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Magazine Pact vL $ Fiction Popular Mechanics SSM?:i§ CHAPTER a H3Ci iin laTSS! m w7wati— JT (mmaso felO MIHWtf1MW W E¥cnUc3 S r Sssfh D 0 0 KJ IL T U® S Vco In- -car Ml4J)VM m team MmU etuaillt J:rfx Go After Dualneca la a business wsy—ths r£fm tls&gwcy An nd b this ptpsr offers tho KsazSnum terries at the nlnlmum cost Elam Harnlali known all through aa "Burning Daylight" celebrates hli birthday with a crowd of ngnara at tha Circle City Tivoli The danoa lead! to heavy gambling In which ovar la ataked Harnleh loaea hla money and He hla mins but wlna tha mall contract etarta on hla mall trip with doga and lied as telling his friend that ha wiM be In the big Yukon gold strike at tha start a make Mhaatlonally Burning Daylight tha mall rapid run serose country withnow raady appears at tha Tivoli and to Join hla friends In a dash to tha naw gold fields 10th p55tT2fi5te2 ruTneta 'V DDE SYNOPSIS It yaAa lb pst of cad vbbr joa vet to reach Cb torn Try It— Bt Pays IV— Continued In tha meantime there waa naught But It was to show for It but hunch Aa be would (take hla last oomlng ounce on a good poker hand so he itaked hla life and effort on the hunch that the future held In etore a big trike on the Upper River Bo ho and with dogs and hla three companions ileds and enowshoes toiled up the tolled frozen breast of the Stewart on and on through the white wilder-aeswhere the unending stillness was never broken by the voices of men the stroke of an ax or the distant crick of a rifle Gold they found on the bars hat not in paying quap titles and In the following May they re turned to Sixty Mile Ten days later Harper and Joe arrived at Sixty Mile and Daylight strong to obey the hunch that had ootne to him traded a third Interest In his Stewart town site for a third interest In theirs on the Klondike They had faith In the Upper Country and Harper left with a of supplies to start a small post gt the mouth of the Klondike "Why don't you tackle Indian River Harper advised at partiDaylight?” ng “There’s whole slathers of erfeeks and draws draining In up there and to he somewhere crying gold Just found That’s my hunch There’s a big strike oomlng and Indian River miles ain’t going to he a million tomary speed Daylight paid them their wages In advance and arranged the purchase of the supplies though he He was so In sack his doing emptied leaving the Sourdough when he suddenly turned back to the bar from the door waa the "Got another hunch?" query answered "I he sure have” “Flour’s sure going to be worth what a man will pay fol It this winter up on the Klondike Who’ll lend me some money?" On the instant a soore of the men him who had declined to accompany on the chase were crowding about him with proffered Your TAILOn? Who repairs and cleans clothes? August Erioksen p Store at ths Co-o- Salina Co-o- p Ag-oFOB THE OTTO G OLSEN ' Coffin&Casket work EPHRAIM UTAH Call at Salima Salina Utah Wo have a fine line of Caskets in stock and can please you n Still men were without faith In the strike When Daylight with his heavy outfit of flour arrived at the mouth cl the Klondike he found the big fiat as desolate and tenantless as ever Down doze by the river Chief Isaac and his Indians were camped beside the x away” frames on which they were drying salwith mon Several "And the plaoe Is swarming were also In “Boh Henmoose" Joe Ladue added Having finished their camp there been summer work on Ten Mile Creefc derson’s up there somewhere there three years mow swearing had come down the Yukon bodnd fat big Is going to happen something But at 81xty Mile they Circle City living off’n straight moose and prosbad learned of the strike and stopped pecting around like a crazy man off to look over the ground They had Daylight decided to go Indian River Just returned to their boat when DayI flutter as he expressed It and lin- light landed his flour and their report But an hour later gered a few days longer arranging his was pessimistic meager outfit He planned to go In at his own camp Joe Ladue strode In from Bonansa Creek He led Daylight light carrying a pack of seventy-fivpounds and making his five dogs pack away from tha camp and men and as well Indian fashion loading them told him things In confidence with thirty pounds each "She’s sure there" be said in conDepending on the report of Ladue he Intended to clusion ”1 didn’t slulco it or cradlo follow Bob Henderson’s example and It I panned it all In that sack yesmeat terday on the live practically on straight I tell you you s When Jack Kearns’ scow laden with can shake It out of the down In the sawmill from Lake Llnderman And what’s on the tied np at Sixty Mile Daylight bunthe bottom of the creek they ain’t no dled hla outfit