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Show ? I I TnE LEHI SUN, LEIII, UTAH Under frozen Stars . I red ie doomed d Ve birch-bark, as It a In awethe men of 'Vthemad canoeman iSJLtt into the ;tej iteer !4f the maelstrom of Inired the canoe. la the stern. Fol-water Fol-water channels the widen WW4 mpka thrusting ,scu wV!ne with U the pom, T:a hunrt. r i funded with foam 7. -h the way wud u-. umitJ by Paa' Wm . n.. Jrnint ARB old U wem me . . C Drenched with spray, his rocks, be fought bis . the river Co 0 1 unbroken barrier water, wiw doom written in the burled wMch barred his path. He ... . i Vy Inner U the light, a"--"- tor M ana uuw But Esan Otchlg would go ightingl , , He chaos of foaming boul-Pd boul-Pd the canoe, "snubbed" bending pole. The bottom 4 on rock, was lifted off mb: the boat was caught U Into another by baffling Lnts: but still the old man LmcoDQaered in the face of At last, tne un- river caught the shattered like i straw, ana flroppea tage boulder, over which the moanded. Pivoting on the lie canoe rolled and started It was the end! 1 1 desperate leap Esau was water, his feet braced on the jrsei rock. A heave, and he :ie rapidly filling boat, swung Ll the current, and fell gasp- hli knees inside, clutching . Shortly be was clear of I od down, through the riot !;tog river, the bent figure stem steered his boat, the si victory in bis black eyes, tang (or a space on the lip Ji. But he had won. Us heart sank as he saw a Flow him. Desperate, he took le from where It lay at his the water and boldly drifted m the waiting canoe. 'I ...... J ll - Ml .1 m ,f wareu me crmi, tue iaces occupants watched him with you i Manitou, a spirit," n OJibwa, "that you pass tough the Rapids of the !pnt down his gun. "I am t ihaman in the land where 11 foes to sleep. I fear no " Here was an opportunity ft the Indians of the Stur- pwy, ana the keen-witted f swiftly made the most of It to are your friends, for I allows no man tn nnss t;3s" 1 ravely nodded, "Enh-enh, fipirits are my friends." ' P&n exchanged fright-f fright-f m the awed squaw f In his canoe, frt, the shaman, fears to to his canoe. Your g longer than his." 'acontempt crystallized on li'an. -Jingwak . who deceives the OJIb-fKttelrrorforthe OJIb-fKttelrrorforthe trader - spirits do not know 10 the Lake of the Stur- TeH the ruwmi. .... lift. .v vv'" war. f aman from the land USmt wh0 coaes to iSfrom the fcsi ,L UQIg0- 1 have tray-I tray-I sw" t0 find Jingwak, i the country- with Csi;er'er-Going ltaS. benJ. he dLbD"taflrtodry Ue&lesofsaUs-Natfcand at lake to endeavor to learn the ! of Esau. Two nights later. the canoe from Sunset House wait ed at the rendezvous the Rattlesnake Rattle-snake bad set In a deep cove near the foot of the lake. Hestless from days of doubt and forced Inaction, In which the absent ab-sent Esau might have so sorely needed their aid, Jim and Omar sat beside their hidden canoe. "Dere ees Jlnaw," announced Omar as a black shadow slid In to ward the shore. "Esau Is here on the lake," began the old man, who spoke no English. "I have talked to the hunters at many camps. A strange story has passed down the lake. Seven sleeps ago an Indian and his woman saw a canoe pass out of the Rapids of the WIndlgo. In It was a great shaman sha-man who told them his name was Otchig and he sought the sorcerer, Jingwak." "He ran those rapids I" Jim peered triumphantly Into Omar's startled face. . "By gar J" grunted the surprised half-breed. "How be do dat?" "No canoe has ever before passed the Rapids of the WIndigo," added Jlnaw. "The woman who saw It says the boat had wings, and never rode the water." "How did he do Itr cried Jim, elated with the good news. "Now where are Paradls and Jingwak?'' "Paradis returned and the families fam-ilies of four of those who went with him are asking for .their sons. But he will not speak." "But Jingwak, what does he say? Is he afraid of this medicine man who ran the rapids to reach him?" "He tells them that his magic will destroy the stranger." "Did you see your son?" "Yes. He said that Paradls and two others saw this shaman drive two men with their canoe into the rapids, but Paradis has closed his lips. Two more, who hunted for the white trader