HHH By ROBERT AMES BENNET WNU Service Copyright by Robert Ames Bennet + CHAPTER VI—Continued ons l en Even after this, Garth had to bear the brunt of the heavy work. Much of the time the others were forced to stop off, to get the cramp out of their knees or rest thelr arms. And when they paddled, their unskilliful stroke kept Garth twisting his own stroke te keep the canoe from being swerved from side to side like a ship with the yaws. Had work been the only consideration, he would as soon have done It all There were, however, reasons for more speed than he could make alone with the heavily loaded skin-covered craft. The summer was now far along. The days were rapidly shortening, the nights becoming colder and darker, Delay would mean a serious chance of being caught in early autumn bliz- zards. Even Lilith Ramill might not be able to survive an all-day drive of sleet. Such a storm would undoubted- 1y kill her father and, not improbably, Huxby also. Persistent use of the paddles would continue the toughening of the three chechahcos. It would also quicken the speed of the canoe as they acquired skill from practice, He himself kept to his stroke like the born voyager he was, dipping his paddle for hour after hour, His steady pull never varied except when, at long intervals, he shifted the paddle over to the other side. He stopped that clocklike stroke only when landings had to be made for food or sleep. On the third day Lilith attempted to keep stroke with him. She paddled until so exhausted that she broke down and wept. After that Huxby quit less often, though he never came 80 near to overtiring himself, They had twice camped on muskeg. The third afternoen brought them to broken ridges where the stream dashed through a gorge. So far as could be seen, the rapids looked easy to shoot. But Garth said it was a portage. He slung a pack from his tump-line and took the canoe on his shoulders. The total load was a full two hun dred and fifty pounds. At sight of it, the others took on all the rest of the meat and equipment, For miles Garth led them up and down rocky slopes, through brush and bogs. Twice they skirted sheer falls that showed why he had taken to land. At last, below the lower fall he launched the canoe In the eddy of a deep pool. The others sank down on the bank, outspent. He bullt a fire and boiled tea for them. They ex- pected to camp overnight. He ordered them back into the cance. “Can't chance walting here. May be too foggy to see tomorrow,” he ex- plained. “Sit flat in the bottom, and keep your paddies Inboard.” They understood when a few strokes of his paddie brought the canoe to the foot of the pool. For a long twe miles they crouched low In the bottom while the frail craft glanced down the foaming, swirling torrent of white ws- ter. Garth smiled at thelr cowering backs. He had often shot worse rapids, and he had been down these once before. Skillfully as an Athabas- kan Indian, he drove the canoe clear of dangerous whirlpools and dodged past rocks with deft twists of his paddle, At the foot of the rapids, he headed in alongside a bit of gravelly beach and helped Mr. Ramill and Lilith ashore. When he remarked that there was gold in the gravel, Huxby nearly upset the canoe in his baste to get out and look. *Gold ! gold pan?” Garth laughed and streached out on the dry grass above the gravel. “Gal. lant gentleman, your lady is building the fire.” “Don't mind him, Vivian” chimed In on the banter. “You can use the cup for panning. I need only the pot to boll Alan's tea” Hikby glanced sidelong at Garth and Bastened to help the girl. Her father had flattened out beside Garth. With a yawn, Garth stretched up his arms and let them fall. The left one came down across the mililonaire’s body. The back of the hand felt a lump under the leather coat. Huxby had not again gained possession of the pistol, Nothing would have been easier than to have pulled out the weapon and flung It Into the stream. The im- puise to do so passed as quickly as It flashed into Garth's mind. He was mot the kind of sportsman who shoots lions from a boma, or tigers from the backs of elephants. There is far more sport stalking a beast that has a chance to kill the stalker. The chechaheos had now experi. enced the different phases of canoeing ~days of paddling through muskeg, a portage, and the running of rapids, ‘But all proved to be no more than a mild sample of the difficulties and ‘hardships that followed. In the next two weeks three more rapids had to be shot and two very hard made. Between times, the canoe was dled Interminably through mean- dering channels that twisted and looped and split off In blind lends, Down In the lower country, the pests of black gnats, mosquitoes and sting- ing flies became worse. At the same Why dido’t we bring the Lilith time the flask of grease and pitch dope began to give out. Most of the camps were on wet ground. For days the party were drenched by a steady drizzle, varled only by downpours that kept Lilith and her father balling the