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+Project Gutenberg's Our Little Alaskan Cousin, by Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Our Little Alaskan Cousin
+
+Author: Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
+
+Release Date: August 1, 2013 [EBook #10224]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR LITTLE ALASKAN COUSIN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Emmy, Beth Baran, Juliet Sutherland, Mary
+Meehan, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Transcriber's Note: Bold text is surrounded by =equal signs= and italic
+text is surrounded by _underscores_.]
+
+
+
+Our Little Alaskan Cousin
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+Little Cousin Series
+
+(TRADE MARK)
+
+ Each volume illustrated with six or more full-page plates in
+ tint. Cloth, 12mo, with decorative cover,
+ per volume, 60 cents
+
+
+LIST OF TITLES
+
+BY MARY HAZELTON WADE
+
+(unless otherwise indicated)
+
+
+ =Our Little African Cousin=
+ =Our Little Alaskan Cousin=
+ By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
+ =Our Little Arabian Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little Armenian Cousin=
+ =Our Little Australian Cousin=
+ By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
+ =Our Little Brazilian Cousin=
+ By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
+ =Our Little Brown Cousin=
+ =Our Little Canadian Cousin=
+ By Elizabeth R. MacDonald
+ =Our Little Chinese Cousin=
+ By Isaac Taylor Headland
+ =Our Little Cuban Cousin=
+ =Our Little Dutch Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little Egyptian Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little English Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little Eskimo Cousin=
+ =Our Little French Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little German Cousin=
+ =Our Little Greek Cousin=
+ By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
+ =Our Little Hawaiian Cousin=
+ =Our Little Hindu Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little Indian Cousin=
+ =Our Little Irish Cousin=
+ =Our Little Italian Cousin=
+ =Our Little Japanese Cousin=
+ =Our Little Jewish Cousin=
+ =Our Little Korean Cousin=
+ By H. Lee M. Pike
+ =Our Little Mexican Cousin=
+ By Edward C. Butler
+ =Our Little Norwegian Cousin=
+ =Our Little Panama Cousin=
+ By H. Lee M. Pike
+ =Our Little Philippine Cousin=
+ =Our Little Porto Rican Cousin=
+ =Our Little Russian Cousin=
+ =Our Little Scotch Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little Siamese Cousin=
+ =Our Little Spanish Cousin=
+ By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
+ =Our Little Swedish Cousin=
+ By Claire M. Coburn
+ =Our Little Swiss Cousin=
+ =Our Little Turkish Cousin=
+
+ L. C. PAGE & COMPANY
+ New England Building, Boston, Mass.
+
+[Illustration: "KALITAN FISHED DILIGENTLY BUT CAUGHT LITTLE."
+
+(_See page 3_)]
+
+
+
+
+ Our Little Alaskan
+ Cousin
+
+ By
+ Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
+
+ _Author of "Our Little Spanish Cousin," "With
+ a Pessimist in Spain," "God, the
+ King, My Brother," etc._
+
+ _Illustrated_
+
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ Boston
+ L. C. Page & Company
+ _PUBLISHERS_
+
+
+
+
+ _Copyright, 1907_
+ BY L. C. PAGE & COMPANY
+ (INCORPORATED)
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+ Third Impression, May, 1909
+
+
+
+ TO MY LITTLE SON
+ John Nixon de Roulet
+
+
+
+
+Preface
+
+
+AWAY up toward the frozen north lies the great peninsula, which the
+United States bought from the Russians, and thus became responsible for
+the native peoples from whom the Russians had taken the land.
+
+There are many kinds of people there, from Indians to Esquimos, and they
+are under the American Government, yet they have no votes and are not
+called American citizens.
+
+It is about this country and its people that this little story is
+written, and in the hope of interesting American girls and boys in these
+very strange people, their Little Alaskan Cousins.
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I. KALITAN TENAS 1
+ II. AROUND THE CAMP-FIRE 12
+ III. TO THE GLACIER 26
+ IV. TED MEETS MR. BRUIN 38
+ V. A MONSTER OF THE DEEP 48
+ VI. THE ISLAND HOME OF KALITAN 60
+ VII. TWILIGHT TALES AND TOTEMS 71
+ VIII. THE BERRY DANCE 82
+ IX. ON THE WAY TO NOME 93
+ X. IN THE GOLD COUNTRY 108
+ XI. AFTERNOON TEA IN AN EGLU 119
+ XII. THE SPLENDOUR OF SAGHALIE TYEE 129
+
+
+
+
+
+List of Illustrations
+
+
+ PAGE
+ "KALITAN FISHED DILIGENTLY BUT CAUGHT
+ LITTLE" (_See page 3_) _Frontispiece_
+ "AWAY WENT ANOTHER STINGING LANCE" 57
+ "A GROUP OF PEOPLE AWAITING THE CANOES" 64
+ MOUNT SHISHALDIN 99
+ "'LET'S WATCH THOSE TWO MEN. THEY HAVE
+ EVIDENTLY STAKED A CLAIM TOGETHER'" 113
+ "TWO FUNNY LITTLE LAPP BABIES HE TOOK
+ TO RIDE ON A LARGE REINDEER" 134
+
+
+
+
+Our Little Alaskan Cousin
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+KALITAN TENAS
+
+
+IT was bitterly cold. Kalitan Tenas felt it more than he had in the long
+winter, for then it was still and calm as night, and now the wind was
+blowing straight in from the sea, and the river was frozen tight.
+
+A month before, the ice had begun to break and he had thought the cold
+was over, and that the all too short Alaskan summer was at hand. Now it
+was the first of May, and just as he had begun to think of summer
+pleasures, lo! a storm had come which seemed to freeze the very marrow
+of his bones. However, our little Alaskan cousin was used to cold and
+trained to it, and would not dream of fussing over a little snow-storm.
+
+Kalitan started out to fish for his dinner, and though the snow came
+down heavily and he had to break through the ice to make a fishing-hole,
+and soon the ice was a wind-swept plain where even his own tracks were
+covered with a white pall, he fished steadily on. He never dreamed of
+stopping until he had fish enough for dinner, for, like most of his
+tribe, he was persevering and industrious.
+
+Kalitan was a Thlinkit, though, if you asked him, he would say he was
+"Klinkit." This is a tribe which has puzzled wise people for a long
+time, for the Thlinkits are not Esquimos, not Indians, not coloured
+people, nor whites. They are the tribes living in Southeastern Alaska
+and along the coast. Many think that a long, long time ago, they came
+from Japan or some far Eastern country, for they look something like
+the Japanese, and their language has many words similar to Japanese in
+it.
+
+Perhaps, long years ago, some shipwrecked Japanese were cast upon the
+coast of Alaska, and, finding their boats destroyed and the land good to
+live in, settled there, and thus began the Thlinkit tribes.
+
+The Chilcats, Haidahs, and Tsimsheans are all Thlinkits, and are by far
+the best of the brown people of the Northland. They are honest, simple,
+and kind, and more intelligent than the Indians living farther north, in
+the colder regions. The Thlinkit coast is washed by the warm current
+from the Japan Sea, and it is not much colder than Chicago or Boston,
+though the winter is a little longer.
+
+Kalitan fished diligently but caught little. He was warmly clad in
+sealskin; around his neck was a white bearskin ruff, as warm as toast,
+and very pretty, too, as soft and fluffy as a lady's boa. On his feet
+were moccasins of walrus hide. He had been perhaps an hour watching the
+hole in the ice, and knelt there so still that he looked almost as
+though he were frozen. Indeed, that was what those thought who saw him
+there, for suddenly a dog-sledge came round the corner of the hill and a
+loud halloo greeted his ears.
+
+"Boston men," he said to himself as he watched them, "lost the trail."
+
+They had indeed lost the trail, and Ted Strong had begun to think they
+would never find it again.
+
+Chetwoof, their Indian guide, had not talked very much about it, but
+lapsed into his favourite "No understan'," a remark he always made when
+he did not want to answer what was said to him.
+
+Ted and his father were on their way from Sitka to the Copper River. Mr.
+Strong was on the United States Geological Survey, which Ted knew meant
+that he had to go all around the country and poke about all day among
+rocks and mountains and glaciers. He had come with his father to this
+far Alaskan clime in the happiest expectation of adventures with bears
+and Indians, always dear to the heart of a boy.
+
+He was pretty tired of the sledge, having been in it since early
+morning, and he was cold and hungry besides; so he was delighted when
+the dogs stopped and his father said:
+
+"Hop out, son, and stretch your legs. We'll try to find out where we are
+before we go any farther."
+
+Chetwoof meanwhile was interviewing the boy, who came quickly toward
+them.
+
+"Who are you?" demanded Chetwoof.
+
+"Kalitan Tenas," was the brief reply.
+
+"Where are we?" was the next question.
+
+"Near to Pilchickamin River."
+
+"Where is a camp?"
+
+"There," said the boy, pointing toward a clump of pine-trees. "Ours."
+
+Ted by this time was tired of his own unwonted silence, and he came up
+to Kalitan, holding out his hand.
+
+"My name is Ted Strong," he said, genially, grinning cheerfully at the
+young Alaskan. "I say this is a jolly place. I wish you would teach me
+to fish in a snow-hole. It must be great fun. I like you; let's be
+friends!" Kalitan took the boy's hand in his own rough one.
+
+"Mahsie" (thank you), he said, a sudden quick smile sweeping his dark
+face like a fleeting sunbeam, but disappearing as quickly, leaving it
+grave again. "Olo?" (hungry).
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Strong, "hungry and cold."
+
+"Camp," said Kalitan, preparing to lead the way, with the hospitality of
+his tribe, for the Thlinkits are always ready to share food and fire
+with any stranger. The two boys strode off together, and Mr. Strong
+could scarcely help smiling at the contrast between them.
+
+Ted was the taller, but slim even in the furs which almost smothered
+him, leaving only his bright face exposed to the wind and weather. His
+hair was a tangle of yellow curls which no parting could ever affect,
+for it stood straight up from his forehead like a golden fleece; his
+mother called it his aureole. His skin was fair as a girl's, and his
+eyes as big and blue as a young Viking's; but the Indian boy's locks
+were black as ink, his skin was swarthy, his eyes small and dark, and
+his features that strange mixture of the Indian, the Esquimo, and the
+Japanese which we often see in the best of our Alaskan cousins.
+
+Boys, however, are boys all the world over, and friendly animals, and
+Ted was soon chattering away to his newly found friend as if he had
+known him all his life.
+
+"What's your name?" he asked.
+
+"Kalitan," was the answer. "They call me Kalitan Tenas;[1] my father was
+Tyee."
+
+"Where is he?" asked Ted. He wanted to see an Indian chief.
+
+"Dead," said Kalitan, briefly.
+
+"I'm sorry," said Ted. He adored his own father, and felt it was hard on
+a boy not to have one.
+
+"He was killed," said Kalitan, "but we had blood-money from them," he
+added, sternly.
+
+"What's that?" asked Ted, curiously.
+
+"Long time ago, when one man kill another, his clan must pay
+with a life. One must be found from his tribe to cry,
+'O-o-o-o-o-a-ha-a-ich-klu-kuk-ich-klu-kuk'" (ready to die, ready to
+die). His voice wailed out the mournful chant, which was weird and
+solemn and almost made Ted shiver. "But now," the boy went on, "Boston
+men" (Americans) "do not like the blood-tax, so the murderer pays money
+instead. We got many blankets and baskets and moneys for Kalitan Tyee.
+He great chief."
+
+"Do you live here?" asked Ted.
+
+"No, live on island out there." Kalitan waved his hand seaward. "Come to
+fish with my uncle, Klake Tyee. This good fishing-ground."
+
+"It's a pretty fine country," said Ted, glancing at the scene, which
+bore charm to other than boyish eyes. To the east were the mountains
+sheltering a valley through which the frozen river wound like a silver
+ribbon, widening toward the sea. A cold green glacier filled the valley
+between two mountains with its peaks of beauty. Toward the shore, which
+swept in toward the river's mouth in a sheltered cove, were clumps of
+trees, giant fir, aspen, and hemlock, green and beautiful, while seaward
+swept the waves in white-capped loveliness.
+
+Kalitan ushered them to the camp with great politeness and considerable
+pride.
+
+"You've a good place to camp," said Mr. Strong, "and we will gladly
+share your fire until we are warm enough to go on."
+
+Ted's face fell. "Must we go right away?" he asked. "This is such a
+jolly place."
+
+"No go to-day," said Kalitan, briefly, to Chetwoof. "_Colesnass._"[2]
+
+"Huh!" said Chetwoof. "Think some."
+
+"Here comes my uncle," said Kalitan, and he ran eagerly to meet an old
+Indian who came toward the camp from the shore. He eagerly explained the
+situation to the Tyee, who welcomed the strangers with grave politeness.
+He was an old man, with a seamed, scarred face, but kindly eyes. Chief
+of the Thlinkits, his tribe was scattered, his children dead, and
+Kalitan about all left to him of interest in life.
+
+"There will be more snow," he said to Mr. Strong. "You are welcome. Stay
+and share our fire and food."
+
+"Do let us stay, father," cried Ted, and his father smiled indulgently,
+but Kalitan looked at him in astonishment. Alaskan boys are taught to
+hold their tongues and let their elders decide matters, and Kalitan
+would never have dreamed of teasing for anything.
+
+But Mr. Strong did not wish to face another snow-storm in the sledge,
+and knew he could work but little till the storm was passed; so he
+readily consented to stay a few days and let Ted see some real Alaskan
+hunting and fishing.