on the lake have not returned." ! "Umh i" Omar grunted. "He weel wait long tam for dem." Far Into the night the three discussed dis-cussed the situation. Omar wished to go in search of Esau at once, but Jlnaw objected. "There is now fear In the camp of Paradls. The young men are worried wor-ried about the strange shaman from the west Let me go again to the fishing camps and talk to the people. peo-ple. The time Is not yet right for you to show yourselves to the Ojibwas." Ojib-was." "But we must find Esau. He may need us," urged Jim. "I will find him and return In two sleeps to this place," said the old man, as he stepped Into his canoe. Chafing under the lack of action imposed upon them by the old Indian, In-dian, Jim and Omar spent two more days In hiding. On the second night Jlnaw returned, re-turned, and the news he brought quickened the blood In the veins of the two who listened. Jinaw told them that some of the older Indians had demanded that Jingwak prove his superiority over the stranger whose magic canoe had been seen on the lake. And so, word had gone out to the people of Sturgeon lakes that the shaman, Jingwak, would erect his medicine lodge at the Great Medicine Stone, and prove his magic stronger than that of the sorcerer sor-cerer who had come among them only to hide. "Esau's smoked him out I Good old Esau I Here's his chance!" cried Jim. "But what under heaven Is he going to do, Omar?" "We go and see," grunted the half- breed. CHAPTER IX FOR two days canoes from the four winds passed the hiding their 5water that no 4- " aw ' 01 Ms Charms Hatipitotlpl op i WL ForUme he p,!Jalk aronid I Vh. I he knw his would strike. strike. oav . ua and nmn & i. . t . ami . & travel. th place of Jim and Omar, on way to the medicine making beside the mammoth boulder, known as the Great Medicine Stone. As he sat watching the moving canoes through hLi binoculars, Jim wondered how. In the face of the odds which confronted him, the little lit-tle old man hoped to outwit the sorcerer. What could he contrive before these gaping red men to make the fakir, Jingwak, a laughing laugh-ing stock In the eyes of his own people? And In Omar Jim found no com fort "Eef Esan do not mak' de beeg medicine, we nevaire see home." Further than that Omar would not go. "What Is he holding so closely behind those stiff lips of his?" Jim ruminated. "He certainly certain-ly has some Idea about what Esau will do." When the twilight died and the lake lay muffled In shadow, Jim and Omar slipped their canoe Into the water and started for the Island, a few hours now would tell the tale. Jim wondered If this was the end. In the mad hope of saving Sunset House, he had put aside his love for the girl who had begged him to stay. And now, on the desperate chance of Esan winning over the Indians In-dians by some sleight of hand, some artifice of the conjuror, learned from his father, they were giving Paradls Para-dls odds of ten to one In a knife fight In the dark. At last, off the shore where the expectant Ojibwas were gathered before the fire, the peterboro drifted drift-ed In the murk. A short distance from the fire, dimly outlined In the shadows at the foot of the Medicine Stone, stood a small cylindrical tipl of caribou hide, ornamented with the grotesque shapes of serpents ana .nimals. It was the medicine lodge of Jlngwtk. "We wait for heem to mak de J!rf- denwegoa8hor below here," whispered Omar. rSayou make 0ut Paradls?" replied re-plied Jim. "Paradees keep een de dark until he see how de magic of Jingwak Ee -eet Work we hav t fit for Esau." Presently the rattle of shells, mingled with the beat of the medicine medi-cine drum, drifted from the tent The low hum of the squatted audience au-dience died. The sorcerer had begun be-gun his Invocation of the spirits. At the Are swart faces turned gray with dread. Suddenly out of the bush, lifted a voice from the grave. A spirit was speaking. "The stranger from the land where the sun sleeps Is no shaman. He came from the trader of the House of the Setting Sun, the home of devils. "Where is this conjuror," asked the sepulchral voice, "who tells the Ojibwas his magic is stronger than that of Jingwak, my brother? He is not herel He fears the