canoe, Several times fog on the water com- pelled Garth to put ashore. Without sight, even his training could not en- able him to follow the right channel He was not an Indian, But between the forced halts, he put in still longer hours of paddling. Matters were coming to a pinch, After the first wetting by the raln, what remained of the meat spolled. It became so flyblown and tainted that Lilith threw It away before Garth could prevent the wastage. He de cided to give them all another lesson. In the fast that followed, Mr. Ramil was the first to fall Huxby came next; Lilith last of the three. By the third day they had given up all pad- dling. On the fourth, they lay slumped in the bottom of the canoe. Garth only tightened his belt again and dipped his paddle in his strong, steady, seemingly tireless stroke, Whenever he found himself nearing his limit, he headed ashore, bolled tea, slept, and then put off again. The fifth day began to draw on the last reserve of his wiry endurance. To wards noon he made the boggy shore, almost outspent. He dragged out the wolfskin knapsack anchor, with {its load of platinum alloy. The girl and the two men lay In a stupor of star vation. He himself was so tired that he could not have lifted even Lilith ashore, As he rested on the west sedges he recalied the place as one of his for mer camp sites. A spruce-covered ridge of higher ground here thrust out into the muskeg The first remem- brance brought another. The second gave him strength to pull his rifle from the canoe and climb aslant the ridge end. There was a berry patch on the east slope. The fruit would be better than nothing. He hoped, how- ever, for something more, Circling to get the wind in his face. he crept through the spruce thickets until he could peer out on the open (Eran nnngrrgeoy 4 “Out of the Muskegs; but a Long Way From Out of This D-—d North!” ground of the berry patch. Luck was with him. The old black bear had gone off and left her cub. He rested the rifle barrel on a spruce branch to get a sure alm, That was the end of famine. Gorged upon the fat, tender meat of the bear cub, even Mr. Ramill rapidly regained strength. He was still rather weak, however, when they came to the last portage, The approach to solid ground was across a narrow belt of muskeg. Near the far side of the swamp, the mil lionaire failed to jump squarely upon a tussock of niggerhead grass. He slipped and plunged headfirst into a pool. Huxby was following close behind, alert for every move of his partner. He sprang to grasp the feet of the sinking man. A heave dragged him out, slimed and spluttering, Huxby worked over him, scraping off mud, until Lilith hastened back to help as sist her father across the rest of the quagmire. Once on firm ground, the millionaire joked about his mishap, “Haven't bad a bath since the last rdin,” he sald. “This one Is higher class—equal to the mud baths at Hot Springs. How about my pack Lilith?’ She looked In his foxskin bag. “Everything there, Dad—with some mud added.” Garth had been too far ahead, with his heavy pack and cance, to see or hear the accident. Mr. Ramill joked again about his extra bath when they took to the canoe at the far side of the portage. But all the time until they reached the evening camp and he started to wash the mud from the leather coat, he did not notice that the pistol was missing, At the announcement of the loss, Huxby met Garth's gaze with a stare of cold hostility. Garth walked up to him, empty-handed. “If you've done what I think you have,” he sald, “I call you for a show- down." The engineer's lips tightened in an ironical smile. He put up his hands. Not to be fooled by the seeming bluff, Garth went over Huxby's tattered clothes, from coat collar to moccasins, The pistol was nowhere on the engl- neer, “This 1s one time I'm due to apolo- glze,” Garth admitted, “1 accept no apology from you,” Huxby replied. Lilith looked from one to the other, her own lips tightening, Mr. Ramill good-humoredly inter posed, as he hung the washed leather coat before the fire: “Postpone your fight, boys. We're still in the mus kegs. I'll bullt a cockplt for you when we gat out.” That won a chuckle from Garth. Huxby smiled with his lips—not with his eyes. As Lilith looked from Garth to him, her eyes narrowed and her lips tightened, ———— CHAPTER VII The Gafied Wolf. Mr. Ramill's good-humor over his fall Into the muskeg pool had not been forced. It was based upon his feeling of physical well-being. Instead of having been broken down by the hard toll and exposure of the trip and that severe lesson in the meaning of famine, he had come through It all in even better shape than before the start from the lost valley. The days of starvation had completed Nature's rald upon the de- generate fats and polsons of his once obese body, There had followed the feasts of tender bear-cub meat. He was again putting on weight, but it was hard muscie. The healthy biocod flooded his brain with a comfortable glow that was not to be dampened by any