+
+Both boys were delighted, and soon had the camp rearranged to
+accommodate the strangers. The fire was built up, Ted and Kalitan
+gathering cones and fir branches, which made a fragrant blaze, while
+Chetwoof cared for the dogs, and the old chief helped Mr. Strong pitch
+his tent in the lee of some fragrant firs. Soon all was prepared and
+supper cooking over the coals,--a supper of fresh fish and seal fat,
+which Alaskans consider a great delicacy, and to which Mr. Strong added
+coffee and crackers from his stores,--and Indians and whites ate
+together in friendliness and amity.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] Little Arrow.
+
+[2] Snow.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+AROUND THE CAMP-FIRE
+
+
+"HOW does it happen that you speak English, Kalitan?" asked Mr. Strong
+as they sat around the camp-fire that evening. The snow had continued
+during the afternoon, and the boys had had an exciting time coasting and
+snow-balling and enjoying themselves generally.
+
+"I went for a few months to the Mission School at Wrangel," said
+Kalitan. "I learned much there. They teach the boys to read and write
+and do sums and to work the ground besides. They learn much more than
+the girls."
+
+"Huh!" said the old chief, grimly. "Girls learn too much. They no good
+for Indian wives, and white men not marry them. Best for girls to stay
+at home at the will of their fathers until they get husbands."
+
+"So you've been in Wrangel," said Ted to Kalitan. "We went there, too.
+It's a dandy place. Do you remember the fringe of white mountains back
+of the harbour? The people said the woods were full of game, but we
+didn't have time to go hunting. There are a few shops there, but it
+seemed to me a very small place to have been built since 1834. In the
+States whole towns grow up in two or three weeks."
+
+"Huh!" said Kalitan, with a quick shrug of his shoulders, "quick grow,
+sun fade and wind blow down."
+
+"I don't think the sun could ever fade in Wrangel," laughed Ted. "They
+told me there it hadn't shone but fifteen days in three months. It
+rained all the time."
+
+"Rain is nothing," said Kalitan. "It is when the Ice Spirit speaks in
+the North Wind's roar and in the crackling of the floes that we
+tremble. The glaciers are the children of the Mountain Spirit whom our
+fathers worshipped. He is angry, and lo! he hurls down icebergs in his
+wrath, he tosses them about, upon the streams he tosses the _kyaks_ like
+feathers and washes the land with the waves of Sitth. When our people
+are buried in the ground instead of being burnt with the fire, they must
+go for ever to the place of Sitth, of everlasting cold, where never sun
+abides, nor rain, nor warmth."
+
+Ted had listened spellbound to this poetic speech and gazed at Kalitan
+in open-mouthed amazement. A boy who could talk like that was a new and
+delightful playmate, and he said:
+
+"Tell me more about things, Kalitan," but the Indian was silent, ashamed
+of having spoken.
+
+"What do you do all day when you are at home?" persisted the American.
+
+"In winter there is nothing to do but to hunt and fish," said Kalitan.
+"Sometimes we do not find much game, then we think of how, when a
+Thlinkit dies, he has plenty. If he has lived as a good tribesman, his
+kyak glides smoothly over the silver waters into the sunset, until, o'er
+gently flowing currents, it reaches the place of the mighty forest. A
+bad warrior's canoe passes dark whirlpools and terrible rapids until he
+reaches the place we speak not of, where reigns Sitth.
+
+"In the summer-time we still hunt and fish. Many have learned to till
+the ground, and we gather berries and wood for the winter. The other
+side of the inlet, the tree-trunks drift from the Yukon and are stranded
+on the islands, so there is plenty for firewood. But upon our island the
+women gather a vine and dry it. They collect seaweed for food in the
+early spring, and dry it and press it into square cakes, which make good
+food after they have hung long in the sun. They make baskets and sell
+them to the white people. Often my uncle and I take them to Valdez, and
+once we brought back fifty dollars for those my mother made. There is
+always much to do."
+
+"Don't you get terribly cold hunting in the winter?" asked Ted.
+
+"Thlinkit boy not a baby," said Kalitan, a trifle scornfully. "We begin
+to be hardened when we are babies. When I was five years old, I left my
+father and went to my uncle to be taught. Every morning I bathed in the
+ocean, even if I had to break ice to find water, and then I rolled in
+the snow. After that my uncle brushed me with a switch bundle, and not
+lightly, for his arm is strong. I must not cry out, no matter if he
+hurt, for a chief's son must never show pain nor fear. That would give
+his people shame."
+
+"Don't you get sick?" asked Ted, who felt cold all over at the idea of
+being treated in such a heroic manner.
+
+"The _Kooshta_[3] comes sometimes," said Kalitan. "The Shaman[4] used to
+cast him out, but now the white doctor can do it, unless the _kooshta_
+is too strong."
+
+Ted was puzzled as to Kalitan's exact meaning, but did not like to ask
+too many questions for fear of being impolite, so he only said:
+
+"Being sick is not very nice, anyhow."
+
+"To be bewitched is the most terrible," said Kalitan, gravely.
+
+"How does that happen?" asked Ted, eagerly, but Kalitan shook his head.
+
+"It is not good to hear," he said. "The medicine-man must come with his
+drum and rattle, and he is very terrible. If the white men will not
+allow any more the punishing of the witches, they should send more of
+the white medicine-men, if we are not to have any more of our own."
+
+"Boys should not talk about big things," said the old chief suddenly. He
+had been sitting quietly over the fire, and spoke so suddenly that
+Kalitan collapsed into silence. Ted, too, quieted down at the old
+chief's stern voice and manner, and both boys sat and listened to the
+men talking, while the snow still swirled about them.
+
+Tyee Klake told Mr. Strong many interesting things about the coast
+country, and gave him valuable information as to the route he should
+pursue in his search for interesting things in the mountains.
+
+"It will be two weeks before the snow will break so you can travel in
+comfort," he said. "Camp with us. We remain here one week, then we go to
+the island. We can take you there, you will see many things, and your
+boy will hunt with Kalitan."
+
+"Where is your island?" asked Mr. Strong.
+
+Ted said nothing, but his eyes were fixed eagerly upon his father. It
+was easy to see that he wished to accept the invitation.
+
+"Out there." Tyee Klake pointed toward where the white coast-line seemed
+to fade into silvery blue.
+
+"There are many islands; on some lives no one, but we have a village.
+Soon it will be nearly deserted, for many of our people rove during the
+summer, and wander from one camping-ground to another, seeking the best
+game or fish. But Kalitan's people remain always on the island. Him I
+take with me to hunt the whale and seal, to gather the berries, and to
+trap the little animals who bear fur. We find even seal upon our shores,
+though fewer since your people have come among us."
+
+"Which were the best, Russians or Americans?" asked Mr. Strong, curious
+to see what the old Indian would say, but the Tyee was not to be caught
+napping.
+
+"Men all alike," he said. "Thlinkit, Russian, American, some good, some
+bad. Russians used Indians more, gave them hunting and fishing, and only
+took part of the skins. Americans like to hunt and fish all themselves
+and leave nothing for the Indians. Russians teach _quass_, Americans
+teach whiskey. Before white men came, Indians were healthy. They ate
+fish, game, berries; now they must have other foods, and they are not
+good for Indians here,"--he touched his stomach. "Indian used to dress
+in skins and furs, now he must copy white man and shiver with cold. He
+soon has the coughing sickness and then he goes into the unknown.
+
+"But the government of the Americans is best because it tries to do some
+things for the Indian. It teaches our boys useful things in the
+schools, and, if some of its people are bad, some Indians are bad, too.
+Men all alike," he repeated with the calm stoicism of his race.
+
+"The government is far away," said Mr. Strong, "and should not be blamed
+for the doings of all its servants. I should like to see this island
+home of yours, and think we must accept your invitation; shall we, Ted?"
+he smiled at the boy.
+
+"Yes, indeed; thank you, sir," said Ted, and he and Kalitan grinned at
+each other happily.
+
+"We shall stay in camp until the blue jay comes," said the old chief,
+smiling, "and then seek the village of my people."
+
+"What does the blue jay mean?" asked Ted, timidly, for he was very much
+in awe of this grave old man.
+
+Kalitan said something in Thlinkit to his uncle, and the old chief,
+looking kindly at the boy, replied with a nod:
+
+"I will tell you the story of the blue jay," he said.
+
+"My story is of the far, far north. Beside a salmon stream there dwelt
+people rich in slaves. These caught and dried the salmon for the winter,
+and nothing is better to eat than dried salmon dipped in seal oil. All
+the fish were caught and stored away, when lo! the whiteness fell from
+heaven and the snows were upon them. It was the time of snow and they
+should not have complained, but the chief was evil and he cursed the
+whiteness. No one should dare to speak evil of the Snow Spirit, which
+comes from the Unknown! Deeper and deeper grew the snow. It flew like
+feathers about the _eglu_,[5] and the slaves had many troubles in
+putting in limbs for the fire. Then the snow came in flakes so large
+they seemed like the wings of birds, and the house was covered, and they
+could no longer keep their _kyaks_ on top of the snow. All were shut
+tight in the house, and their fire and food ran low. They knew not how
+many days they were shut in, for there was no way to tell the day from
+night, only they knew they were sore hungry and that the Snow Spirit was
+angry and terrible in his anger.
+
+"But each one spoke not; he only chose a place where he should lie down
+and die when he could bear no more.
+
+"Only the chief spoke, and he once. 'Snow Spirit,' he said aloud, 'I
+alone am evil. These are not so. Slay me and spare!' But the Snow Spirit
+answered not, only the wind screamed around the _eglu_, and his screams
+were terrible and sad. Then hope left the heart of the chief and he
+prepared to die with all his people and all his slaves.
+
+"But on the day when their last bit of food was gone, lo! something
+pecked at the top of the smoke-hole, and it sang 'Nuck-tee,' and it was
+a blue jay. The chief heard and saw and wondered, and, looking 'neath
+the smoke-hole, he saw a scarlet something upon the floor. Picking it
+up, he found it was a bunch of Indian tomato berries, red and ripe, and
+quickly hope sprang in his breast.
+
+"'Somewhere is summer,' he cried. 'Let us up and away.'
+
+"Then the slaves hastened to dig out the canoe, and they drew it with
+mighty labour, for they were weak from fasting, over the snows to the
+shore, and there they launched it without sail or paddle, with all the
+people rejoicing. And after a time the wind carried them to a beach
+where all was summer. Birds sang, flowers bloomed, and berries gleamed
+scarlet in the sun, and there were salmon jumping in the blue water.
+They ate and were satisfied, for it was summer on the earth and summer
+in their hearts.
+
+"That is how the Thlinkits came to our island, and so we say when the
+snow breaks, that now comes the blue jay."
+
+"Thank you for telling us such a dandy story," cried Ted, who had not
+lost a word of this quaint tale, told so graphically over the camp-fire
+of the old chief Klake.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[3] Kooshta, a spirit in animal's form which inhabits the body of sick
+persons and must be cast out, according to Thlinkit belief.
+
+[4] Shaman, native medicine-man.
+
+[5] Hut.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+TO THE GLACIER
+
+
+TED slept soundly all night, wrapped in the bearskins from the sledge,
+in the little tent he shared with his father. When the morning broke, he
+sprang to his feet and hurried out of doors, hopeful for the day's
+pleasures. The snow had stopped, but the ground was covered with a thick
+white pall, and the mountains were turned to rose colour in the morning
+sun, which was rising in a blaze of glory.
+
+"Good morning, Kalitan," shouted Ted to his Indian friend, whom he spied
+heaping wood upon the camp-fire. "Isn't it dandy? What can we do
+to-day?"
+
+"Have breakfast," said Kalitan, briefly. "Then do what Tyee says."
+
+"Well, I hope he'll say something exciting," said Ted.
+
+"Think good day to hunt," said Kalitan, as he prepared things for the
+morning meal.
+
+"Where did you get the fish?" asked Ted.
+
+"Broke ice-hole and fished when I got up," said the Thlinkit.
+
+"You don't mean you have been fishing already," exclaimed the lazy Ted,
+and Kalitan smiled as he said:
+
+"White people like fish. Tyee said: 'Catch fish for Boston men's
+breakfast,' and I go."
+
+"Do you always mind him like that?" asked Ted. He generally obeyed his
+father, but there were times when he wasn't anxious to and argued a
+little about it. Kalitan looked at him in astonishment.
+
+"He chief!" he said, simply.
+
+"What will we do with the camp if we all go hunting?" asked Ted.
+
+"Nothing," said Kalitan.
+
+"Leave Chetwoof to watch, I suppose," continued Ted.
+
+"Watch? Why?" asked Kalitan.
+
+"Why, everything; some one will steal our things," said Ted.
+
+"Thlinkits not steal," said Kalitan, with dignity. "Maybe white man come
+along and steal from his brothers; Indians not. If we go away to long
+hunt, we _cache_ blankets and no one would touch."
+
+"What do you mean by _cache_?" asked Ted.
+
+"We build a mound hut near the house, and put there the blankets and
+stores. Sometime they stay there for years, but no one would take from a
+_cache_. If one has plenty of wood by the seashore or in the forest, he
+may cord it and go his way and no one will touch it. A deer hangs on a
+tree where dogs may not reach it, but no stray hunter would slice even a
+piece. We are not thieves."
+
+"It is a pity you could not send missionaries to the States, you
+Thlinkits, my boy," said Mr. Strong, who had come up in time to hear
+Kalitan's words. "I'm afraid white people are less honest."
+
+"Teddy, do you know we are to have some hunting to-day, and that you'll
+get your first experience with a glacier."
+
+"Hurrah," shouted Ted, dancing up and down in excitement.
+
+"Tyee Klake says we can hunt toward the base of the glacier, and I shall
+try to go a little ways upon it and see how the land lies, or, rather,
+the ice. It is getting warmer, and, if it continues a few days, the snow
+will melt enough to let us go over to that island you are so anxious to
+see."
