the help you can. I'm used to mountain climbing, Paul. I will go at once and get help. Okay, sir. And don't let anyone go deeper into the cave until I come back with help. It's too dangerous. Well, as this looks like the end of the line, as far as riding in the drug is concerned, the rest of the way is on foot. That big peak way off to the southwest is a place, isn't it? Yeah. It's a long, rugged way, pal. Well, let's get out and fix our gear and start. I can leave the truck right here, and it won't be in anybody's way. I've got to get help for Swift. I can't see very well. The snow has blinded me. I've got to keep on. I've got to keep on. I can't get up. What a pace you've been going. What do you guys think I am, an iron man? Well, I'll wish we were iron men before we get through this trip. Now, follow me down the mountain. We're going to rest. Hey, pal, I have a heart. There isn't much air. I mean, there isn't much oxygen. What's the use? He'll sure get awfully hard of hearing sometimes. Stumpy. Everything normal. Henry complain, as usual. Yep. Only can say I blame you much. Only if he gets one thing. Bill just as tired as the rest of us. Murder like he says. Did you see that there? A crazy kid ride the ridge and beat us down by about a mile. Then he went right up the slope for some reason or other. I'm very dangerous. Go along edge at high speed and one slip and beat too late. I think he did that just to get ahead of us so he could rest at the top of the slope. That's risky, all right? Henry! Yeah, Bill? Henry, don't you take any more chances like you did coming down the slope. Suppose you'd hit a rock and been thrown over the edge. I was just trying to get ahead of you iron men so I could rest. Yeah. One slip and you'd have gotten a permanent rest. Now no more harebrained ski runs for you, young man. That's an order. I'm sorry. I didn't mean to upset you. But there was something good that came out of it. What do you mean? You see something we couldn't see? Yeah. Look carefully in the bottom of the valley down there. That dark spot in the snow it looks like it could be a man. It is a man, Bill. He looks almost frozen. Kick your skis off, pal, and give me a hand with him. Here, I'll roll him over. Right. Hey, look at his face. That's the man whose picture we saw in the paper. Right. He's one of the scientists exploring the new cave. Something's wrong with that cave. I'm sure of that now. Here, let's see if we can't revive him enough to have him talk. I'll get blanket out of pack. Good. Henry, lift his feet. Okay. Now there he is. I'll start rubbing his legs and feet. I'm gonna stir up that circulation. Well, you're doing that, young fellow. Work on one arm. Gray Wolf, you get on the other. Rub toward his heart, mind you. I do. Good. Meanwhile, I'll unpack my blanket. Get some medicine that should revive him. Then stop being Gray Wolf and take him back to town in the hospital. What are we gonna do, Bill? We're going on to the cave. Just as soon as we find out what's happened. Look at his eyes. He's trying to talk. Swift. Pass out again. What do you think he'd mean, Bill? No, go to cave, Swift Rocks. Go to cave, I understand. But about Swift Rocks, I don't. Don't have to put Swift and Rocks together, young fellow. Take them as two words. Huh? Okay. Swift and Rocks. I still don't get it. Wait a minute. I do. Isn't there a scientist by the name of Swift in the party of explorers up there? Yeah, sure there is. That's it. Swift is probably caught in a rock slide and this fellow is trying to get help. Something, Gray Wolf. You two take this fellow back to the hospital. Henry and I'll go up to the cave. Okay, Bill. Any more orders? Yeah. I'll carry our small radio. One of you fellas stay by the truck radio all the time. I'll contact you as soon as we know the story. Now let's go, pal. Somebody in that cave is in real trouble. That must be the father of the cave, Bill. Yeah. Nobody's waving at us for me. Must be one of the men in the party. Save your breath now and keep going. It isn't far. Keep on pushing, pal. We're almost there. You look beautiful. I'm all right. Help my young friend here. Let's get inside out of this wind. We've got some morphine in my kit, Dr. Swift. Injection of this will ease the pain in your smashed leg. Just get a little rest in this pain. Hold your arms still. I should help you. Poor fella's really in a bad way, isn't he, Bill? No wonder. Look at all that rock on top of his leg. What do you think we can do, Bill? Let's walk away a bit and talk about it, huh? Good idea. I'm afraid it's pretty bad, Paul. Follow my light of that pile of rocks that fell on him on the slide occurred. I know. I looked at it a dozen times while I was waiting for you, fellas. Some of those rocks must weigh a ton. Yeah, easily. I'd say there were 20 tons of rocks piled up there and solid as a mountain. I went to radio for Dr. Pike, a surgeon, a naughty pine, to come up here with Stumpkin Grey Wolf. A surgeon? You mean it? Yes, Paul. Let's face the truth. The only way we can get Dr. Swift out of here alive is to amputate. Let the dogs pull Dr. Pike on the last stretch of the way. I know I'm going to be too exhausted when he gets here. Oh, Grey Wolf, don't sign off yet. I want you to have Stumpkin bring a dog team, too. On it, I want you to put a small generator, gasoline type, a hand job, then also an electric cord with a dozen light sockets, some light bulbs, star drills, and some dynamite. Oh, yes. And two four-pound hammers. Like knowledge, over and out. Well, I guess I did sound crazy. That's pretty admirable. Well, let's get back into the cave and see how Dr. Swift is. Many glad Anderson's doing all right. Yeah, I think the death was only a hair's breath away. Bill, I'm just a little nosy, but what in the world are you going to do with all that stuff you have in Grey Wolf and Stumpkin bring up? Dynamite? Star drills? Electric light bulbs and a generator? Man! Well, you'll see. I could do some more thinking before I let the general public in in my wild ideas. And I am one of the general public, eh? I'm