amount of toll or discomforts, He was paddling as vigorously if not as skillfully as his daughter, when, mid-morning of the twenty-fourth day from the valley, the canoe neared a wooded point that rose well above the swamps. Garth called out from the stern of the canoe: “If you want as surprise, friends, shut your eyes while we take ten strokes.” He knew that Huxby would keep on staring ahead. But he guessed right about Lilith and her father. At the end of the tenth stroke, the girl flung up her paddle and uttered a shriek of joyous amazement: “The river! The river!" Close upon the cry came the deep- lunged shout of her father: “By the Almighty, you've done It, Garth! We're out.” Huxby continued to stare fixedly shead at the mighty flood of the Mac- kenzlie. He was last to speak: “Out of the muskegs; but a long way from out of this d—d North!" “Long by canoe or even by steamer,” Garth agreed. “Not so far, though, by alr passage. We can make the emergency supply post by two or threo hours’ paddling downstream” “What of It? That fellow Tobin told us planes never stop there, unless foul weather runs them short of gas” Garth met the suddenly anxious looks of Lilith and her father with a smile, “All pllots have orders to sight non- stop posts in passing. Tobin has a dis- tress signal. There'll be a plane com- ing south from the Arctic coast within three days—probably tomorrow. You'll be lying In the lap of luxury at Ed. monton within a week or ten days” The millionaire feit at the grease- and-pitch mat of his month-old beard. He chuckled. “A bath and a barber! Hand over that last cigar, Garth. Here's where 1 celebrate,” He opened the gold-mounted case, bit off the tip of the sole surviving Havana, and snapped his patent light. er. It failed to flair, He tossed It over into the water, and turned to Garth, with an impatient command: “Give me a light” “Only two matches left, sir.” “Enough to light a cigar. Pass them over.” Instead of taking out his water proof match case, Garth took up his paddie. "The rule is, never burn your last match antll you have to. You've thrown away that little flint and steel. The fire-drill 1s all right in dry weath- er but hard to use in wet.” Huxby dipped his own paddle. “Come on, Mr. Ramill. By his own ac- count, three hours more will rid us of him and his insolence.” “Walt,” sald Lilith. She pointed to the bank where the pleasant green of young spruces showed among the weathered white trunks of fire-killed birch trees. “If we have 80 much time, we'll land there and clean up.” “But—with the post so near, my dear LUlth!" Huxby protested. “That fellow Tobin had any amount of soap.” “All the more reason. I'll not have even A common navvy see me In this condition, rags can't be helped But the dirt!" Out burst her sup men. “Mud! slime! rancid fat! spoiled meat! Alan Garth, I know that I have to go In dressed like a squaw. Bat this—this filth!" He surged the canoe around shore ward with a powerful sweep of his paddle, “Not necessary, Miss RamliL A scouring with hardwood ashes and sand will do the work of soap. We can go in sweet” They landed where an ice Jam of Some spring break-up had gouged through the muskeg mud at the end of the ridge and left a clear beach of glacial! sand and gravel, Up over the ten-foot cut bank, Garth started a fire with one of his two re- maining matches, Even Huxby joined in other plles of fallen birch branches for more fires. While they were burn- Ing, Garth beached the cance and tiited it so that the sun would dry the Soggy Inside. Huxby stirred the fires, and Mr. Ramlll brolled the last of the partly spoiled bear-cub meat, while Lilith tried out a cupful of the ran- sid fat for a final mess of mosquito dope. Garth brought the girl pitch for the mix from the nearby thicket of young spruces, No cleaning could be done until the fires burned out. When Mr. Ramil took off the spits of cooked meat, all squatted down as usual to share the meal. CGarth smiled his thanks as he took the slab of hot meat handed to him by the millionaire. The smile hardened, A sudden change had fallen upon his three companions, He could easily guess the cause. They realized that this was the last meal they were to share as fellow voyageurs with him. The moment they stepped from the canoe onto the wharf at the emer gency refueling post, thelr forced com- panionship with him in the lost val ley and on all the long trip ont would be at an end. Instead of a trio de pendent upon their opponent for food and guldance—for life itself—they would be a trio not only Independent of, but hostile to him and his in- teresta, That was at least true of the two men. And even Lilith betrayed in her look and manner a vivid consciousness of the Impending change of relation. ship. As for Huxby, the cold gloating ig his stare showed how he was antici pating the robbery and ruln of the man who had so far outplayed him. {TO BE CONTINUED) gathering Coronation of New King or Queen Is Great Event A great thing to see In London is the crowning of a new king