+
+Ted's eyes shone, and the amount of breakfast he put away quite prepared
+him for his day's work, which, pleasant though it might be, certainly
+was hard work. The chief said they must seek the glacier first before
+the sun got hot, for it was blinding on the snow. So they set out soon
+after breakfast, leaving Chetwoof in charge of the camp, and with orders
+to catch enough fish for dinner.
+
+"We'll be ready to eat them, heads and tails," said Ted, and his father
+added, laughingly:
+
+"'Bible, bones, and hymn-book, too.'"
+
+"What does that mean?" asked Ted, as Kalitan looked up inquiringly.
+
+"Once a writer named Macaulay said he could make a rhyme for any word in
+the English language, and a man replied, 'You can't rhyme Timbuctoo.'
+But he answered without a pause:
+
+ "If I were a Cassowary
+ On the plains of Timbuctoo,
+ I'd eat up a missionary,
+ Bible, bones, and hymn-book, too."
+
+Ted laughed, but Kalitan said, grimly:
+
+"Not good to eat Boston missionary, he all skin and bone!"
+
+"Where did they get the name Alaska?" asked Ted, as they tramped over
+the snow toward the glacier.
+
+"Al-ay-ck-sa--great country," said Kalitan.
+
+"It certainly is," said Ted. "It's fine! I never saw anything like this
+at home," pointing as he spoke to the scene in front of him.
+
+A group of evergreen trees, firs and the Alaska spruce, so useful for
+fires and torches, fringed the edge of the ice-field, green and verdant
+in contrast to the gleaming snows of the mountain, which rose in a
+gentle slope at first, then precipitously, in a dazzling and enchanting
+combination of colour. It was as if some marble palace of old rose
+before them against the heavens, for the ice was cut and serrated into
+spires and gables, turrets and towers, all seeming to be ornamented with
+fretwork where the sun's rays struck the peaks and turned them into
+silver and gold. Lower down the ice looked like animals, so twisted was
+it into fantastic shapes; fierce sea monsters with yawning mouths
+seeming ready to devour; bears and wolves, whales, gigantic elephants,
+and snowy tigers, tropic beasts looking strangely out of place in this
+arctic clime.
+
+Deep crevices cut the ice-fields, and in their green-blue depths lurked
+death, for the least misstep would dash the traveller into an abyss
+which had no bottom. Beyond the glacier itself, the snow-capped
+mountains rose grand and serene, their glittering peaks clear against
+the blue sky, which hue the glacier reflected and played with in a
+thousand glinting shades, from purpling amethyst to lapis lazuli and
+turquoise.
+
+As they gazed spellbound, a strange thing occurred, a thing of such
+wonder and beauty that Ted could but grasp his father's arm in silence.
+
+Suddenly the peaks seemed to melt away, the white ice-pinnacles became
+real turrets, houses and cathedrals appeared, and before them arose a
+wonderful city of white marble, dream-like and shadowy, but beautiful as
+Aladdin's palace in the "Arabian Nights." At last Ted could keep silent
+no longer.
+
+"What is it?" he cried, and the old chief answered, gravely:
+
+"The City of the Dead," but his father said:
+
+"A mirage, my boy. They are often seen in these regions, but you are
+fortunate in seeing one of the finest I have ever witnessed."
+
+"What is a mirage?" demanded Ted.
+
+"An optical delusion," said his father, "and one I am sure I couldn't
+explain so that you would understand it. The queer thing about a mirage
+is that you usually see the very thing most unlikely to be found in that
+particular locality. In the Sahara, men see flowers and trees and
+fountains, and here on this glacier we see a splendid city."
+
+"It certainly is queer. What makes glaciers, daddy?" Ted was even more
+interested than usual in his father's talk because of Kalitan, whose
+dark eyes never left Mr. Strong's face, and who seemed to drink in every
+word of information as eagerly as a thirsty bird drinks water.
+
+"The dictionaries tell you that glaciers are fields of ice, or snow and
+ice, formed in the regions of perpetual snow, and moving slowly down the
+mountain slopes or valleys. Many people say the glaciers are the fathers
+of the icebergs which float at sea, and that these are broken off the
+glacial stream, but others deny this. When the glacial ice and snow
+reaches a point where the air is so warm that the ice melts as fast as
+it is pushed down from above, the glacier ends and a river begins. These
+are the finest glaciers in the world, except, perhaps, those of the
+Himalayas.
+
+"This bids fair to be a wonderfully interesting place for my work, Ted,
+and I'm glad you're likely to be satisfied with your new friends, for I
+shall have to go to many places and do a lot of things less interesting
+than the things Kalitan can show you.
+
+"See these blocks of fine marble and those superb masses of porphyry and
+chalcedony,--but there's something which will interest you more. Take my
+gun and see if you can't bring down a bird for supper."
+
+Wild ducks were flying low across the edge of the glacier and quite near
+to the boys, and Ted grasped his father's gun in wild excitement. He was
+never allowed to touch a gun at home. Dearly as he loved his mother, it
+had always seemed very strange to him that she should show such poor
+taste about firearms, and refuse to let him have any; and now that he
+had a gun really in his hands, he could hardly hold it, he was so
+excited. Of course it was not the first time, for his father had allowed
+him to practise shooting at a mark ever since they had reached Alaska,
+but this was the first time he had tried to shoot a living target. He
+selected his duck, aimed quickly, and fired. Bang! Off went the gun,
+and, wonder of wonders! two ducks fell instead of one.
+
+"Well done, Ted, that duck was twins," cried his father, laughing,
+almost as excited as the boy himself, and they ran to pick up the birds.
+Kalitan smiled, too, and quietly picked up one, saying:
+
+"This one Kalitan's," showing, as he spoke, his arrow through the bird's
+side, for he had discharged an arrow as Ted fired his gun.
+
+"Too bad, Ted. I thought you were a mighty hunter, a Nimrod who killed
+two birds with one stone," said Mr. Strong, but Ted laughed and said:
+
+"So I got the one I shot at, I don't care."
+
+They had wild duck at supper that night, for Chetwoof plucked the birds
+and roasted them on a hot stone over the spruce logs, and Ted, tired and
+wet and hungry, thought he had never tasted such a delicious meal in his
+life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+TED MEETS MR. BRUIN
+
+
+IT seemed to Ted as if he had scarcely touched the pillow on the nights
+which followed before it was daylight, and he would awake to find the
+sun streaming in at his tent flap. He always meant to go fishing with
+Kalitan before breakfast, so the moment he woke up he jumped out of bed,
+if his pile of fragrant pine boughs covered with skins could be called a
+bed, and hurried through his toilet. Quick as he tried to be, however,
+he was never ready before Kalitan, for, when Ted appeared, the Indian
+boy had always had his roll in the snow and was preparing his lines.
+
+Kalitan was perfectly fascinated with the American boy. He thought him
+the most wonderful specimen of a boy that he had ever seen. He knew so
+much that Kalitan did not, and talked so brightly that being with Ted
+was to the Indian like having a book without the bother of reading.
+There were some things about him that Kalitan could not understand, to
+be sure. Ted talked to his father just as if he were another boy. He
+even spoke to Tyee Klake on occasions when that august personage had not
+only not asked him a question, but was not speaking at all. From the
+Thlinkit point of view, this was a most remarkable performance on Ted's
+part, but Kalitan thought it must be all right for a "Boston boy," for
+even the stern old chief seemed to regard happy-go-lucky Ted with
+approval.
+
+Ted, on the other hand, thought Kalitan the most remarkable boy he had
+ever met in all his life. He had not been much with boys. His "Lady
+Mother," as he always called the gentle, brown-eyed being who ruled his
+father and himself, had not cared to have her little Galahad mingle
+with the rougher city boys who thronged the streets, and had kept him
+with herself a great deal. Ted had loved books, and he and his little
+sister Judith had lived in a pleasant atmosphere of refinement, playing
+happily together until the boy had grown almost to dread anything common
+or low. His mother knew he had moral courage, and would face any issue
+pluckily, but his father feared he would grow up a milksop, and thought
+he needed hardening.
+
+Mrs. Strong objected to the hardening process if it consisted in turning
+her boy loose to learn the ways of the city streets, but had consented
+to his going with his father, urged thereto by fears for his health,
+which was not of the best, and the knowledge that he had reached the
+"bear and Indian" age, and it was certainly a good thing for him to have
+his experiences first-hand.
+
+To Ted the whole thing was perfectly delightful. When he lay down at
+night, he would often like to see "Mother and Ju," but he was generally
+so tired that he was asleep before he had time to think enough to be
+really homesick. During the day there was too much doing to have any
+thinking time, and, since he had met this boy friend, he thought of
+little else but him and what they were to do next. The Tyee had assured
+Mr. Strong that it was perfectly safe for the boys to go about together.
+
+"Kalitan knows all the trails," he said. "He take care of white brother.
+Anything come, call Chetwoof."
+
+As Mr. Strong was very anxious to penetrate the glacier under Klake's
+guidance, and wanted Ted to enjoy himself to the full, he left the boys
+to themselves, the only stipulation being that they should not go on the
+water without Chetwoof.
+
+There seemed to be always something new to do. As the days grew warmer,
+the ice broke in the river, and the boys tramped all over the country.
+Ted learned to use the bow and arrow, and brought down many a bird for
+supper, and proud he was when he served up for his father a wild duck,
+shot, plucked, and cooked all by himself.
+
+They fished in the stream by day and set lines by night. They trapped
+rabbits and hares in the woods, and one day even got a silver fox, a
+skin greatly prized by the fur traders on account of its rarity. Kalitan
+insisted that Ted should have it, though he could have gotten forty
+dollars for it from a white trader, and Ted was rejoiced at the idea of
+taking it home to make a set of furs for Judith.
+
+One day Ted had a strange experience, and not a very pleasant one, which
+might have been very serious had it not been for Kalitan. He had noticed
+a queer-looking plant on the river-bank the day before, and had stopped
+to pick it up, when he received such a sudden and unexpected pricking
+as to cause him to jump back and shout for Kalitan. His hand felt as if
+it had been pierced by a thousand needles, and he flew to a snow-bank to
+rub it with snow.
+
+"I must have gotten hold of some kind of a cactus," he said to Kalitan,
+who only replied:
+
+"Huh! picked hedgehog," as he pointed to where Ted's cactus was ambling
+indignantly away with every quill rattling and set straight out in anger
+at having his morning nap disturbed. Kalitan wrapped Ted's hand in soft
+mud, which took the pain out, but he couldn't use it much for the next
+few days, and did not feel eager to hunt when his father and the Tyee
+started out in the morning. Kalitan remained with him, although his eyes
+looked wistful, for he had heard the chief talk about bear tracks having
+been seen the day before. Bears were quite a rarity, but sometimes an
+old cinnamon or even a big black bruin would venture down in search of
+fresh fish, which he would catch cleverly with his great paws.
+
+Kalitan and Ted fished awhile, and then Ted wandered away a little,
+wondering what lay around a point of rock which he had never yet
+explored. Something lay there which he had by no means expected to see,
+and he scarcely knew what to make of it. On the river-bank, close to the
+edge of the stream, was a black figure, an Indian fishing, as he
+supposed, and he paused to watch. The fisherman was covered with fur
+from head to foot, and, as Ted watched him, he seemed to have no line or
+rod. Going nearer, the boy grew even more puzzled, and, though the man's
+back was toward him, he could easily see that there was something
+unusual about the figure. Just as he was within hailing distance and
+about to shout, the figure made a quick dive toward the water and sprang
+back again with a fish between his paws, and Ted saw that it was a huge
+bear. He gave a sharp cry and then stood stock-still. The creature
+looked around and stood gnawing his fish and staring at Ted as stupidly
+as the boy stared at him. Then Ted heard a halloo behind him and
+Kalitan's voice:
+
+"Run for Chetwoof, quick!"
+
+Ted obeyed as the animal started to move off. He ran toward the camp,
+hearing the report of Kalitan's gun as he ran. Chetwoof, hearing the
+noise, hurried out, and it was but a few moments before he was at
+Kalitan's side. To Ted it seemed like a day before he could get back and
+see what was happening, but he arrived on the scene in time to see
+Chetwoof despatch the animal.
+
+"Hurrah!" cried Ted. "You've killed a bear," but Chetwoof only grunted
+crossly.
+
+"Very bad luck!" he said, and Kalitan explained:
+
+"Indians don't like to kill bears or ravens. Spirits in them, maybe
+ancestors."
+
+Ted looked at him in great astonishment, but Kalitan explained:
+
+"Once, long ago, a Thlinkit girl laughed at a bear track in the snow and
+said: 'Ugly animal must have made that track!' But a bear heard and was
+angry. He seized the maiden and bore her to his den, and turned her into
+a bear, and she dwelt with him, until one day her brother killed the
+bear and she was freed. And from that day Thlinkits speak respectfully
+of bears, and do not try to kill them, for they know not whether it is a
+bear or a friend who hides within the shaggy skin."
+
+The Tyee and Mr. Strong were greatly surprised when they came home to
+see the huge carcass of Mr. Bruin, and they listened to the account of
+Kalitan's bravery. The old chief said little, but he looked approvingly
+at Kalitan, and said "Hyas kloshe" (very good), which unwonted praise
+made the boy's face glow with pleasure. They had a great discussion as
+to whom the bear really belonged. Ted had found him, Kalitan had shot
+him first, and Chetwoof had killed him, so they decided to go shares.
