WNU Service @ SYNOPSIS As Alan Garth, prospector, is pre- paring to leave for his mining claim in the Far North, a plane lands at the airways emergency station. In it are Burton Ramill, millionaire mining magnate; his daughter, Lil- ith; and Vivian Huxby, pilot and mining engineer. Belleving him to be only an ignorant prospector, the men offer to make an alr trip to Garth's claim, although they refer to his samples of platinum-bearing ore as nearly “worthless.” Lilith Ram- fll, product of the jazz age, plainly shows contempt for Garth. Through Garth's guidance the plane soon reaches the claim site. Huxby and Ramill, after making several tests, assure Garth his claim is nearly valueless, but to “encourage” young prospectors they are willing to take a chance In investing a small amount, Sensing treachery ahead, Garth se- cretly removes a part from the mo- tor of the plane. Huxby and Lilith taunt Garth, but their tone soon changes when they try to start the plane. Returning to shore they try to force Garth to give up the miss. ing part. Garth manages to set the monoplane adrift and the current carries it over the falls. He points out that he is thelr only hope In uiding them out of the wilderness. Garth begins the work of preparing for the long journey, He Insists that the others help. Ramill and his daughter must be hardened for the hardships ahead in their trek to the outpost on the Mackenzie. Garth experiences difficulties In getting his companions into line. An experi- ence with a bear helps. Returning from a long sleep In the woods, Garth finds the party has stolen the tea and sugar he has been saving for emergencies. He makes no ob- jection, simply pointing out that he is accustomed to a strict meat diet, and that they are hurting only them- selves. The work of getting ready for the trip continues. Huxby re- fuses to help, and works on the mining claim. CHAPTER V—Continued wont nine No man of the engineer's coldly cal culating character would stop at any- thing, when the stakes of the game meant a placer worth a million or more. Mother Nature could now be counted on to ka2ep the spoiled helress in line. jut the Wild would only sharpen and Intensify the engineer's craft and avarice, After eating his fill, Garth took to Huxby's bed, beside the smudge-fire. He wakened to find that the sun had taken its porthern dip and was just slanting up again above the mountaln crests. It had been under much longer than in June. The summer was get. ting well along. Huxby had stayed on watch to keep the fire going. He met Garth's off- hand good morning with a show of civility. His cool reasoning had brought him to the realization that nothing was to be gained by upstaging Garth. When Miss Ramill left the leanto, Garth stooped In under the low roof and began to rub her father's knees and hips. The millionaire groaned that he had been stricken with a ter rible attack of lumbago and rheuma- ism. It was impossible for him to move, Heedless of the plaints, Garth rolled the complainer out beside the cold baked leg of moose. The "sick™ man ate more than either his daughter or Garth. Afterwards, insistent urging and the promise of an easy work-out persuaded him to get on his feet. They wandered around through the woods, with frequent pauses In the glades, When, several hours later, they re turned to camp Miss Ramill had com- pleted one moccasin and was doggedly stitching at its mate. Huxby came down from the trough with the gold pan. Garth melted the last of the moose fat In it and fried a heaping mess of mvshrooms. For salad, he shook a quantity of pleasantly acid sorrel from the bottom of his pall With berries for dessert, the meal be came a banquet. While it lasted there was a general glow of good feel ing. Evea Huxby spoke pleasantly to Garth, As before, Garth turned In at the same time as Mr, Ramil. He wakened to find the first palr of moceasing finished. The girl had met his terms. He gave Huxby the moss bed, and started to collect flattish stones as heavy as he could toss, When he had pitched a dozen or 80 upon the cache platform, he strung the smoked slices of meat on rawhide thongs. Raking aside the smudge-fire, he stood on the rack and tied all the meat close up under the cache platform. He then climbed upon the platform and piled the stones on the tie-thongs where they came around the pdles, That would keep wolverines or other piifer ers from gnawing the rawhide to lot the meat fall. No fourfooted crea. ture could now get at the meat on the under side of the platform, and even ravens would have difficulty stealing much of it. To complete the job, Gartn pulled off the cross poles