wrath of Jingwak, the great shaman." Jim's muscles stiffened. The moment mo-ment had come. It was time to strike but where was Esau? "He's not here!" whispered Jim. "We'd better work toward the canoe." But the man at his side, whose fingers clamped on the hornhandle of a knife as he peered at the medicine med-icine lodge, stood motionless. "The stranger has the heart of a rabbit. His mouth is full of lies. He hides from the magic of Jing- WBKJ" With a glance at the spellbound Indians, Jim took Omar's arm. "Come on I They'll go crazy in a minute 1 We'll be cut off from the canoe 1" Then the iron fingers of Omar dug into Jims arm as he muttered. "Look!" Beside the medicine lodge stood an apparition. From the nodding head, above a chalk-white mask with eyeholes and a grimacing mouth, rose the antlers of a caribou. On the skin-clad body writhed painted snakes. At the sash hung the medicine med-icine bag and shell rattle of a conjuror. A suppresesd "Ah!" swept the startled Ojibwas. "The shaman 1 The shaman!" There was a pause. Wide eyed, the electrified Indians waited for the funereal voice from the mask. "I have come, oh Jingwak I Otchlg, the shaman from God's lake who fears not your magic, Is herel" But from the tipl of Jingwak came no sound. "Come forth, oh magician with the split tongue. Otchig, the shaman from God's lake, laughs at your medicine!" med-icine!" Still the lodge of Jingwak gave no answer. From the squatted Ojibwas rose murmurs of surprise. Why did not Jingwak speak? Suddenly in the gloom across the fire, sounded heated words. Jim's eyes turned from the horned shape by the medicine lodge. An Inflamed In-flamed face, lit by the glow, faded into the darkness. It was Paradis. "Does Jingwak, the friend of the trader, Paradls, fear the magic of Otchig that he hides his face?" Low groans greeted this strange behavior of the mute conjuror In the tent "He's afraid to come out!" whispered whis-pered Jim excitedly. "What's Esau done to him?" The half-breed's answer was a fierce squeeze of the arm. Shortly, above the murmuring of the Indians lifted the voice of Jlnaw, the Rattlesnake: "The strange shaman sha-man has put a spell upon Jingwak Jing-wak I" There was a movement In the medicine med-icine lodge. The door flap was thrust aside and the conjuror crawled slowly out As be rose, the rat-like eyes In the painted face, avoided the mask of Otchlg, shifted furtively from side to side. "He's quitl Esau's got him! We'd better work around behind to hold 'em off, If they rushl" breathed Jim. "No, de Indians believe Esau-wait Esau-wait I I tak' care of Paradees!" "Look, men of the Sturgeon, on the great Wabeno!" Jeered the voice from the chalk-white mask, as Jlng-wak's Jlng-wak's hunted eyes fell before the rows of fire-lit faces. "His friend, the spirit asks me for magic I Behold Be-hold the medicine of Otchlg I" With an ear-torturing scream, he stiffened his arms and sliced the air, downward, to his side. "Without blood I have taken bis ears!" announced the voice from the mask. "Go to him and behold the magic of Otchlg." The desperate Jingwaic turned iu escape In the blackness of the spruce, but Jlnaw and two Ojibwas were on him and dragged the panic-stricken panic-stricken sorcerer back to the fire. Pushing aside the long hair which hung to his shoulders, the Rattlesnake Rattle-snake exposed the sides of Jing-wak's Jing-wak's head to the view of the aston- IchoA niihwflS. The ears had been removed close to the skull! For a hushed Interval the awed Ojibwas gasped la wonder at this nrnnr i otchlz's magic. Then with a roar there was a rush for the Im- poster who bad deceived w. Li- hacMn. But the terrified Jing- rhefi free of the arms tnai held blm and disappeared In the cut back to the shore to head off Paradis, but he had foreseen defeat de-feat and his canoe had lost Itself In the shadows. Furious at bavin Miniature "Empire" on Island in Saltan Sea I? a.uttrl ,. .-ti.a . ffc i - . 