+Ted wanted the skin to take home, and thought it would make a splendid
+rug for his mother's library, so his father paid Kalitan and Chetwoof
+what each would have received as their share had the skin been sold to a
+trader, and they all had bear meat for supper. Ted thought it finer than
+any beefsteak he had ever eaten, and over it Kalitan smacked his lips
+audibly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+A MONSTER OF THE DEEP
+
+
+THE big bear occupied considerable attention for several days. He had to
+be carefully skinned and part of the meat dried for future use. Alaskans
+never use salt for preserving meat. Indeed they seem to dislike salt
+very much. It had taken Ted some time to learn to eat all his meat and
+fish quite fresh, without a taste of salt, but he had grown to like it.
+There is something in the sun and wind of Alaska which cures meat
+perfectly, and the bear's meat was strung on sticks and dried in the sun
+so that they might enjoy it for a long time.
+
+It seemed as if the adventure with Bruin was enough to last the boys for
+several days, for Ted's hand still pained him from the porcupine's
+quills, and he felt tired and lazy. He lay by the camp-fire one
+afternoon listening to Kalitan's tales of his island home, when his
+father came in from a long tramp, and, looking at him a little
+anxiously, asked:
+
+"What's the matter, son?"
+
+"Nothing, I'm only tired," said Ted, but Kalitan said:
+
+"Porcupine quills poison hand. Well in a few days."
+
+"So your live cactus is getting in his work, is he? I'm glad it wasn't
+the bear you mistook for an Alaskan posy and tried to pick. I'm tired
+myself," and Mr. Strong threw himself down to rest.
+
+"Daddy, how did we come to have Alaska, anyway?"
+
+"Well, that's a long story," said his father, "but an interesting one."
+
+"Do tell us about it," urged Ted. "I know we bought it, but what did we
+pay the Indians for it? I shouldn't have thought they'd have sold such a
+fine country."
+
+Kalitan looked up quickly, and there was a sudden gleam in his dark eyes
+that Ted had never seen before.
+
+"Thlinkits never sell," he said. "Russians steal."
+
+Mr. Strong put his hand kindly on the boy's head.
+
+"You're right, Kalitan," he said. "The Russians never conquered the
+Thlinkits, the bravest tribe in all Alaska.
+
+"You see, Teddy, it was this way. A great many years ago, about 1740, a
+Danish sailor named Bering, who was in the service of the Russians,
+sailed across the ocean and discovered the strait named for him, and a
+number of islands. Some of these were not inhabited, others had Indians
+or Esquimos on them, but, after the manner of the early discoverers,
+Bering took possession of them all in the name of the Emperor of
+Russia. It doesn't seem right as we look at things now, but in those
+days 'might made right,' and it was just the same way the English did
+when they came to America.
+
+"The Russians settled here, finding the fishing and furs fine things for
+trade, and driving the Indians, who would not yield to them, farther and
+farther inland. In 1790 the Czar made Alexander Baranoff manager of the
+trading company. Baranoff established trading-posts in various places,
+and settled at Sitka, where you can see the ruins of the splendid castle
+he built. The Russians also sent missionaries to convert the Indians to
+the Greek Church, which is the church of Russia. The Indians, however,
+never learned to care for the Russians, and often were cruelly treated
+by them. The Russians, however, tried to do something for their
+education, and established several schools. One as early as 1775, on
+Kadiak Island, had thirty pupils, who studied arithmetic, reading,
+navigation, and four of the mechanical trades, and this is a better
+record than the American purchasers can show, I am sorry to say.
+
+"One of the recent travellers[6] in Alaska says that he met in the
+country 'American citizens who never in their lives heard a prayer for
+the President of the United States, nor of the Fourth of July, nor the
+name of the capital of the nation, but who have been taught to pray for
+the Emperor of Russia, to celebrate his birthday, and to commemorate the
+victories of ancient Greece.' In March, 1867, the Russians sold Alaska
+to the United States for $7,200,000 in gold. It was bought for a song
+almost, when we consider the immense amount of money made for the
+government by the seal fisheries, the cod and salmon industries, and
+the opening of the gold fields. The resources of the country are not
+half-known, and the government is beginning to see this. That is one of
+the reasons they have sent me here, with the other men, to find out what
+the earth holds for those who do not know how to look for its treasures.
+Gold is not the best thing the earth produces. There is land in Alaska
+little known full of coal and other useful minerals. Other land is
+covered with magnificent timber which could be shipped to all parts of
+the world. There are pasture-lands where stock will fatten like pigs
+without any other feeding; there are fertile soils which will raise
+almost any crops, and there are intelligent Indians who can be taught to
+work and be useful members of society. I do not mean dragged off to the
+United States to learn things they could never use in their home lives,
+but who should be educated here to make the best of their talents in
+their home surroundings.
+
+"That is one crying shame to our government, that they have neglected
+the Alaskan citizens. Forty years have been wasted, but we are beginning
+to wake up now, and twenty years more will see the Indians of Kalitan's
+generation industrious men and women, not only clever hunters and
+fishermen, but lumbermen, coopers, furniture makers, farmers, miners,
+and stock-raisers."
+
+At this moment their quiet conversation was interrupted by a wild shout
+from the shore, and, springing to their feet, they saw Chetwoof
+gesticulating wildly and shouting to the Tyee, who had been mending his
+canoe by the river-bank. Kalitan dropped everything and ran without a
+word, scudding like the arrow from which he took his name. Before Ted
+could follow or ask what was the matter, from the ocean a huge body rose
+ten feet out of the water, spouting jets of spray twenty feet into the
+air, the sun striking his sides and turning them to glistening silver.
+Then it fell back, the waters churning into frothy foam for a mile
+around.
+
+"It's a whale, Ted, sure as you live. Luck certainly is coming your
+way," said his father; but, at the word "whale," Ted had started after
+Kalitan, losing no time in getting to the scene of action as fast as
+possible.
+
+"Watch the Tyee!" called Kalitan over his shoulder, as both boys ran
+down to the water's edge.
+
+The old chief was launching his _kiak_ into the seething waters, and to
+Ted it seemed incredible that he meant to go in that frail bark in
+pursuit of the mighty monster. The old man's face, however, was as calm
+as though starting on a pleasure-trip in peaceful waters, and Ted
+watched in breathless admiration to see what would happen next.
+
+Klake paddled swiftly out to sea, drawing as near as he dared to where
+the huge monster splashed idly up and down like a great puppy at play.
+He stopped the _kiak_ and watched; then poised his spear and threw it,
+and so swift and graceful was his gesture that Ted exclaimed in
+amazement.
+
+"Tyee Klake best harpoon-thrower of all the Thlinkits," said Kalitan,
+proudly. "Watch!"
+
+Ted needed no such instructions. His keen eyes passed from fish to man
+and back again, and no movement of the Tyee escaped him.
+
+The instant the harpoon was thrown, the Tyee paddled furiously away, for
+when a harpoon strikes a whale, he is likely to lash violently with his
+tail, and may destroy his enemy, and this is a moment of terrible danger
+to the harpooner. But the whale was too much astonished to fight, and,
+with a terrific splash, he dived deep, deep into the water, to get rid
+of that stinging thing in his side, in the cold green waters below.
+
+[Illustration: "AWAY WENT ANOTHER STINGING LANCE."]
+
+The Tyee waited, his grim face tense and earnest. It might have been
+fifteen minutes, for whales often stay under water for twenty minutes
+before coming to the surface to breathe, but to Kalitan and Ted it
+seemed an hour.
+
+Then the spray dashed high into the air again, and the instant the huge
+body appeared, Klake drew near, and away went another stinging lance
+again, swift and, oh! so sure of aim. This time the whale struck out
+wildly, and Kalitan held his breath, while Ted gasped at the Tyee's
+danger, for his _kiak_ rocked like a shell and then was quite hidden
+from their sight by the spray which was dashed heavenward like clouds of
+white smoke.
+
+Once more the creature dived, and this time he stayed down only a few
+minutes, and, when he came up, blood spouted into the air and dyed the
+sea crimson, and Kalitan exclaimed:
+
+"Pierced his lungs! Now he must die."
+
+There was one more bright, glancing weapon flying through the air, and
+Ted noticed attached to it by a thong a curious-looking bulb, and asked
+Kalitan:
+
+"What is on that lance?"
+
+"Sealskin buoy," said Kalitan. "We make the bag and blow it up, tie it
+to the harpoon, and when the lance sticks into the whale, the buoy makes
+it very hard for him to dive. After awhile he dies and drifts ashore."
+
+The waters about the whale were growing red, and the carcass seemed
+drifting out to sea, and at last the Tyee seemed satisfied. He sent a
+last look toward the huge body, then turned his _kiak_ toward the
+watchers on the banks.
+
+"If it only comes to shore," said Kalitan.
+
+"What will you do with it?" asked Ted.
+
+"Oh, there are lots of things we can do with a whale," said Kalitan.
+"The blubber is the best thing to eat in all the world. Then we use the
+oil in a bowl with a bit of pith in it to light our huts. The bones are
+all useful in building our houses. Whales were once bears, but they
+played too much on the shore and ran away to sea, so they wore off all
+their fur on the rocks, and had their feet nibbled off by the fishes."
+
+"Well, this one didn't have his tail nibbled off at any rate," laughed
+Ted. "I saw it flap at the Tyee, and thought that was the last of him,
+sure."
+
+"Tyee much big chief," said Kalitan, and just then the old man's _kiak_
+drew near them, and he stepped ashore as calmly as though he had not
+just been through so exciting a scene with a mighty monster of the
+deep.
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[6] Dr. Sheldon Jackson, General Agent of Education in the Territory.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE ISLAND HOME OF KALITAN
+
+
+SWIFT and even were the strokes of the paddles as the canoes sped over
+the water toward Kalitan's island home. Ted was so excited that he could
+hardly sit still, and Tyee Klake gave him a warning glance and a
+muttered "Kooletchika."[7]
+
+The day before a big canoe had come to the camp, the paddlers bearing
+messages for the Tyee, and he had had a long conversation with Mr.
+Strong. The result was astonishing to Teddy, for his father told him
+that he was to go for a month to the island with Kalitan. This delighted
+him greatly, but he was a little frightened when he found that his
+father was to stay behind.
+
+"It's just this way, son," Mr. Strong explained to him. "I'm here in
+government employ, taking government pay to do government work. I must
+do it and do it well in the shortest time possible. You will have a far
+better time on the island with Kalitan than you could possibly have
+loafing around the camp here. You couldn't go to many places where I am
+going, and, if my mind is easy about you, I can take Chetwoof and do my
+work in half the time. I'll come to the island in three or four weeks,
+and we'll take a week's vacation together, and then we'll hit the trail
+for the gold-fields. Are you satisfied with this arrangement?"
+
+"Yes, sir." Ted's tone was dubious, but his face soon cleared up. "A
+month won't be very long, father."
+
+"No, I'll wager you'll be sorry to leave when I come for you. Try and
+not make any trouble. Of course Indian ways are not ours, but you'll get
+used to it all and enjoy it. It's a chance most boys would be crazy
+over, and you'll have tales to tell when you get home to make your
+playmates envy you. I'm glad I have a son I can trust to keep straight
+when he is out of my sight," and he laid his hand affectionately on the
+boy's shoulder. Ted looked his father squarely in the eye, but gave only
+a little nod in answer, then he laughed his clear, ringing laugh.
+
+"Wouldn't mother have spasms!" he exclaimed. Mr. Strong laughed too, but
+said:
+
+"You'll be just as well off tumbling around with Kalitan as falling off
+a glacier or two, as you would be certain to do if you were with me."
+
+Teddy felt a little blue when he said good-bye to his father, but
+Kalitan quickly dispelled his gloom by a great piece of news.
+
+"Great time on island," he said, as the canoe glided toward the dim
+outline of land to which Ted's thoughts had so often turned. "Tyee's
+whale came ashore. We go to see him cut up."
+
+"Hurrah!" cried Ted, delighted. "To think I shall see all that! What
+else will we do, Kalitan?"
+
+"Hunt, fish, hear old Kala-kash stories. See berry dance if you stay
+long enough, perhaps a potlatch; do many things," said the Indian.
+
+One of the Indian paddlers said something to Kalitan, and he laughed a
+little, and Ted asked, curiously: "What did he say?"
+
+"Said Kalitan Tenas learned to talk as much as a Boston boy," said
+Kalitan, laughing heartily, and Ted laughed, too.
+
+The canoes were nearing the shore of a wooded island, and Ted saw a
+fringe of trees and some native houses clustered picturesquely against
+them at the crest of a small hill which sloped down to the water's
+edge, where stood a group of people awaiting the canoes.
+
+[Illustration: "A GROUP OF PEOPLE AWAITING THE CANOES."]
+
+"My home," said Kalitan, pointing to the largest house, "my people."
+There was a great deal of pride in his tone and look, and he received a
+warm welcome as the canoes touched land and their occupants sprang on
+shore. The boys crowded around the young Indian and chattered and
+gesticulated toward Ted, while a bright-looking little Malamute sprang
+upon Kalitan and nearly knocked him down, covering his face with eager
+puppy kisses.
+
+The girls were less boisterous, and regarded Teddy with shy curiosity.
+Some of them were quite pretty, and the babies were as cunning as the
+puppies. They barked every time the dogs did, in a funny, hoarse little
+way, and, indeed, Alaskan babies learn to bark long before they learn to
+talk.
+
+The Tyee's wife received Teddy kindly, and he soon found himself
+quite at home among these hospitable people, who seemed always friendly
+and natural. Nearly all spoke some English, and he rapidly added to his
+store of Chinook, so that he had no trouble in making himself understood
+or in understanding. Of course he missed his father, but he had little
+time to be lonely. Life in the village was anything but uneventful.