of the smoke rack. For breakfast, the party the baked leg of moose, finished As Garth of foreseen, his three elty camp tes bad developed camp appetites, etter still, they were less irritable. Thelr craving for drink and tobacco Bad begun to lessen, At timberline Huxby went up the trough with the gold pan. Garth headed again for the glacler. This time Mr. Ramil did not pant and gasp so hard, nor did he have to stop so often to rest, The first climb had done more than strengthen his wind and flabby muscles. It had burned up the autotoxins in his system as well as sweat off many pounds of fat. He managed to climb all the way to the lower end of the glacier. It took him less time than his part-way climb and he was far less exhausted. While he rested in a sunny nook on the rocky side of the lateral moraine, his daugh- ter went down'in front of the glacler with Garth. They came to the chan- nel where the milky stream gushed out of a tunnel cave in the blue-white ice. Garth pointed to a shelf of rock on the near slde of the stream. He walked Into the cave along the smooth- ly polished ledge. Lilith Ramill shud- dered and glanced up fearfully at the steep over-hanging fice face that seemed about to crash down Yet after a moment's hesitation, she fol- lowed Garth Into the chilly blue shadow of the cave. Several yards from the entrance Garth stopped before a narrow side hole that opened above a walst-high uprise in the bedrock. He reached in and plcked up a bundled white skin, Out In the sun he opened the skin and showed a plece of frozen meat. “How's that for cold storage?’ he said. “Killed a young mountain sheep on my way ouf, last month. Thought I'd test the glacler. Looks as if it's a safe meat house. No chance of spoil ing, and not even a wolf has ventured inside.” Miss Ramill sald nothing. She saw no reason to consider the cave of the slightest interest. There was, however, the meat. suggested that if It was not spoiled, it would make a change from the moose meat. This proved true. Down at camp the young mutton was first thawed In cold water, then stewed in the gold pan, The descent had been made by Ra- mill without ald. There was no need to support, much less back-pack him. He had really begun to get a start in training. To Garth this was all the more reason for pushing the million- alre so much the harder. In the week that followed, he al ternated more climbs with trips around into the muskeg swamps. He led his sweating, swearing charge over nigger head grass, where the heavy-bodied city man had to jump nimbly from one big tussock to another or take a tumble, She Miss Ramill tagged along on these grueling hikes. She also made an- other climb up the gulch. Garth cached in the cave the hundred pounds of smoked moose meat he had brought up on his pack-board. He then led on up the glacier, halfway from its foot to the top of the pass. That gave the three climbers some real ice work. Coming back, Garth knocked three brace of fool hens from spruce limbs with a stick. The half dozen grouse made a pleas. ant change. But even with a pall of salmon berries for dessert they prove a scant meal for the four meat-eaters. The last leg of moose had already been baked and eaten, the tongues broiled, and the second muffle stewed. The remainder of smoked meat would ‘not last long. So far. Garth had not interfered with Huxby's all day panning out of the platinum alloy. He had not even asked to look at the take of precious metal. Food was a different matter. Instead of shooting another moose, he called upon Huxby to Join in & caribou hunt, A band of the big animals had drift ed along the tundra terrace over towards the glacler. Garth counted fifteen. He waited until the band came within seventy-five yards. He then let drive, shooting rapidly yet with careful alm. One after another dropped, each with a bullet through the head. The stupid beasts stared in the direction of the sharp reports. But they could see nothing. The sixth went down before the nine survivors wheeled and clattered off in panle stricken flight, The flaying was well under way when Euxby and Miss Ramill came hastening aslant the tundra ahead of Mr. Ramill. The girl eyed the clean deliclous-looking white fat on the first flayed body. “That looks good, Alan! Vivian, you ean go back to your min- ing. Dad and I will help here.” Her father called out a panting sug- gestion for Huxby to walt and carry down a load of meat. “No need,” Garth sald, Huxhy. on lee. spoil” The engineer did not linger. He bad looked none too well pleased over the girl's famillar use of Garth's first name. Along with his displeasure about this, there could