and dogs on board way of tollin’ But she’s big I tell over you big Keep It quiet and locate all turned his application to Elijah to be filed and the same day you can It’s In spots but I wouldn’t was landed at the mouth of Indian be none surprised If some of them down Hunker claims yielded as high as fifty thouHe continued River and on to the sumto the Klondike sand Ths only trouble la that it’s mer fishing camp of the Indians on spotted" the Yukon Carwith A month passed by and Bonanza Here for a day he camped A sprinkling and his Indian Creek remained quiet mack a Skookum Jim bought of men had staked hut most of them after staking had gone on down to a boat and with his dogs on board drifted down the Yukon to Forty Mile Then It waa that Carmack his broth Jim and Cultus Skookum Charlie another Indian arrived in a canoe at Forty Mile went straight to and recorded the gold commissioner three claims and a discovery claim on Bonansa Creek After that in the Sourdough Saloon that night they exhibited coarse gold to the skeptical crowd too was skeptical and this Daylight despite his faith In the Upper Coun try Had be not only a few days before seen Carmack loafing with his Indians and with never a thought of But at eleven that night prospecting? sitting on the edge of hla hunk end a thought his moccasins unlacing He put on his coat end came to him hat and went back to the Sourdough Carmack was still there flashing his coarse gold In the eyes of aa unbelieving generation Daylight ranged of him and emptied Caralongside This be macks sack into a blower studied for a long time Than from his own sack Into another blower he ounces of Circle several City emptied and Forty Mile gold Again for a long Ths Whole Bottom 8howed so If Cov Final-ltime he studied and compared trod With Butter he pocketed his own gold returned Carmacks and held np his hand for Forty MU and Circle City The lew silence that possessed sufficient faith to om were busy building log cabins "Boys I want to tell thing’ he said “She’s sure com — the agalna the coming of winter Car strike And I tell pack and bis Indian relatives were occlear and forcible this is It There cupied In building s sluice box sad The work alnt never been gold like that In e getting a head of water blower In this country before wu slow for they had to saw their It’s got more stiver In ft lumber by band from the standing (or new gold can see It by the color Car- ost But farther down Bonansa were s mack's sure made a strike four men who had drifted In from up Dave MeKay river Dan McGilvary got faith to come along with me?" one and Harry Waugh volunteered No Dsvs Edwards ’ll take a Job from l They were a quiet party neither ask! "Then me cash wages In advance te pole up ing tor giving confidences and they herded by themselves a thousand pounds of grab?" But Daylight another Pat who had panned the spotted rim of Curly Parsons and and Carmack’s claim and with hla shaken coarse Monahan accepted Iie Who’s “What are you going to do with two tons?" the storekeeper demanded l In simple A B C Til tell and one two three" Daylight held up one finger and began checking off “Hunch number one: a big strike comHunch number ing In Upper Country two: Carmack’s made It Hunch number three: ain’t no hunch at'alL It’s a cinch If one and two Is right then If I’m flour Just has to go rldng hunches one and two I Just got to ride this cinch which is number flour balance I’m three If right gold on the scales this winter" - bcildinb UTAH SAUNA OC mqpt- V ' John Gilson bashusssm MAfif 6Z&XZT want?" “How much flour do you Comasked the Alaska Commercial pany's storekeeper "About two ton" ’The proffered wers not withdrawn though their owners were guilty of aa outrageous burst of msrrl- - CHAPTER NEW Cepe Wags all ktads of wood work daoe Cabinet werit axeoe- tafl in t2e stirie All klnde work Mended q OeU earns s Got Faith to and who from ths had panned the rim at a hundred other places up and down the length of V as cuand creek found nothing the rious to know what lay on He had noted the four quiet men sinking a shaft close by the stream and going as he had heard their they made lumber for the sluice boxen He did not wait for an Invitation but he was present the first day they sluiced And at the end of five hours for one man he saw them shoveling take out thirteen ounces and a half of gold It was coarse gold running from r nugget pinheads to a and it had come from off The first tall snow was flying that day and the Arctic winter was closing Daylight had no eyes for sadness of the dying the summer He saw his vision coming true and on the big flat was upreared anew his golden city of ths snows Gold had been found on That was the big thing DayCarmack's strike was assured light staked