+
+At first there was the whale to be attended to, and all the village
+turned out for that. The huge creature had drifted ashore on the farther
+side of the island, and Ted was much interested in seeing him gradually
+disposed of. Great masses of blubber were stripped from the sides to be
+used later both for food and fuel, the whalebone was carefully secured
+to be sold to the traders, and it seemed to Ted that there was not one
+thing in that vast carcass for which the Indians did not have some use.
+
+Ted soon tired of watching the many things done with the whale, but
+there was plenty to do and see in the village.
+
+The village houses were all alike. There was one large room in which the
+people cooked, ate, and slept. The girls had blankets strung across one
+corner, behind which were their beds. Teddy was given one also for his
+corner of the great room in the Tyee's house.
+
+He learned to eat the food and to like it very much. There was dried
+fish, herons' eggs, berries, or those put up in seal oil, which is
+obtained by frying the fat out of the blubber of the seal. The Alaskans
+use this oil in nearly all their cooking, and are very fond of it. Ted
+ate also dried seaweed, chopped and boiled in seal oil, which tasted
+very much like boiled and salted leather, but he liked it very well.
+Indeed he grew so strong and well, out-of-doors all day in the clear air
+and bright sunshine of the Alaskan June, that he could eat anything and
+tramp all day without being too tired to sleep like a top all night,
+and wake ready for a new day with a zest he never felt at home.
+
+Fresh fish were plentiful. The boys caught salmon, smelts, and
+whitefish, and many were dried for the coming winter, while clams,
+gum-boots, sea-cucumbers, and devil-fish, found on the rocks of the
+shore, were every-day diet.
+
+Kalitan's sister and Ted became great friends. She was older than
+Kalitan, and, though only fifteen, was soon to be married to Tah-ge-ah,
+a fine young Indian who was ready to pay high for her, which was not
+strange, for she was both pretty and sweet.
+
+"At the next full moon," said Kalitan, "there will be a potlatch, and
+Tanana will be sold to Tah-ge-ah. He says he will give four hundred
+blankets for her, and my uncle is well pleased. Many only pay ten
+blankets for a wife, but of course we would not sell my sister for that.
+She is of high caste, chief's daughter, niece, and sister," the boy
+spoke proudly, and Ted answered:
+
+"She's so pretty, too. She's not like the Indian girls I saw at Wrangel
+and Juneau. Why, there the women sat around as dirty as dogs on the
+sidewalk, and didn't seem to care how they looked. They had baskets to
+sell, and were too lazy to care whether any one bought them or not. They
+weren't a bit like Tanana. She's as pretty as a Japanese."
+
+Kalitan smiled, well pleased, and Ted added, "I guess the Thlinkits must
+be the best Indians in Alaska."
+
+Kalitan laughed outright at this.
+
+"Thlinkits pretty good," he said. "Tanana good girl. She learned much
+good at the mission school, marry Tah-ge-ah, and make people better. She
+can weave blankets, make fine baskets, and keep house like a white
+girl."
+
+"She's all right," said Ted. "But, Kalitan, what is a potlatch?"
+
+"Potlatch is a good-will feast," said his friend. "Very fine thing, but
+white men do not like. Say Indian feasts are all bad. Why is it bad when
+an Indian gives away all his goods for others? That is what a great
+potlatch is. When white men give us whiskey and it is drunk too much,
+then it is very bad. But Tyee will not have that for Tanana's feast. We
+will drink only quass,[8] as my people made it before they learned evil
+drinks and fire-water, which make them crazy."
+
+"I guess Tyee Klake was right when he said all men were alike," said
+Ted, sagely. "It seems to me that there are good and bad ones in all
+countries. It's a pity you have had such bad white ones here in Alaska,
+but I guess you have had good ones, too."
+
+"Plenty good, plenty bad, Thlinkit men and Boston men," said Kalitan,
+"all same."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[7] "Dangerous channel."
+
+[8] Quass is a native drink, harmless and acid, made with rye and water
+fermented. The bad Indians mix it with sugar, flour, dried apples, and
+hops, and make a terribly intoxicating drink.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+TWILIGHT TALES AND TOTEMS
+
+
+"ONCE a small girl child went by night to bring water. In the skies
+above she saw the Moon shining brightly, pale and placid, and she put
+forth her tongue at it, which was an evil thing, for the Moon is old,
+and a Thlinkit child should show respect for age. So the Moon would not
+endure so rude a thing from a girl child, and it came down from the sky
+and took her thither. She cried out in fear and caught at the long grass
+to keep herself from going up, but the Moon was strong and took her with
+her water-bucket and her bunch of grass, and she never came back. Her
+mother wept for her, but her father said: 'Cease. We have other girl
+children; she is now wedded to the Moon; to him we need not give a
+potlatch.'
+
+"You may see her still, if you will look at the Moon, there, grass in
+one hand, bucket in the other, and when the new Moon tips to one side
+and the water spills from the clouds and it is the months of rain, it is
+the bad Moon maiden tipping over her water-bucket upon the earth. No
+Thlinkit child would dare ever to put her tongue forth at the Moon, for
+fear of a like fate to that of Squi-ance, the Moon maiden."
+
+Tanana's voice was soft and low, and she looked very pretty as she sat
+in the moonlight at the door of the hut and told Kalitan and Ted quaint
+old stories. Ted was delighted with her tales, and begged for another
+and yet another, and Tanana told the quaint story of Kagamil.
+
+"A mighty _toyon_[9] dwelt on the island of Kagamil. By name he was
+Kat-haya-koochat, and he was of great strength and much to be feared. He
+had long had a death feud with people of the next totem, but the bold
+warrior Yakaga, chieftain of the tribe, married the toyon's daughter,
+and there was no more feud. Zampa was the son of Kat-haya-koochat, and
+his pride. He built for this son a fine _bidarka_,[10] and the boy
+launched it on the sea. His father watched him sail and called him to
+return, lest evil befall. But Zampa heard not his father's voice and
+pursued diving birds,[11] and, lo! he was far from land and the dark
+fell. He sailed to the nearest shore and beheld the village of Yakaga,
+where the people of his sister's husband made him welcome, though Yakaga
+was not within his hut. There was feasting and merry-making, and,
+according to their custom, he, the stranger, was given a chieftain's
+daughter to wife, and her name was Kitt-a-youx; and Zampa loved her and
+she him, and he returned not home. But Kitt-a-youx's father liked him
+not, and treated him with rudeness because of the old enmity with his
+Tyee father, so Zampa said to Kitt-a-youx: 'Let us go hence. We cannot
+be happy here. Let us go from your father, who is unfriendly to me, and
+seek the _barrabora_ of my father, the mighty chief, that happiness may
+come upon us,' and Kitt-a-youx said: 'What my lord says is well.'
+
+"Then Zampa placed her in his canoe, and alone beneath the stars they
+sailed and it was well, and Zampa's arm was strong at his paddle. But,
+lo! they heard another paddle, and one came after them, and soon arrows
+flew about them, arrows swift and cruel, and one struck his paddle from
+his hand and his canoe was overturned. The pursuer came and placed
+Kitt-a-youx in his canoe, seeking, too, for Zampa, but, alas! Zampa was
+drowned. And when his pursuer dragged his body to the surface, he gave
+a mighty cry, for, lo! it was his brother-in-law whom he had pursued,
+for he was Yakaga. Then fearing the terrible rage of Zampa's father, he
+dared not return with the body, so he left it with the overturned canoe
+in the kelp and weeds. Kitt-a-youx he bore with him to his own island.
+There she was sad as the sea-gull's scream, for the lord she loved was
+dead. And her father gave her to another _toyon_, who was cruel to her,
+and her life was as a slave's, and she loathed her life until Zampa's
+child was born to her, and for it she lived. Alas, it was a girl child
+and her husband hated it, and Kitt-a-youx saw nothing for it but to be
+sold as a slave as was she herself. And she looked by day and by night
+at the sea, and its cold, cold waves seemed warmer to her than the arms
+of men. 'With my girl child I shall go hence,' she whispered to herself,
+'and the Great Unknown Spirit will be kind.'
+
+"So by night she stole away in a canoe and steered to sea, ere she knew
+where she was, reaching the seaweeds where she had journeyed with her
+young husband. The morning broke, and she saw the weeds and the kelp
+where her lover had gone from her sight, and, with a glad sigh, she
+clasped Zampa's child to her breast and sank down among the weeds where
+he had died. So her tired spirit was at rest, for a woman is happier who
+dies with him she loves.
+
+"Now Zampa's father had found his boy's body and mourned over it, and
+buried it in a mighty cave, the which he had once made for his furs and
+stores. With it he placed bows and arrows and many valuables in respect
+for the dead. And Zampa's sister, going to his funeral feast, fell upon
+a stone with her child, so that both were killed. Then broke the old
+chief's heart. Beside her brother he laid her in the cave, and gave
+orders that he himself should be placed there as well, when grief
+should have made way with him. Then he died of sorrow for his children,
+and his people interred him in his burial cave, and with him they put
+much wealth and blankets and weapons.
+
+"When, therefore, the people of his tribe found the bodies of
+Kitt-a-youx and her child among the kelp, having heard of her love for
+Zampa, they bore them to the same cave, and, wrapping them in furs, they
+placed Kitt-a-youx beside her beloved husband, and in her burial she
+found her home and felt the kindness of the Great Spirit. This, then, is
+the story of the burial cave of Kagamil, and since that day no man dwelt
+upon the island, and it is known as the 'island of the dead.'"
+
+"I'd like to see it, I can tell you," said Ted. "Are there any burial
+caves around here?"
+
+"The Thlinkits do not bury in caves," said Tanana. "We used to burn our
+dead, but often we place them in totem-poles."
+
+"I thought those great poles by your doors were totems," said Ted,
+puzzled.
+
+"Yes," said the girl. "They are caste totems, and all who are of any
+rank have them. As we belong to the Raven, or Bear, or Eagle clan, we
+have the carved poles to show our rank, but the totem of the dead is
+quite different. It does not stand beside the door, but far away. It is
+alone, as the soul of the dead in whose honour it is made. It is but
+little carved. A square hole is cut at the back of the pole, and the
+body of the dead, wrapped in a matting of cedar bark, is placed within,
+a board being nailed so that the body will not fall to the ground. A
+potlatch is given, and food from the feast is put in the fire for the
+dead person."
+
+"It seems queer to put weapons and blankets and things to eat on
+people's graves," said Ted. "Why do they do it?"
+
+"Of the dead we know nothing," said Tanana. "Perhaps the warrior spirit
+wishes his arrows in the Land of the Great Unknown."
+
+"Yes, but he can't come back for them," persisted Ted.
+
+"At Wrangel, Boston man put flowers on his girl's grave," said Kalitan,
+drily. "She come back and smell posy?"
+
+Having no answer ready, Ted changed the subject and asked:
+
+"Why do you have the raven at the top of your totem pole?"
+
+"Indian cannot marry same totem," said Kalitan. "My father was eagle
+totem, my mother was raven totem. He carve her totem at the top of the
+pole, then his totem and those of the family are carved below. The
+greater the family the taller the totem."
+
+"How do you get these totems?" demanded Ted.
+
+"Clan totems we take from our parents, but a man may choose his own
+totem. Before he becomes a man he must go alone into the forest to
+fast, and there he chooses his totem, and he is brother to that animal
+all his life, and may not kill it. When he comes forth, he may take part
+in all the ceremonies of his tribe."
+
+"Why, it is something like knighthood and the vigil at arms and
+escutcheons, and all those Round-Table things," exclaimed Ted, in
+delight, for he dearly loved the stirring tales of King Arthur and his
+knights and the doughty deeds of Camelot.
+
+"Tell us about that," said Kalitan, so Ted told them many tales in the
+moonlight, as they sat beneath the shadows of the quaint and curious
+totem-poles of Kalitan's tribe.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[9] Chieftain.
+
+[10] Canoe.
+
+[11] Ducks.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE BERRY DANCE
+
+
+TEDDY'S month upon the island stretched out into two. His father came
+and went, finding the boy so happy and well that he left him with an
+easy mind. Ted's fair skin was tanned to a warm brown, and, clad in
+Indian clothes, save for his aureole of copper-coloured hair, so strong
+a contrast to the straight black locks of his Indian brothers, he could
+hardly be told from one of the island lads who roamed all day by wood
+and shore. They called him "Yakso pil chicamin,"[12] and all the village
+liked him.
+
+Tanana's marriage-feast was held, and she and Tah-ge-ah went to
+housekeeping in a little hut, where the one room was as clean and neat
+as could be, and not a bit like the dirty rooms of some of the natives.
+Tanana spent all her spare time weaving beautiful baskets, for her slim
+fingers were very skilful. Some of the baskets which she made out of the
+inner bark of the willow-tree were woven so closely that they would hold
+water, and Teddy never tired of watching her weave the gay colours in
+and out, nor of seeing the wonderful patterns grow. Tah-ge-ah would take
+them to the mainland when she had enough made, and sell them to the
+travellers from the States. Meantime Tah-ge-ah himself was very, very
+busy carving the totem-pole for his new home, for Tanana was a
+chieftain's daughter, and he, too, was of high caste, and their totem
+must be carved and stand one hundred feet high beside their door, lest
+they be reproached.
+
+Ted also enjoyed seeing old Kala-kash carve, for he was the finest
+carver among the Indians, and it was wonderful to see him cut strange
+figures out of bone, wood, horn, fish-bones, and anything his gnarled
+old fingers could get hold of, and he would carve grasshoppers, bears,
+minnows, whales, sea-gulls, babies, or idols. He made, too, a canoe for
+Ted, a real Alaskan dugout, shaping the shell from a log and making it
+soft by steam, filling the hole with water and throwing in red-hot
+stones. The wood was then left to season, and Ted could hardly wait
+patiently until sun and wind and rain had made his precious craft
+seaworthy. Then it was painted with paint made by rubbing a certain rock
+over the surface of a coarse stone and the powder mixed with oil or
+water.