be uo doubt of his eagerness to get back to the plat. inum panning. Each successive day he had shown himself still keener to continue the sampling of the placer. When Garth finished the flaying of the caribou, he started to dress out the bodies. Greatly to his astonishment, at the cutting up of the second carl bou, she took the belt-ax and began to help. Mother Nature had cracked the polished shell of artificiality In which the pampered heiress had been en the “Don’t stop, Most of this venison is going None will be allowed to cased. The girl's few days In the Wild had awakened primitive Instincts ground deep into the nature of woman during the remote past of mankind, Down through countless ages her pre- historle ancestresses had learned the bitter lesson that, in the Wild, days of plenty are certaln to be followed by days of famine. The cave man hunted the meat; the cave woman hoarded what she could of It against the time of want, Otherwise her children starved, So, upon reflection, Garth's amaze- ment passed. He bad managed to cover it, even at the first, when Lilith Ramill took the belt-ax in her slen- der hand and severed the neck bone of the caribou with a single blow, Her father was the one who stared. He sat watching the girl's quick, eager wielding of the hand-ax, his mouth slack, almost agape. Garth could only surmise how she had always been coddled and pampered. Her father knew it. He knéw how, since ber childhood, she had been wrapped about with silken luxury, walted upon by attentive servants, petted and spolled, The millionaire had been born on a farm. He could recall seeing his mother help butcher sheep and hogs. But she was a farmer's wife, Lilith would not have known how to prepare a spring chicken for the pan. And now she was cutting up caribou, Aside ffom an occasional word of direction, Garth sald nothing. When he finished dressing out the fifth car- cass, he handed his knife to his eager helper, packed a load of meat, and carried it to the ice cave. Down in the gulch bottom he chose a pothole stone that would hold per. haps three quarts. In the bowl he colled a wick of twisted dry caribon She Followed Gartn Into the Chilly Blue Shadow of the Cave. moss, plied In caribou fat, and lighted the wick. When the fat melted. the wick burned with a strong steady flame. Caribou ribs furnished a grat. ing on whieh to broll steaks. The fat meat was deliciously tender, its flavor between venison and beef. When even Mr, Ramill could eat no more, Garth carried the stone lamp into the ice eave. Upon his return, he had Mr. Ramill and Lilith look close at the caribou skins, “You see they are hair, not fur. But every hair is hollow, Nothing is warmer than a caribou parka. In fact, the winter coat Is too warm to be worn. That is why I killed six now, instead of one. You have never win- tered in the North" Mr. Ramill tensed as if prodded. “Wintered? You can’t mean to infer you expect to stay on here. We have your promise to take us out.” Garth turned to meet the Intent gaze of the girl's blue eyes. They looked as cold as the blue Ice of the glacier tunnel. None the less, they had great- ly changed since he had first seen them, over on the Mackenzie. They no longer showed a trace of thelr former cynical tiredness. The girl might be a8 hard as ever, but she was no longer bored or ennuled. For another thing, she had begun to lose her exces sive thinness, He answered her father: “You have my promise—~more's the pity. A winter a la Eskimo would be a won- derful experience for Miss Ramil However, she will of course prefer to go back to Jazz and cocktails, to paint, powder and lipstick.” She flared: “And rid of you!” “To be wure. That above all else,” he agreed. “So how could 1 deprive you of that pledsure, or fail to give your father and your flance another chance to bilk me out of my placer claim? I agreed to get you back to the Mackenzie. When we reach the old post, we part company. You and Huxby will then be free to go as far a8 you ean” “But In that case—~ No, you ean't wake me swallow It. I know you're not such a fool as to risk losing that placer.” . Garth laughed outright. “What d'you take me for? Your brand of gold-digger? nubbin of it all. It's the reason why men like you and Huxby lose out. You worship the golden calf. Yet what value Is there to riches other than what you get from them? Can you think of a more enjoyable game than playing draw poker, with our lives In the jackpot, and Fortune deal ing us the cards of chance?” “What's the catch?” inquired Miss Ramill, with a sudden upwelling of her sophisticated cynicism. “Lives In the Jackpot'—that means nothing. It's