441 ,,vvlulv vnueu. says iiurrv Srnwilad hnntC1 thera Bllp Carr ,n the k8 Angeles Times, on JXKi . elrngei8' Jlm an1 0m Captain Davis on Mullet Islam! In returned to the fire. tha soit n. . ... ,, - i -w ....iuu ecu. ui una au amuziuK J.nen Jinaw shouted for iton. hitti mni -. . . y. i w tuuu grDcia Banjul wnue tne triumphant Esau path, steam hieh ntn h .t umm ?? J,hewruIts of hl8 vlctory' cUmb 0Ter roy ot bis es- uuuuier was ronTinoBH tt- tat- i'K had won ! Eagerly the mercurial red men waited while the great shaman, Otchlg, removed his costume. Then pools beneath bis mud geysers are drug stores. The Sal ton sea Is a vast lake of medicated waters. By executive order. Salton sea has Esau addressed them. Going back Deen -nade a refuge where fishing Is to God's lake, he told of the respect not permitted. The waters have for fair dealing In which the In- been stocked with bass. Captain dians had held the elder Stuart and DaTls a8?8 0181 tt pelicans got all nis son. The devil story of Jing- the bass the first day. On the other wak the liar, which had kept the band, the pelicans have stocked the hunters from the post was the In- sea with mullet, a strange, greasy, vention of Paradis, to hold the fur unpalatable fish. Davis says that trade. Jingwak and the Frenchman the mullets hibernate In mud and they would never see again. Esau were brought In by pelicans Incased told them, If the people wished It 1 mud pellets. ne would come each summer and ue has a little museum; among make medicine at the great stone, the relics Is a' small Bible whose fly And soon in the little Moon of the! leaf states It was presented In 1857 Spirit, when the trails were broken by the countess of Suffolk to Stur for sledding, he would bring flour ges Tomlinson; It was found by the and trade-goods for those who found side of a bleached skeleton and the the journey too long to the House weather-beaten remnants of a wagon of the Sunset near Mullet Island. Another relic In turn Jim and Omar spoke to recalls a tragedy. A man named the hunters, warning them that Donaldson was traveling In a cov Paradis was now an outlaw, and In- ered wagon across the desert and his vltlng them to Sunset House. Then water gave out Leaving his two shaking the hand of the Indians, daughters, be struggled on to find a some of whom Stuart had reason to water hole. When he came back believe had fought him and Omar they had shot themselves. He went on the portage trail, Jim and his In to Yuma; told his story and killed men headed back to camp. I himself. As his paddle tore the water, he Mere similarity of names means nothing, the speaker emphasized, because be-cause the same names frequently were assigned over and over again to different families merely because of accidental ownership of the same piece of land, holding of the aame office or minor title or work at the same ccupation. Among persons known to have been present at the battle of Hast ings In 10(50 A. D, only seventeen, it was stated by another speaker at the meeting, now can be Identified. Twelve of these can be connected with surviving families, but cot even one of these has bad an unbroken descent In the male line.- Baltimore Sua laughed In his relief and joy: "We've won ! We've won I Aurore I D'you hear, down there In the city? I'm coming back to you, girl; I've won J" to exact ly-infrw fflVOTwii' n tiii fjrmsfitr nrr m -maul inrTirvl lercolizcdWax Keeps Skin Young (MHMmuJwHllTHtod.TlHHilUMii(til Mia pi ofl until U mop. mot. M vd lkl dUipM. - '."".r'f ud Kr. Your I loo i rn WM. Mroli Wi brio it to hidd.n bMuty of row km. T r-MM 'ink!.; M m ojim Vowdmd tluoUl jimArti im mi h,U plat itcJ Al dru Hereditary A caller was entertaining herself with little Muriel, age four, and the baby sister while waiting for their mother to appear. Repeated efforts failed to get the baby, who was just beginning to talk, to say a word. Muriel watched the visitor's at temnts for a while and then re marked soberly: "It's no use; Jane's awful trary; that's the daddy part of her." Static Sounds Familiar Mary You think more of that old radio than you do of me. HuBband John Well, dear, I get less Interference from It "Ancient Family" Claims Scoffed At by Experts Persons who like to trace their an cestry back to William the Conquer or, or to some other famous hero of You foxy old devil! You de- history, were ridiculed in a recent serve the Victoria cross I" address before the Society of Ge- For the twentieth time Jim nealogists In London