+
+At last it was done, a shapely thing, more beautiful in Ted's eyes than
+any launch or yacht he had ever seen at home. His canoe had a carved
+stern and a sharp prow which came out of the water, and which had carved
+upon it a fine eagle. Kala-kash had not asked Ted what his totem was,
+but supposing that the American eagle on the buttons of the boy's coat
+was his emblem, had carved the rampant bird upon the canoe as the boy's
+totem. Ted learned to paddle and to fish, never so well as Kalitan, of
+course, for he was born to it, but still he did very well, and enjoyed
+it hugely.
+
+Happily waned the summer days, and then came the time of the berry
+dance, which Kalitan had spoken of so often that Ted was very anxious to
+see it.
+
+The salmon-berry was fully ripe, a large and luscious berry, found in
+two colours, yellow and dark red. Besides these there were other small
+berries, maruskins, like the New England dewberries, huckleberries, and
+whortleberries.
+
+"We have five kinds of berries on our island," said Kalitan. "All good.
+The birds, flying from the mainland, first brought the seeds, and our
+berries grow larger than almost any place in Alaska."
+
+"They're certainly good," said Ted, his mouth full as he spoke. "These
+salmon-berries are a kind of a half-way between our blackberries and
+strawberries. I never saw anything prettier than the way the red and
+yellow berries grow so thick on the same bush--"
+
+"There come the canoes!" interrupted Kalitan, and the two boys ran down
+to the water's edge, eager to be the first to greet the visitors. Tyee
+Klake was giving a feast to the people of the neighbouring islands, and
+a dozen canoes glided over the water from different directions. The
+canoes were all gaily decorated, and they came swiftly onward to the
+weird chant of the paddlers, which the breeze wafted to the listeners'
+ears in a monotonous melody.
+
+Every one in the village had been astir since daybreak, preparing for
+the great event. Parallel lines had been strung from the chief's house
+to the shore, and from these were hung gay blankets, pieces of bright
+calico, and festoons of leaves and flowers. As the canoes landed their
+occupants, the dancers thronged to welcome their guests. The great drum
+sounded its loud note, and the dancers, arrayed in wonderful blankets
+woven in all manner of fanciful designs and trimmed with long woollen
+fringes, swayed back and forth, up and down, to and fro, in a very
+graceful manner, keeping time to the music.
+
+In the centre of the largest canoe stood the Tyee of a neighbouring
+island, a tall Indian, dressed in a superb blanket with fringe a foot
+long, fringed leggins and moccasins of walrus hide, and the chief's hat
+to show his rank. It was a peculiar head-dress half a foot high, trimmed
+in down and feathers.
+
+The Tyee, in perfect time to the music, swayed back and forth, never
+ceasing for a moment, shaking his head so that the down was wafted in a
+snowy cloud all over him.
+
+As the canoes reached the shallows, the shore Indians dashed into the
+water to draw them up to land, and the company was joyously received.
+Teddy was delighted, for in one of the canoes was his father, whom he
+had not seen for several weeks. After the greetings were over, the
+dancers arranged themselves in opposite lines, men on one side, women on
+the other, and swayed their bodies while the drum kept up its unceasing
+tum-tum-tum.
+
+"It's a little bit like square dances at home," said Ted. "It's ever so
+pretty, isn't it? First they sway to the right, then to the left, over
+and over and over; then they bend their bodies forward and backward
+without bending their knees, then sway again, and bend to one side and
+then the other, singing all the time. Isn't it odd, father?"
+
+"It certainly is, but it's very graceful," said Mr. Strong. "Some of the
+girls are quite pretty, gentle-looking creatures, but the older women
+are ugly."
+
+"The very old women look like the mummies in the museum at home," said
+Ted. "There's one old woman, over a hundred years old, whose skin is
+like a piece of parchment, and she wears the hideous lip-button which
+most of the Thlinkits have stopped using. Kalitan says all the women
+used to wear them. The girls used to make a cut in their chins between
+the lip and the chin, and put in a piece of wood, changing it every few
+days for a piece a little larger until the opening was stretched like a
+second mouth. When they grew up, a wooden button like the bowl of a
+spoon was set in the hole and constantly enlarged. The largest I have
+seen was three inches long. Isn't it a curious idea, father?"
+
+"It certainly is, but there is no telling what women will admire. A
+Chinese lady binds her feet, and an American her waist; a Maori woman
+slits her nose, and an English belle pierces her ears. It's on the same
+principle that your Thlinkit friends slit their chins for the
+lip-button."
+
+"I'm mighty glad they don't do it now, for Tanana's as pretty as a pink,
+and it would be a shame to spoil her face that way," said Ted. "The
+dancing has stopped, father; let's see what they'll do next. There comes
+Kalitan."
+
+A feast of berries was to follow the dance, and Kalitan led Mr. Strong
+and Ted to the chief's house, which was gaily decorated with blankets
+and bits of bright cloth. A table covered with a cloth was laid around
+three sides of the room, and on this was spread hardtack and huge bowls
+of berries of different colours. These were beaten up with sugar into a
+foamy mixture, pink, purple, and yellow, according to the colour of the
+berries, which tasted good and looked pretty.
+
+Ted and Kalitan had helped gather the berries, and their appetites were
+quite of the best. Mr. Strong smiled to see how the once fussy little
+gentleman helped himself with a right good-will to the Indian dainties
+of his friends.
+
+Many pieces of goods had been provided for the potlatch, and these were
+given away, given and received with dignified politeness. There was
+laughing and merriment with the feast, and when it was all over, the
+canoes floated away as they had come, into the sunset, which gilded all
+the sea to rosy, golden beauty.
+
+Ted's share of the potlatch was a beautiful blanket of Tanana's weaving,
+and he was delighted beyond measure.
+
+"You're a lucky boy, Ted," said his father. "People pay as high as
+sixty-five dollars for an Alaskan blanket, and not always a perfect one
+at that. Many of the Indians are using dyed yarns to weave them, but
+yours is the genuine article, made from white goat's wool, long and
+soft, and dyed only in the native reds and blacks. We shall have to do
+something nice for Tanana when you leave."
+
+"I'd like to give her something, and Kalitan, too." Ted's face looked
+very grave. "When do I have to go, father?"
+
+"Right away, I'm afraid," was the reply. "I've let you stay as long as
+possible, and now we must start for our northern trip, if you are to see
+anything at all of mines and Esquimos before we start home. The
+mail-steamer passes Nuchek day after to-morrow, and we must go over
+there in time to take it."
+
+"Yes, sir," said Ted, forlornly. He wanted to see the mines and all the
+wonderful things of the far north, but he hated to leave his Indian
+friends.
+
+"What's the trouble, Ted?" His father laid his hand on his shoulder,
+disliking to see the bright face so clouded.
+
+"I was only thinking of Kalitan," said Ted.
+
+"Suppose we take Kalitan with us," said Mr. Strong.
+
+"Oh, daddy, could we really?" Ted jumped in excitement.
+
+"I'll ask the Tyee if he will lend him to us for a month," said Mr.
+Strong, and in a few minutes it was decided, and Ted, with one great
+bear's hug to thank his father, rushed off to find his friend and tell
+him the glorious news.
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[12] Copper hair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+ON THE WAY TO NOME
+
+
+"WELL, boys, we're off for a long sail, and I'm afraid you will be
+rather tired with the steamer before you are done with her," said Mr.
+Strong. They had boarded the mail-steamer late the night before, and,
+going right to bed, had wakened early next day and rushed on deck to
+find the August sun shining in brilliant beauty, the islands quite out
+of sight, and nought but sea and sky around and above them.
+
+"Oh, I don't know; we'll find something to do," said Teddy. "You'll have
+to tell us lots about the places we pass, and, if there aren't any other
+boys on board, Kalitan and I will be together. What's the first place we
+stop?"
+
+"We passed the Kenai Peninsula in the night. I wish you could have
+caught a glimpse of some of the waterfalls, volcanoes, and glaciers.
+They are as fine as any in Alaska," said Mr. Strong. "Our next stop will
+be Kadiak Island."
+
+"Kadiak Island was once near the mainland," said Kalitan. "There was
+only the narrowest passage of water, but a great Kenai otter tried to
+swim the pass, and was caught fast. He struggled so that he made it
+wider and wider, and at last pushed Kadiak way out to sea."
+
+"He must have been a whopper," said Ted, "to push it so far away. Is
+that the island?"
+
+"Yes," said his father. "There are no splendid forests on the island as
+there are on the mainland, but the grasses are superb, for the fog and
+rain here keeps them green as emerald."
+
+"What a queer canoe that Indian has!" exclaimed Ted. "It isn't a bit
+like yours, Kalitan."
+
+"It is _bidarka_," said Kalitan. "Kadiak people make canoe out of walrus
+hide. They stretch it over frames of driftwood. It holds two people.
+They sit in small hatch with apron all around their bodies, and the
+_bidarka_ goes over the roughest sea and floats like a bladder. Big
+_bidarka_ called an _oomiak_, and holds whole family."
+
+"Some one has called the _bidarkas_ the 'Cossacks of the sea,'" said Mr.
+Strong. "They skim along like swallows, and are as perfectly built as
+any vessel I ever saw."
+
+"What are those huge buildings on the small island?" asked Ted, as the
+steamer wound through the shallows.
+
+"Ice-houses," said his father. "Before people learned to manufacture
+ice, immense cargoes were shipped from here to as far south as San
+Francisco."
+
+"It was fun to see them go fishing for ice from the steamer when we came
+up to Skaguay," said Ted. "The sailors went out in a boat, slipped a
+net around a block of ice and towed it to the side of the ship, then it
+was hitched to a derrick and swung on deck."
+
+"Huh!" said Kalitan. "What people want ice for stored up? Think they'd
+store sunshine!"
+
+"If you could invent a way to do that, you could make a fortune, my
+boy," said Mr. Strong, laughing. "The next place of any interest is
+Karluk. It's around on the other side of the island in Shelikoff Strait,
+and is famous for its salmon canneries. Nearly half of the entire salmon
+pack of Alaska comes from Kadiak Island, most of the fish coming from
+the Karluk River."
+
+"Very bad for Indians," said Kalitan. "Used to have plenty fish. Tyee
+Klake said salmon used to come up this river in shoal sixteen miles
+long, and now Boston men take them all."
+
+"It does seem a pity that the Indians don't even have a chance to earn
+their living in the canneries," said Mr. Strong. "The largest cannery in
+the world is at Karluk. There are thousands of men employed, and in one
+year over three million salmon were packed, yet with all this work for
+busy hands to do, the canneries employ Chinese, Greek, Portuguese, and
+American workmen in preference to the Indians, bringing them by the
+shipload from San Francisco."
+
+"What other places do we pass?" asked Ted.
+
+"A lot of very interesting ones, and I wish we could coast along,
+stopping wherever we felt like it," said Mr. Strong. "The Shumagin
+Islands are where Bering, the great discoverer and explorer, landed in
+1741 to bury one of his crew. Codfish were found there, and Captain
+Cook, in his 'Voyages and Discoveries,' speaks of the same fish. There
+is a famous fishery there now called the Davidson Banks, and the
+codfishing fleet has its headquarters on Popoff Island. Millions of
+codfish are caught here every year. These islands are also a favourite
+haunt of the sea otter. Belofsky, at the foot of Mt. Pavloff, is the
+centre of the trade."
+
+[Illustration: MOUNT SHISHALDIN.]
+
+"What kind of fur is otter?" asked Ted, whose mind was so inquiring that
+his father often called him the "living catechism."
+
+"It is the court fur of China and Russia, and at one time the common
+people were forbidden by law to wear it," said Mr. Strong. "It is a
+rich, purplish brown sprinkled with silver-tipped hairs, and the skins
+are very costly."
+
+"At one time any one could have otter," said Kalitan. "We hunted them
+with spears and bows and arrows. Now they are very few, and we find them
+only in dangerous spots, hiding on rocks or floating kelp. Sometimes the
+hunters have to lie in hiding for days watching them. Only Indians can
+kill the otter. Boston men can if they marry Indian women. That makes
+them Indian."
+
+"Rather puts otter at a discount and women at a premium," laughed Mr.
+Strong. "Now we pass along near the Alaska peninsula, past countless
+isles and islets, through the Fox Islands to Unalaska, and then into the
+Bering Sea. One of the most interesting things in this region is called
+the 'Pacific Ring of Fire,' a chain of volcanoes which stretches along
+the coast. Often the passengers can see from the ships at night a
+strange red glow over the sky, and know that the fire mountains are
+burning. The most beautiful of these volcanoes is Mt. Shishaldin, nearly
+nine thousand feet high, and almost as perfect a cone in shape as Fuji
+Yama, which the Japanese love so much and call 'the Honourable
+Mountain.' At Unalaska or Ilinlink, the 'curving beach,' we stop. If we
+could stay over for awhile, there are a great many interesting things we
+could see; an old Greek church and the government school are in the
+town, and Bogoslov's volcano and the sea-lion rookeries are on the
+island of St. John, which rose right up out of the sea in 1796 after a
+day's roaring and rumbling and thundering. In 1815 there was a similar
+performance, and from time to time the island has grown larger ever
+since. One fine day in 1883 there was a great shower of ashes, and, when
+the clouds had rolled away, two peaks were seen where only one had been,
+separated by a sandy isthmus. This last was reduced to a fine thread by
+the earthquake of 1891, and I don't know what new freaks it may have
+developed by now. I know some friends of mine landed there not long ago
+and cooked eggs over the jets of steam which gush out of the
+mountainside. Did you ever hear of using a volcano for a cook-stove?"