your placer that's In the pot. What stakes do you consider we have in to balance ft?" “That would be telling.” he teased, “You'll know if I win. If I lose, it will not matter to any of you what you've risked. The showdown may sooner than I expected. Your father is already In fairly good shape. We'll start the trip out as soon as these caribou skins have been tanned.” ————— CHAPTER VI Hell in the Muskegs. Garth sat beside the camp fire, sew- ing new moccasing for himself. Near- by, the millionaire dealer in mines and his fastidious daughter scraped the raw sides of the six caribou skins and rubbed them with the tanning mixture of fat, liver and brains. Garth had told them they could either tan the skins, or walt for him to do it. Until the tanning had been finish, the trip out would not begin. Mr. Ramill was so keen to start back for civilization that he went at the disagreeable task with energy and determination. Lilith not only worked as vigorously as her father, she showed a real interest in the tanning, come Huxby tock no part In this prepara tion of the skins. When he came down to the camp from the platinum of his flancee's d squaw work struck n He stared in blank ama be found Garth: gone a bit too far, yon Stand up, or I'll kick you going to—" The girl broke In, with cool scorn: “Tune off, old dear. You're set on static. IC's not interference we want Dad and 1 are giving this performance under our own direction. You see, it's a bargain. Alan agrees to start our trip out just as soon as these skins are all tanned.™ The mining engineer drew back. “Ro soon as that? My dear girl, If he's going to rush us off, I don't see how I can spare any time here In camp. I haven't yet sampled all the area of the placer.” (TO BE CONTINUED) Manure Most Important in Aiding Plant Growth The chemist's analysis of a short ton—2000 pounds—of well rotted barnyard manure reveals that ft is made up of 1500 pounds of water and 500 pounds of dry matter. This pounds of dry matter contains approximately ten pounds of nitro gen, five »f phosphoric acid, 13 of potash, eight of lime and five of sul phur—a total of 41 pounds of chem- lcals—plus 450 pounds of organie matter, or “humus” In addition, as serts an authority In the New York Times, it contains a supply of cer tain bacteria and other’ microscopic organisms which are essential In ef. fecting changes In the soll—the “breaking down" of chemical com- pounds existing in the soll Into sim- pler and more soluble forms In other words, manure is so val uable in gardening because if oro vides, combined in this one substance, three distinet soll alds: first, small amounts of the maln plant food ele- ments (nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash) and also of lime (not a food element but a “digestion accelerator” in the plant's diet); second, a supply of humus or organic matter which helps to change any uncongenial, un- responsive soll into molsture-holding, friable, productive loam; and, third: ly, an active, thriving population of bacteria beneficial to plant feeding and plant growth. placer, the sight ing such speechless, ment. When at last to threaten “You've roughneck. up. I am Pressed Wood i pered grade, has almost unlimited takle. Made entirely of wood and be. ing warp-proof and molsture-resistant, pressed wood is sturdy ; 1t ylelds easily to the saw and does not chip or crack under pressure of nalls or screws, U. 8. Public Health Service The United States public health fee official seal bears the date origin, 1708, when It was known Marine Hospital Service, The ent name wins authorized by in 1012 BRISBAN, THIS WEEK If Five Dictators Unite England Is Feverish Wealth for a Good Girl Gen. Mitchell Finds Rest Rome hints that Mussolini and Hit ler have arranged a protective treaty with Austria, Po- land and Hungary. Five countries un- der dictators, unit- ed against England and France, still experimenting with the old “demoec- racy,” would be in- teresting. One dictator, Sta- Hn, su pposed to have an under. standing with France, might off. the other com- bination. set Arthur Brisbane . will any le al- but stayed, otherwise, bitterness, to cause Italy's ‘thiopia, Hitler (ye Also, that In 1014 thought she had Italy in a “tr Hance"—Italy-Austria Germany, Italy did not stay, Had the war might ended That with England defeat by remember she have Mussolini's trying barbarous increnses Mr. Eden, young foreign secretary, tells England modern conditions “dreadfully” like conditions before 1914. England must arm herself to the teeth and have, for final objective, “a world-wide system of ] curity which an authority and his pnchallengent ” That might be done by two or three are lective se- ations in embraces i I i 5 hall inchallenged which Is 1 countries closely united, although the airplane makes everything in war un- certain. It might destroy a capital city and an al In morning, as a pistol destroys the strongest man. one Countess Barbara Hutton Haugwits- Reventlow bas a new bab ing seven and a half twenty dollars: that in at the present price we than thirty thousand p Ask jarbara Hutton H vitz-Reventlow, as she holds that s nit s ¥ t 4 her fin boy welgh- and gold 2id weigh more y pounds, million ounds, v 1 v ocused, one sn ger, whether she wou rathe £20,000, 000, and 14 iQ F or the Khe ions for woman who m i Kind young man ( . ” riehe seg » may be richer than any “five and ten heiress, Gen. William E. Mitchell was buried nily burial plot in Milwaukee, on cemetery. it all against his the stupidity of his superiors, he wanted peace at the last He lies beside his father, a United States senator from Wisconsin. General Mitchell has gone wherever patriotic, men go. that opposed him will not follow him there. not k his life the enemies of country a % ang brave some At Greenwood Lake, N. Y., a mall carrying rocket went 2000 feet from New York to New Jersey over Green- wood lake, while spectators smiled In derision, Other spectators smiled when ton tried his first steamboat, Ful- In Madison, Wis, death masks of Indians, more than 3,000 years old, found in burial grounds, lead back to savages of the Eskimo type that hunt. ed mammoths near the beautiful Wis. consin lakes 15,000 years ago. Those ancient savages, Instead burying the dead, cleaned the skeletons neatly, covered the skulls with lifelike masks of clay, kept their relatives with them for years, The human race has done queer things always, Russia has Lenin, embalmed, exhibited in the great Red square of Moscow, Td O35 The world becomes gradually demo- cratic. In King George's funeral pro- cession everybody walked. At his father's funeral, the great all went on horseback, Including King George's cousin, the former kaiser, on a pranc- ing white horse, Now King Edward VIII orders sim. pler uniforms, less fancy dressing In Buckingham palace, President Lewis, fifty, head of the miners’ valon, plenty ef cash on hand, offers Willlam Green, American Fed: eration Labor head, £3500.000 for a campaign to organize 500.000 men In the stesl Industry, Mr. Green, a long. time uvaion man, has not accepted the offer. fle knows how easy it Is for one man to become a tail for the othe~ man's kite, Dr. Alfred Adler, competent pay. chologist, says the Dionne quintup- own good.” facile, Emilie and Marie, sb, heart disease; a substitute for power, oll, coal, etc. That means harnessing the sun to one end of the scale, the atom at the other, © King Pures fyndicate, luc, | Adorable Pantie Frock That Is Easy to Make PATTERN 2556 BA = SH odin ais dati v7 | Here's an adorable frock for a two- to-ten-year-old, and one very easy for nother to make, it wears a young round-collared neckline, puffed sleeves little girl charm, and roomy pleats for agile youngsters who want action.” Printed percale would be ever so ap- pealing and Pattern 2556 6, 8 and ’ L00, for Irresistible “free practical, is avalls 10, Size inch sewir “an oA ure to he Sewing t., 247 W. Forty- ork, N. XY. 14 ANT Bervice. Forward and Upward Anywhere, if it and If I should haps my spent as a other way.—Da be forward iife inner rar d Livingstone, Week's Supply of Postum Free Read the offer made by the Postum Company in another part of this pa. per. They will send a full week's sup- ply of health giving Postum free to anyone who writes for it-—Ady. Failings of Others If we had no failings ourselves we in should not take so much pleasure in finding out those of others. —Roche- foucauld. Out From Your Doctor if the “Pain” Remedy You Take Is Safe. Don’t Entrust Your Own or Your Family's Well - Being to Unknown Preparations EFORE you take any p pa - tion you don’t know all about, for the relief of headaches; or the pains of rheumatism, neuritis or neuralgia, ask your doctor what he thinks about it —in comparison with Genuine Bayer Aspirin. We say this because, before the it ae clams i bein the heart. And the discovery of Bayer Auplifn largely changed prac Countless thousands of people year ect, have who have taken Bayer i in and out without ill proved that the medical findings about its safely were correct. Remember this: Genuine Bayer Aspirin is rated the fastest methods pet discovered for the relief of headaches and a common pains You can get real Bayer Aspirin at axking 1 4 the name “gain ASP, bt al A zen Bayer Aspirin