by the British hugged the lean frame of the grin- genealogical expert, T. R, Thomson. nlng Esau, as they stood at their The majority of such claims rest, camp-fire. Mr. Thomson explained, upon slmi You knew before we left the larlty of surnames, but this Is of no post that JIngwnk was this Makwa, value at all, since the general use of without ears, you had run out of surnames or "family names" dates Wolf river years ago. But how In back only a little more than 200 thunder did you find it out; you years. never saw him?" Another difficulty Is the fact estab W'en I hear dat Jingwak and Hshed by all genealogical researches Paradees scare de hunter from Sun- that families and family names In set House wld devil story, 1 remem- variably tend to become extinct In a ber dat ees de same talk flis Makwa relatively few generations. The fam mak' at de Wolf riviere. Den some uy blood may survive, more or less Indian tell ma dat Jingwak wear diluted by Intermarriage, but this hees hair ver long. Makwa would usually is extremely difficult do dat to hide de ear he lose, ah- trace, since the necessary hah! W'en de people, Here, tell me records are lacking. w'at he look lak' aen I know he ees Makwa." And you played him like a mas ter! Walt till the story reaches Pipestone. I guess Andrew Chris tie's eyes'll open when he sees the fur you'll get for us by this night's work." And the grateful Jim again hugged the old man, whose smoke- tanned face, like old leather, beamed with his content, "'Otchiz. the strange shaman from the west I" chuckled Jim. "You clever rascal ! When Jingwak saw that the man who took his ears at Wolf river had called his bluff, he hung to that lodge of his like a fox to his hole i Do you suppose he had guessed before this who you were?" "Mebbe so. Jinaw say dat Para dees look hard for me before eet prow dnrk. I know he do dis, so I land on Oder side, an' cross de Is land tru de bush, "I certainly thought we'd have to fight, Esau. Why didn't you tell me about this Jingwak? Did you cut off his ears?" "No, wan good frlen of me, at de Wolf riviere he do tnat," repnea the old man, and he met Jim's In credulous grin with tne guileless look of a child. "And you ran those rapids TT Esau told of his meeting witn Paradls and his men wnicn naa forced him Into the Rapids of the WIndigo. Try Lydla E. Piukham's Visitable Compound f' " . 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When medical Bless your old bones 1" aid arrived the child was dead. The 'Umh!" grunted omar oiueny. necronav was Derformed by the kov- But I let dat Paradees get awayi ernmw,t natholoirlst Sir Bernard In the morning the peternoro gpnsbury, who said the child was a from Sunset House sianeu on tne flne one an appeared to have been lone trail south. Up tne grear iaise well cared for IIe found a feather nn the way to the Inlet traveled the canoe. An Interval of mellow days the early Indian summer of the far north would companion it up th Stnreeon to the Pipestone lakes. At the foot of the Dig rapias or tha Stureeon. Jim loouea ior, ana fnnnd. the footprints of Smoke. ' . The absence of rain, ana tne arop- nlnir of the river, bad lert tne lasi traces of the friend he had lost as clear cut as on the day after the flcht on the portage. a . .m i a 1 I Good-br. SmoKei" saia Jim, gaz ing throuch eyes blurred by many a poignant memory at the footprints of the dog he had fed from puppy- "Jim never baa Deuer UvuUs 1 fHpnd than you. Ail you naa yoo cave blm. and now he s going nom without nis aog. uwu uj , (TO EH CONTIXUSUI la the child's larynx and attributed death to laryngeal shock, which he said was rare. Apparently the child got the feather In its mouth and then inhaled it Death was not attributed at-tributed to asphyxia. Find Crustaceana Discovery of five species of small crustaceans hitherto unknown to science, sci-ence, almost microscopic in size, inhabiting in-habiting Chesapeake bay, Is announced an-nounced by Dr. Charles B. Wilson in a Smithsonian institution report They are copepod crustaceans, distant dis-tant relatives of the crab and the crab and the lobster, and constitute the chief supply of many fish eaten by man. 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