a claim In bis own name adjoining three he had purchased with him a bTck tobacco This gave plug two thousand feet long and extending to in width from Returning that night to bis camp at the mouth of Klondike be found In it Kama the Indian chief he had left at Kama was traveling by caDyea noe bringing In the last mall of the year In hla possession was some two which hundred dollars In m borrowed Daylight Immediately return be arranged to stake a claim for him which he was to record when he passed through Forty Mile When Kama departed next morning he carried a number of letters for Daylight down addressed to all the river In which they were urged to come up Immediately and stake Also Kama carried letters of similar import him by the other men on Bogold Como Along With Me?" moment and thought long thoughts Then he finished the washing and weighed the result in his scales At tbs rate of sixteen dollars to the ounce the pan had contained seven hundred and odd dollars It was beyond anything that even he had dreamed His fondest anticipations had gone no farther th&a twenty or thirty thousand dollars to a claim but here were million a claims worth half each at the least even if they were spotted He did not go back to work In the shaft that day nor the next nor the next Instead capped and mittened a light stampeding outfit Including his rabbit skin robe strapped on his back he was out and away on a tramp over creeks and divides terrispecting tha whole neighboring tory On each creek he was entitled to locate one claim but he was chary In thus surrendering up his chances On Hunker Creek only Bonanza did he stake a claim Creek he found staked from mouth to source while every little draw and pup and gulch that drained Into it wail Little faith was had likewise staked In these s They had been of men who staked by the hundreds The had failed to get In on Bonanza most popular of these creeks was Adams The one least fancied was Eldorado which flowed Into Bonansa Just above Carmack’s Discovery claim Even Daylight disliked the looks of but still riding hla hunch he bought a half share in one claim on It A mouth for half a sack of flour later he paid eight hundred dollars for ths adjoining claim Three months later enlarging this block of property for a third he paid forty thousand claim and though It waa concealed lq the future he was destined not and hundred one long after to pay fifty thousand (or a fourth claim on the creek that had been the least liked of all the creeks In the meantime and from the day he' washed seven hundred dollars from s single pan and squatted over It and thought a long thought he never again As touched hand to pick and shovel he said to Joe Ladue the night of that wonderful washing: “Joe I ain't never going to work hard again Here's where I begin to use my brains I’m going to farm gold have Gold will grow gold if the savvee and can get hold of some for seed When I seen them seven hundred dollars In the bottom of the knew bad seed at last’ pan In the Yukon The hero of the the Carmack younger days before strlks Burning Daylight now became the hero of the strike The story of bis hunch and how be rode It was Certainly told up and down the land he had ridden It far and away beyond the boldest for no five of the luckiest held the value In claims that he held And furthermore be was still riding of ths hunch and with no diminution given nanza "tt will sure be the stampede that ever was' Daylight as he tried to vision the exchuckled cited populations of Forty Mile and Circle City tumbling into and racing the hundreds of miles up the Yukon for he knew that his word accepted would be uoquestlonlngly One day In December Daylight filled on his own claim a pan from cabin Here 5 his It carried Into and fire burned and enabled him to keep water unfrozen in a canvas tank He squatted over the tank and began to wash Earth and gravel seemed to fill the pan As be Imparted to It a circular movement the lighter coarser particles washed out over the edge At times h combed the surface with hta fingers raking out handfuls of graveL The contents of the pan diminished At is drew near to the bottom for the purpose of fleeting and tentative examination he gave the pan a sadden sloshing movement emptying It of water And the whole daring ' bottom showed sc if covered with butfit) BE CONTINUED) Thus the yellow gold flashed ter up as the muddy water waa filtered A man la as young as he feels— and coarse away It was doesn’t always He was a woman but she gold nuggets large nuggets all alone He set the pan down for a look It J BATE3 Lawyor r MterisM IT wvwab KXCZJCXS Ecz:l UTAH Cstins DAKHl USB OF LEASH TO C3 A STENOGRAPHER BOOKKEEPER SALESMAN WRIT! 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