or queen. It does not happen often, but when it a writer In the Detroit News. takes place In Westminster abbey and the archbishop of Canterbury is In charge of the ceremony. The new king sits in the famous Coronation chalr, which Is covered for the event with cloth-of-gold. He promises that he will govern by the laws made by the Brit. Ish parliament; that he will carry out a rule of justice and mercy; and that be will maintain the Protestant re ligion, the time of King Edward I, who ruled six and a half centuries ago. It is made of oak, but under the seat is “the Stone of Scone,” which was taken of Edward. Before that the stone had been used during the crowning of Scottish kings. There is a legend that the Stone of Scone was used as a “pillow” by Ja- cob, the Hebrew patriarch, The leg end says that the stone was moved from Palestine to Ireland, and from there to Scotland before it fell into the hands of the English. There 1s reason to believe, however, that ft was obtained from a quarry near Scone, a town In Scotland, Underground Schools LA | As Told to: FRANK E. HAGAN and The Faithful Crutches OST people know about the loy- alty of dogs and other dumb | do not realize that inanimate things | are frequently just as faithful. So | says Herbert Sharples of Montreal, | Que, who tells this touching story of the faithful crutches, One day he saw a traveling doctor in the market place offering for sale a marvelous salve which, he claimed, would cure all ills. One of the first purchasers was a man whose legs were so shriveled and twisted that he had to use crutches to get along. One min- ute and eight seconds after he had rubbed some of the salve on his legs they were so straight and strong that to walk home without them. The doctor, having no use for the salve left In the box by the man, and noticing that the crutches were very dingy from long use, began rubbing some of the olntmept on them to see if it would brighten them up. At once the crutches began to dance and caper around him, stopping now and then to admire each other's bright, shiny ap- pearance, Suddenly they paused in thelr an- tics and the next moment they were trotting gally down the street until they caught up with thelr former mas- ter. After that they walked sedately at his heels, ready to come to his as- sistance if need be, even though he had cast them off without a single thought. Victims of Imagination Josars THOMPSON, of Nashville, Tenn. who gets around the country quite a bit In his work for a raliroad, is seldom surprised by the queer things that folks do--like putting tacks in a dining car meal, eating them and threatening to sue the carrier, The remson Joe preserves his calm is that once he operated a farm and most everybody knows that the queer est sort of things are forever happen- ing there, Joe's plantation featured fine hams and a herd of nervous goats but he still likes to talk about his trials and tribulations with a patch of popcorn. “Never had any decent luck with the popeorn,™ Joe testifies. “Gets hot as blazes down at Nashville and first thing you'd know my fleld would be- gin to pop and I'd lose practically everything I'd put Into It. Don't sup- pose I ever got to market more than half a crop. “What I finally did was to plant the popcorn at a spot very close to the house. The noise of its popping kept the children amused and sometimes they would be quiet for hours, just popping corn, “One time, began to pop at the same time, white peliets flew into the air in a thick cloud and fell in the pasture with my nervous goats. Eighteen of the goats thought it was snowing and lay down and froze to death” though, the whole fleld The Unfinished Story HARLES M. tales because of silent hours with tains of Wyoming. But, enough, his favorite yarn concerns the open spaces. Chicago had numerous banks and many bank vice presidents. is of one of these 1 sing. shore, commuting dally to the loop. ways crossed downtown. box at the bank. luggage rack. “At his station, the banker seized the garden. But when he opened the parcel there was revealed a T.-bone steak which an unknown but soon-to- be-shocked commuter had selected.” © Western Newspaper Union, Mystery Springs in Queensland Fifty miles southeast of Boulla town. ship, in the far west of Queentbland, are two mystery springs. One, known «3 Elizabeth spring, consists of a circular hole four or five feet in diameter in WITH SILK GLOVES You can't handle exceedingly hand some men by the usual rules for han- — \ Here are Perfect Baking Results/ E Carp E Conwy, 7 This actual scoring card proves how cakes, baked with CLABBER GIRL, shew Perfect stores where Baking Powder counts. [= ATTRA BAKING POWDER Greatest Art The greatest art is to be busy with out seeming so. Tired .. Nervous Wins Back ’ “dead~ be. he tired” feeling. Won color—resthul nights, active days 3 colda. See how refresh Riel NA hg TOMORROW ALRICMTY GLOVERS MANGE MEDICINE MPLES from surface conditions need not be endured. 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