+
+"Well, I should say not," said Ted, amused. "These Alaskan volcanoes are
+great things."
+
+"The one called Makushin has a crater filled with snow in a part of
+which there is always a cloud of sulphurous smoke. That's making
+extremes meet, isn't it?"
+
+"Yehl[13] made many strange things," said Kalitan, who had been taking
+in all this information even more eagerly than Teddy. "He first dwelt on
+Nass River, and turned two blades of grass into the first man and woman.
+Then the Thlinkits grew and prospered, till darkness fell upon the
+earth. A Thlinkit stole the sun and hid it in a box, but Yehl found it
+and set it so high in the heavens that none could touch it. Then the
+Thlinkits grew and spread abroad. But a great flood came, and all were
+swept away save two, who tossed long upon the flood on a raft of logs
+until Yehl pitied, and carried them to Mt. Edgecomb, where they dwelt
+until the waters fell."
+
+"Old Kala-kash tells this story, and he says that one of these people,
+when very old, went down through the crater of the mountain, and, given
+long life by Yehl, stays there always to hold up the earth out of the
+water. But the other lives in the crater as the Thunder Bird, Hahtla,
+whose wing-flap is the thunder and whose glance is the lightning. The
+osprey is his totem, and his face glares in our blankets and totems."
+
+"I've wondered what that fierce bird was," said Teddy, who was always
+quite carried away with Kalitan's strange legends.
+
+"Well, what else do we see on the way to Nome, father?"
+
+"The most remarkable thing happening in the Bering Sea is the seal
+industry, but I do not think we pass near enough to the islands to see
+any of that. You'd better run about and see the ship now," and the boys
+needed no second permission.
+
+It was not many days before they knew everybody on board, from captain
+to deck hands, and were prime favourites with them all. Ted and Kalitan
+enjoyed every moment. There was always something new to see or hear, and
+ere they reached their journey's end, they had heard all about seals and
+sealing, although the famous Pribylov Islands were too far to the west
+of the vessel's route for them to see them. They sighted the United
+States revenue cutter which plies about the seal islands to keep off
+poachers, for no one is allowed to kill seals or to land on this
+government reservation except from government vessels. The scent of the
+rookeries, where millions of seals have been killed in the last hundred
+years, is noticed far out at sea, and often the barking of the animals
+can be heard by passing vessels.
+
+"Why is sealskin so valuable, father?" asked Ted.
+
+"It has always been admired because it is so warm and soft," replied Mr.
+Strong. "All the ladies fancy it, and it never seems to go out of
+fashion. There was a time, when the Pribylov Islands were first
+discovered, that sealskins were so plentiful that they sold in Alaska
+for a dollar apiece. Hunters killed so many, killing old and young, that
+soon there were scarcely any left, so a law was passed by the Russian
+government forbidding any killing for five years. Since the Americans
+have owned Alaska they have protected the seals, allowing them to be
+killed only at certain times, and only male seals from two to four years
+old are killed. The Indians are always the killers, and are wonderfully
+swift and clever, never missing a blow and always killing instantly, so
+that there is almost no suffering."
+
+"How do they know where to find the seals?" asked Ted.
+
+"For half the year the seals swim about the sea, but in May they return
+to their favourite haunts. In these rookeries families of them herd on
+the rocks, the male staying at home with his funny little black
+puppies, while the mother swims about seeking food. The seals are very
+timid, and will rush into the water at the least strange noise. A story
+is told that the barking of a little pet dog belonging to a Russian at
+one of the rookeries lost him a hundred thousand dollars, for the seals
+took fright and scurried away before any one could say 'Jack Robinson!'"
+
+"Rather an expensive pup!" commented Ted. "But what about the seals,
+daddy?"
+
+"You seem to think I am an encyclopaedia on the seal question," said his
+father. "There is not much else to tell you."
+
+"How can they manage always to kill the right ones?" demanded Ted.
+
+"The gay bachelor seals herd together away from the rest and sleep at
+night on the rocks. Early in the morning the Aleuts slip in between them
+and the herd and drive them slowly to the killing-ground, where they are
+quickly killed and skinned and the skins taken to the salting-house.
+The Indians use the flesh and blubber, and the climate is such that
+before another year the hollow bones are lost in the grass and earth."
+
+"What becomes of the skins after they are salted?"
+
+"They are usually sent to London, where they are prepared for market.
+The work is all done by hand, which is one reason that they are so
+expensive. They are first worked in sawdust, cleaned, scraped, washed,
+shaved, plucked, dyed with a hand-brush from eight to twelve times,
+washed again and freed from the least speck of grease by a last bath in
+hot sawdust or sand."
+
+"I don't wonder a sealskin coat costs so much," said Ted, "if they have
+got to go through all that performance. I wish we could have seen the
+islands, but I'd hate to see the seals killed. It doesn't seem like
+hunting just to knock them on the head. It's too much like the
+stock-yards at home."
+
+"Yes, but it's a satisfaction to know that it's done in the easiest
+possible way for the animals.
+
+"What a lot you are learning way up here in Alaska, aren't you, son?
+To-morrow we'll be at Nome, and then your head will be so stuffed with
+mines and mining that you will forget all about everything else."
+
+"I don't want to forget any of it," said Ted. "It's all bully."
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[13] Yehl, embodied in the raven, is the Thlinkit Great Spirit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+IN THE GOLD COUNTRY
+
+
+A LOW, sandy beach, without a tree to break its level, rows of plain
+frame-houses, some tents and wooden shanties scattered about, the surf
+breaking over the shore in splendid foam,--this was Teddy's first
+impression of Nome. They had sailed over from St. Michael's to see the
+great gold-fields, and both the boys were full of eagerness to be on
+land. It seemed, however, as if their desires were not to be realized,
+for landing at Nome is a difficult matter.
+
+Nome is on the south shore of that part of Alaska known as Seward
+Peninsula, and it has no harbour. It is on the open seacoast and catches
+all the fierce storms that sweep northward over Bering Sea. Generally
+seacoast towns are built in certain spots because there is a harbour,
+but Nome was not really built, it "jes' growed," for, when gold was
+found there, the miners sat down to gather the harvest, caring nothing
+about a harbour.
+
+Ships cannot go within a mile of land, and passengers have to go ashore
+in small lighters. Sometimes when they arrive, they cannot go ashore at
+all, but have to wait several days, taking refuge behind a small island
+ten miles away, lest they drag their anchors and be dashed to pieces on
+the shore.
+
+There had been a tremendous storm at Nome the day before Ted arrived,
+and landing was more difficult than usual, but, impatient as the boys
+were, at last it seemed safe to venture, and the party left the steamer
+to be put on a rough barge, flat-bottomed and stout, which was hauled by
+cable to shore until it grounded on the sands. They were then put in a
+sort of wooden cage, let down by chains from a huge wooden beam, and
+swung round in the air like the unloading cranes of a great city, over
+the surf to a high platform on the land.
+
+"Well, this is a new way to land," cried Ted, who had been rather quiet
+during the performance, and his father thought a trifle frightened.
+"It's a sort of a balloon ascension, isn't it?"
+
+"It must be rather hard for the miners, who have been waiting weeks for
+their mail, when the boat can't land her bags at all," said Mr. Strong.
+"That sometimes happens. From November to May, Nome is cut off from the
+world by snow and ice. The only news they receive is by the monthly mail
+when it comes.
+
+"Over at Kronstadt the Russians have ice-breaking boats which keep the
+Baltic clear enough of ice for navigation, and plow their way through
+ice fourteen feet thick for two hundred miles. The Nome miners are very
+anxious for the government to try this ice-boat service at Nome."
+
+"Why did people settle here in such a forlorn place?" asked Ted, as they
+made their way to the town, which they found anything but civilized. "I
+like the Indian houses on the island better than this."
+
+"Your island is more picturesque," said Mr. Strong, "but people came
+here for what they could get.
+
+"In 1898 gold was discovered on Anvil Creek, which runs into Snake
+River, and this turned people's eyes in the direction of Nome. Miners
+rushed here and set to work in the gulches inland, but it was not till
+the summer of 1899 that gold was found on the beach. A soldier from the
+barracks--you know this is part of a United States Military
+Reservation--found gold while digging a well near the beach, and an old
+miner took out $1,200 worth in twenty days. Then a perfect frenzy seized
+the people. They flocked to Nome from far and near; they camped on the
+beach in hundreds and staked their claims. Between one and two thousand
+men were at work on the beach at one time, yet so good-natured were they
+that no quarrels seem to have occurred. Doctors, lawyers, barkeepers,
+and all dropped their business and went to rocking, as they call
+beach-mining."
+
+[Illustration: "'LET'S WATCH THOSE TWO MEN. THEY HAVE EVIDENTLY STAKED A
+CLAIM TOGETHER.'"]
+
+"Oh, dad, let's hurry and go and see it," cried Ted, as they hurried
+through their dinner at the hotel. "I thought gold came out of deep
+mines like copper, and had to be melted out or something, but this seems
+to be different. Do they just walk along the beach and pick it up? I
+wish I could."
+
+"Well, it's not quite so simple as that," said Mr. Strong, laughing.
+"We'll go and see, and then you'll understand," and they went down the
+crooked streets to the sandy beach.
+
+Men were standing about talking and laughing, others working hard. All
+manner of men were there scattered over the _tundra_,[14] and Ted
+became interested in two who were working together in silence.
+
+"What are they doing?" he asked his father. "I can't see how they expect
+to get anything worth having out of this mess."
+
+"Beach-mining is quite different from any other," said his father.
+"Let's watch those two men. They have evidently staked a claim together,
+which means that nobody but these two can work on the ground they have
+staked out, and that they must share all the gold they find. They came
+here to prospect, and evidently found a block of ground which suited
+them. They then dug a prospect hole down two to five feet until they
+struck 'bedrock,' which happens to be clay around here. They passed
+through several layers of sand and gravel before reaching this, and
+these were carefully examined to see how much gold they contained. Upon
+reaching a layer which seemed to be a good one, the gravel on top was
+stripped off and thrown aside and the 'pay streak' worked with the
+rocker."
+
+"What is that?" asked Ted, who was all ears, while Kalitan was taking in
+everything with his sharp black eyes.
+
+"That arrangement that looks like a square pan on a saw-buck is the
+rocker. The rockers usually have copper bottoms, and there is a great
+demand for sheet copper at Nome, but often there is not enough of it,
+and the miners have been known to cover them with silver coins. That man
+you are watching has silver dollars in his, about fifty, I should say.
+It seems extravagant, doesn't it, but he'll take out many times that
+amount if he has good luck."
+
+The man, who had glanced up at them, smiled at that and said:
+
+"And, if I don't have luck, I'm broke, anyhow, so fifty or sixty plunks
+won't make much difference. You going to be a miner, youngster?"
+
+"Not this trip," said Ted, with a smile. "Say, I'd like to know how you
+get the gold out with that."
+
+"At first we used to put a blanket in the rocker, and wash the pay dirt
+on that. Our prospect hole has water in it, and we can use it over and
+over. Some of the holes are dry, and there the men have to pack their
+pay dirt down to the shore and use surf water for washing. Most of our
+gold is so fine that the blanket didn't stop it, so now we use 'quick.'
+I reckon you'd call it mercury, but we call it quick. You see, it saves
+time, and work-time up here is so short, on account of winter setting in
+so early, that we have to save up our spare minutes and not waste 'em on
+long words."
+
+Ted grinned cheerfully and asked: "What do you do with the quick?"
+
+"We paint it over the bottom of the rocker, and it acts like a charm
+and catches every speck of gold that comes its way as the dirt is washed
+over it. The quick and the gold make a sort of amalgam."
+
+"But how do you get at the gold after it amalgams, or whatever you call
+it?" asked Ted.
+
+"Sure we fry it in the frying-pan, and it's elegant pancakes it makes,"
+said the man. "See here," and he pulled from his pocket several flat
+masses that looked like pieces of yellow sponge. "This is pure gold. All
+the quick has gone off, and this is the real stuff, just as good as
+money. An ounce will buy sixteen dollars' worth of anything in Nome."
+
+"It looks mighty pretty," said Ted. "Seems to me it's redder than any
+gold I ever saw."
+
+"It is," said his father. "Nome beach gold is redder and brighter than
+any other Alaskan gold. I guess I'll have to get you each a piece for a
+souvenir," and both boys were made happy by the present of a quaintly
+shaped nugget, bought by Mr. Strong from the very miner who had mined
+it, which of course added to its value.
+
+"You're gathering quite a lot of souvenirs, Ted," said his father. "It's
+a great relief that you have not asked me for anything alive yet. I have
+been expecting a modest request for a Malamute or a Husky pup, or
+perhaps a pet reindeer to take home, but so far you have been quite
+moderate in your demands."
+
+"Kalitan never asks for anything," said Ted. "I asked him once why it
+was, and he said Indian boys never got what they asked for; that
+sometimes they had things given to them that they hadn't asked for, but,
+if he asked the Tyee for anything, all he got was 'Good Indian get
+things for himself,' and he had to go to work to get the thing he
+wanted. I guess it's a pretty good plan, too, for I notice that I get
+just as much as I did when I used to tease you for things," Teddy added,
+sagely.
+
+"Wise boy," said his father. "You're certainly more agreeable to live
+with. The next thing you are to have is a visit to an Esquimo village,
+and, if I can find some of the Esquimo carvings, you shall have
+something to take home to mother. Kalitan, what would you like to
+remember the Esquimos by?"