sorry, pal, but for the present... You can't hurt my feelings. I don't mind the wait. Think of that poor Dr. Swift. He's the guy that'll find the time drag. Yeah. Especially since my supply of morphine will last only 24 hours. Bill, I was wondering, did Professor Anderson get back to your headquarters all right to tell you about me? No, sir. We found him collapsed at the bottom of Shady Valley about 10 miles from here on the other side of the mountain. Collapsed? Is it all right now? Glad to say it is. I thought he got through when you fell and showed up. How did you come to find out about the slide? Well, it was mostly a matter of deduction. You see, Todd called us from the university. He's your associate, I understand. Yes, that's right. Well, Todd picked up a localized tremor on the seismograph and wondered if the big slide glacier might have caused it. Then the thought struck us that it might have caused trouble. I told him I'd take a look up here. It just eases mine. And it's a good thing we did come because Professor Anderson never would have made it. Or any of your men, for that matter, I'm afraid. You don't have the right gear for an open track like that. It was a miracle from God. Interesting. Right. How's that, Doctor? Oh, nothing at all. Nothing at all. Just thinking out loud. How much longer do we have to wait? I mean, how soon will the men be here with the surgeon and the equipment? I don't know, sir. I won't venture into any promises. It all depends how the weather holds up and how fast the dogs move. You know, this is such rugged country that couldn't even use a helicopter. Too many updrafts close to the mountains. All I can do is wait and pray that they get through quickly and safely. But they will get through what they build. Stumpy and gray wolf? Yes, they'll get through unless the earth opens up and swallows them. Even then they dig their way out. How's the pain, Doctor Swift? Oh, not so bad now. The morphine yelps considerably. That's good. Because I'm going to hold off the next morphine shot as long as possible. Why? Are you running out? Doctor, this is the last one we have. Ruffnick is a terrific dog, Stumpy. I'll come here after him so much. It's the only way I'll work, Doc. He's the best-leaved dog in this part of the country. When he changes his mind, where's any woman? One minute is all work, and the next minute he wants to lose. You've got to keep cracking the whip over these rascals. Why, Stumpy? Won't they respond to kinder treatment? Not these values! Don't be innocent! Stumpy, there are places ahead where we find Professor Anderson. It only ten miles to Cave now. You flipped your lid? What are you doing? Couldn't see under that rock. Why stand on your head to try it? I suppose I did look peculiar, crawling along the base of this monster's rock. But no, I'm satisfied. Satisfied? With what? I found out something in me. What is? Come on, tell me. Perhaps we won't have to amputate the doctor's leg after all that. Hey, that's good news! But how do you figure to get him out from under all that rock? Now, wait a minute. First of all, not a word to the doctor. I don't want to get his hopes up too high. We've got to compare nodes with Doc Pike and Stumpy and Grey Wolf too. So you were trying to figure some way to move that rock? Yeah. If we can move it, then the rocks on top of the doctor's leg will roll off away from him. Those that don't move, maybe we can move, but the manpower will have available. Boy, that sounds great! How do you plan to move the big rock? Dynamite. Small charges of it. Small charges of dynamite? Won't that be dangerous for Dr. Swift? For all of us as a matter of fact? I don't think so. That's why I want to talk with the fellas when they get here. And I hope it's soon. Real soon. I'm sure glad you had us bring the portable gasoline generator. Putting those light bulbs around the doctor's helping him immensely. He's getting pretty cold lying on the cold damn floor of the cave. Even though I've given him more morphine, he's very comfortable now. Well, what do you think of my idea about moving this big key rock? Well, I think it's worth a try. If it works, he'll save his leg. I'll try to keep the concussion and jotting down to a minimum. Good. When you're ready to use the dynamite, I'll give him more morphine. To cut what pain there might result from the rock's keeping on moving on his leg. But Doc, the way I've got it figured, the rock on his leg shouldn't move at all. Only the rock's on the top. Are we ready now, Bill? I have holes made under key rock and small charges of dynamite in place. He was just set. All right. Stand by, man. Those rocks on top will move closer to the edge of the cliff, Bill. If we work it, right? The other rocks ought to push that key rock over the edge the next time. I hope so, Henry. Let's make more holes, fellas. The next one should do it. Let's get this remaining rock off of Dr. Swiss's leg. Lift it. Lift it. Easy. Easy. Little more. One more left. There. Make him out. That's it, then. Dr. Swift's a free man. Yes, Bill. Thanks to you, Dr. Swift is a free man. But just now, he doesn't know it. He's lost consciousness. Get the threads in the stretcher and we'll head back for town in the hospital. It's good to see you smile again, Dr. Swift. You're looking well, too, Professor Anderson. Thank you, Bill. Yes. To you and your rangers, Bill and to Dr. Pike, I'm deeply grateful. I not only have my leg, but I'll be able to use it again as well as I did before. Yeah. We've got the skeleton, too. No, correction, Henry. We've got two skeletons from that cave. One, an ancient North American man, and the other, a modern man. And there's something else I found in that cave, Professor. Yeah, what was that? I found God, Dr. Anderson, the God you've talked to me about all these years. Oh, Priest the Lord. Wonderful. In those dark hours when I hovered between consciousness and unconsciousness, I looked to Jesus Christ for the first time in my life. And I heard him say, My son, thy sins are forgiven. Well, see you next week for more adventure with...