+
+Kalitan smiled and replied, simply, "_Mukluks_."
+
+"What are _mukluks_?" demanded Ted.
+
+"Esquimo moccasins," said Mr. Strong. "Well, you shall both have a pair,
+and they are rather pretty things, too, as the Esquimos make them."
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[14] The name given to the boggy soil of the beach.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+AFTERNOON TEA IN AN EGLU
+
+
+THE Esquimo village was reached across the _tundra_, and Teddy and
+Kalitan were much interested in the queer houses. Built for the long
+winter of six or eight months, when it is impossible to do anything
+out-of-doors, the _eglu_[15] seems quite comfortable from the Esquimo
+point of view, but very strange to their American cousins.
+
+"I thought the Esquimos lived in snow houses," said Ted, as they looked
+at the queer little huts, and Kalitan exclaimed:
+
+"Huh! Innuit queer Indian!"
+
+"No," said Mr. Strong; "his hut is built by digging a hole about six
+feet deep and standing logs up side by side around the hole. On the top
+of these are placed logs which rest even with the ground. Stringers are
+put across these, and other logs and moss and mud roofed over it,
+leaving an opening in the middle about two feet square. This is covered
+with a piece of walrus entrail so thin and transparent that light easily
+passes through it, and it serves as a window, the only one they have. A
+smoke-hole is cut through the roof, but there is no door, for the hut is
+entered through another room built in the same way, fifteen or twenty
+feet distant, and connected by an underground passage about two feet
+square with the main room. The entrance-room is entered through a hole
+in the roof, from which a ladder reaches the bottom of the passage."
+
+"Can we go into a hut?" asked Ted.
+
+"I'll ask that woman cooking over there," said Mr. Strong, as they went
+up to a woman who was cooking over a peat fire, holding over the coals
+an old battered skillet in which she was frying fish. She nodded and
+smiled at the boys, and, as Esquimos are always friendly and hospitable
+souls, told them to go right into her _eglu_, which was close by.
+
+They climbed down the ladder, crawled along the narrow passage to where
+a skin hung before an opening, and, pushing it aside, entered the
+living-room. Here they found an old man busily engaged in carving a
+walrus tooth, another sewing _mukluks_, while a girl was singing a
+quaint lullaby to a child of two in the corner.
+
+The young girl rose, and, putting the baby down on a pile of skins,
+spoke to them in good English, saying quietly:
+
+"You are welcome. I am Alalik."
+
+"May we see your wares? We wish to buy," said Mr. Strong, courteously.
+
+"You may see, whether you buy or not," she said, with a smile, which
+showed a mouth full of even white teeth, and she spread out before them
+a collection of Esquimo goods. There were all kinds of carvings from
+walrus tusks, grass baskets, moccasins of walrus hide, stone bowls and
+cups, _parkas_ made of reindeer skin, and one superb one of bird
+feathers, _ramleikas_, and all manner of carved trinkets, the most
+charming of which, to Ted's eyes, being a tiny _oomiak_ with an Esquimo
+in it, made to be used as a breast-pin. This he bought for his mother,
+and a carving of a baby for Judith; while his father made him and
+Kalitan happy with presents.
+
+"Where did you learn such English?" asked Mr. Strong of Alalik,
+wondering, too, where she learned her pretty, modest ways, for Esquimo
+women are commonly free and easy.
+
+"I was for two years at the Mission at Holy Cross," she said. "There I
+learned much that was good. Then my mother died, and I came home."
+
+She spoke simply, and Mr. Strong wondered what would be the fate of this
+sweet-faced girl.
+
+"Did you learn to sew from the sisters?" asked Ted, who had been looking
+at the garments she had made, in which the stitches, though made in
+skins and sewn with deer sinew, were as even as though done with a
+machine.
+
+"Oh, no," she said. "We learn that at home. When I was no larger than
+Zaksriner there, my mother taught me to braid thread from deer and whale
+sinew, and we must sew very much in winter if we have anything to sell
+when summer comes. It is very hard to get enough to live. Since the
+Boston men come, our people waste the summer in idleness, so we have
+nothing stored for the winter's food. Hundreds die and many sicknesses
+come upon us. In the village where my people lived, in each house lay
+the dead of what the Boston men called measles, and there were not left
+enough living to bury the dead. Only we escaped, and a Black Gown came
+from the Mission to help, and he took me and Antisarlook, my brother, to
+the school. The rest came here, where we live very well because there
+are in the summer, people who buy what we make in the winter."
+
+"How do you get your skins so soft?" asked Ted, feeling the exquisite
+texture of a bag she had just finished. It was a beautiful bit of work,
+a tobacco-pouch or "Tee-rum-i-ute," made of reindeer skin, decorated
+with beads and the soft creamy fur of the ermine in its summer hue.
+
+"We scrape it a very long time and pull and rub," she said. "Plenty of
+time for patience in winter."
+
+"Your hands are too small and slim. I shouldn't think you could do much
+with those stiff skins," said Teddy.
+
+Alalik smiled at the compliment, and a little flush crept into the clear
+olive of her skin. She was clean and neat, and the _eglu_, though close
+from being shut up, was neater than most of the Esquimo houses. The bowl
+filled with seal oil, which served as fire and light, was unlighted, and
+Alalik's father motioned to her and said something in Innuit, to which
+she smilingly replied:
+
+"My father wishes you to eat with us," she said, and produced her flint
+bag. In this were some wads of fibrous material used for wicks. Rolling
+a piece of this in wood ashes, she held it between her thumb and a
+flint, struck her steel against the stone, and sparks flew out which
+lighted the fibre so that it burst into flame. This was thrown into the
+bowl of oil, and she deftly began preparing tea. She served it in cups
+of grass, and Ted thought he had never tasted anything nicer than the
+cup of afternoon tea served in an _eglu_.
+
+"Alalik, what were you singing as we came in?" asked Ted.
+
+"A song my mother always sang to us," she replied. "It is called 'Ahmi,'
+and is an Esquimo slumber song."
+
+"Will you sing it now?" asked Mr. Strong, and she smiled in assent and
+sang the quaint, crooning lullaby of her Esquimo mother--
+
+ "The wind blows over the Yukon.
+ My husband hunts the deer on the Koyukun Mountains,
+ Ahmi, Ahmi, sleep, little one, wake not.
+ Long since my husband departed. Why does he wait in the mountains?
+ Ahmi, Ahmi, sleep, little one, softly.
+ Where is my own?
+ Does he lie starving on the hillside? Why does he linger?
+ Comes he not soon, I will seek him among the mountains.
+ Ahmi, Ahmi, sleep, little one, sleep.
+ The crow has come laughing.
+ His beak is red, his eyes glisten, the false one.
+ 'Thanks for a good meal to Kuskokala the Shaman.
+ On the sharp mountain quietly lies your husband.'
+ Ahmi, Ahmi, sleep, little one, wake not.
+ 'Twenty deers' tongues tied to the pack on his shoulders;
+ Not a tongue in his mouth to call to his wife with,
+ Wolves, foxes, and ravens are fighting for morsels.
+ Tough and hard are the sinews, not so the child in your bosom.'
+ Ahmi, Ahmi, sleep, little one, wake not.
+ Over the mountains slowly staggers the hunter.
+ Two bucks' thighs on his shoulders with bladders of fat between them.
+ Twenty deers' tongues in his belt. Go, gather wood, old woman!
+ Off flew the crow, liar, cheat, and deceiver!
+ Wake, little sleeper, and call to your father.
+ He brings you back fat, marrow and venison fresh from the mountain.
+ Tired and worn, he has carved a toy of the deer's horn,
+ While he was sitting and waiting long for the deer on the hillside.
+ Wake, and see the crow hiding himself from the arrow,
+ Wake, little one, wake, for here is your father."
+
+Thanking Alalik for the quaint song, sung in a sweet, touching voice,
+they all took their departure, laden with purchases and delighted with
+their visit.
+
+"But you must not think this is a fair sample of Esquimo hut or Esquimo
+life," said Mr. Strong to the boys. "These are near enough civilized to
+show the best side of their race, but theirs must be a terrible
+existence who are inland or on islands where no one ever comes, and
+whose only idea of life is a constant struggle for food."
+
+"I think I would rather be an American," remarked Ted, while Kalitan
+said, briefly:
+
+"I like Thlinkit."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[15] The _eglu_ is the Esquimo house. Often they occupy tents during the
+summer, but return to the huts the first cool nights.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE SPLENDOUR OF SAGHALIE TYEE
+
+
+THE _tundra_ was greenish-brown in colour, and looked like a great
+meadow stretching from the beach, like a new moon, gently upward to the
+cones of volcanic mountains far away.
+
+The ground, frozen solid all the year, thaws out for a foot or two on
+the surface during the warm months, and here and there were scattered
+wild flowers; spring beauties, purple primroses, yellow anemone, and
+saxifrages bloomed in beauty, and wild honey-bees, gay bumblebees, and
+fat mosquitoes buzzed and hummed everywhere.
+
+Ted and Kalitan were going to see the reindeer farm at Port Clarence,
+and, as this was to be their last jaunt in Alaska, they were determined
+to make the best of it. Next day they were to take ship from Cape Prince
+of Wales and go straight to Sitka. Here Ted was to start for home, and
+Mr. Strong was to leave Kalitan at the Mission School for a year's
+schooling, which, to Kalitan's great delight, was to be a present to him
+from his American friends.
+
+"Tell us about the reindeer farms, daddy. Have they always been here?"
+demanded Ted, as they tramped over the _tundra_, covered with moss,
+grass, and flowers.
+
+"No," said his father. "They are quite recent arrivals in Alaska. The
+Esquimos used to live entirely upon the game they killed before the
+whites came. There were many walruses, which they used for many things;
+whales, too, they could easily capture before the whalers drove them
+north, and then they hunted the wild reindeer, until now there are
+scarcely any left. There was little left for them to eat but small
+fish, for you see the whites had taken away or destroyed their food
+supplies.
+
+"One day, in 1891, an American vessel discovered an entire village of
+Esquimos starving, being reduced to eating their dogs, and it was
+thought quite time that the government did something for these people
+whose land they had bought. Finding that people of the same race in
+Siberia were prosperous and healthy, they sent to investigate
+conditions, and found that the Siberian Esquimos lived entirely by means
+of the reindeer. The government decided to start a reindeer farm and see
+if it would not benefit the natives."
+
+"How does it work?" asked Ted.
+
+"Very well, indeed," said his father. "At first about two hundred
+animals were brought over, and they increased about fifty per cent. the
+first year. Everywhere in the arctic region the _tundra_ gives the
+reindeer the moss he lives on. It is never dry in summer because the
+frost prevents any underground drainage, and even in winter the animals
+feed upon it and thrive. There are, it is said, hundreds of thousands of
+square miles of reindeer moss in Alaska, and reindeer stations have been
+established in many places, and, as the natives are the only ones
+allowed to raise them, it seems as if this might be the way found to
+help the industrious Esquimos to help themselves."
+
+"But if it all belongs to the government, how can it help the natives?"
+asked Ted.
+
+"Of course they have to be taught the business," said Mr. Strong. "The
+government brought over some Lapps and Finlanders to care for the deer
+at first, and these took young Esquimos to train. Each one serves five
+years as herder, having a certain number of deer set apart for him each
+year, and at the end of his service goes into business for himself."
+
+"Why, I think that's fine," cried Ted. "Oh, Daddy, what is that? It
+looks like a queer, tangled up forest, all bare branches in the
+summer."
+
+"That's a reindeer herd lying down for their noonday rest. What you see
+are their antlers. How would you like to be in the midst of that forest
+of branches?" asked Mr. Strong.
+
+"No, thank you," said Teddy, but Kalitan said:
+
+"Reindeer very gentle; they will not hurt unless very much frightened."
+
+"What queer-looking animals they are," said Ted, as they approached
+nearer. "A sort of a cross between a deer and a cow."
+
+"Perhaps they are more useful than handsome, but I think there is
+something picturesque about them, especially when hitched to sleds and
+skimming over the frozen ground."
+
+The farm at Teller was certainly an interesting spot. Teddy saw the deer
+fed and milked, the Lapland women being experts in that line, and found
+the herders, in their quaint _parkas_ tied around the waist, and
+conical caps, scarcely less interesting than the deer. Two funny little
+Lapp babies he took to ride on a large reindeer, which proceeding did
+not frighten the babies half so much as did the white boy who put them
+on the deer. A reindeer was to them an every-day occurrence, but a
+Boston boy was quite another matter.
+
+[Illustration: "TWO FUNNY LITTLE LAPP BABIES HE TOOK TO RIDE ON A LARGE
+REINDEER."]
+
+Better than the reindeer, however, Teddy and Kalitan liked the draught
+dogs who hauled the water at the station. A great cask on wheels was
+pulled by five magnificent dogs, beautiful fellows with bright alert
+faces.
+
+"They are the most faithful creatures in the world," said Mr. Strong,
+"devoted to their masters, even though the masters are cruel to them.
+Reindeer can work all day without a mouthful to eat, living on one meal
+at night of seven pounds of corn-meal mush, with a pound or so of dried
+fish cooked into it. On long journeys they can live on dried fish and
+snow, and five dogs will haul four hundred pounds thirty-five miles a
+day. They carry the United States mails all over Alaska."
+
+"I should think the dog would be worth more than the reindeer," said
+Ted.
+
+"Many Alaskan travellers say he is by far the best for travelling, but
+he cannot feed himself on the _tundra_, nor can he be eaten himself if
+necessary. The Jarvis expedition proved the value of the reindeer," said
+Mr. Strong.
+
+"What was that?" asked Ted.
+
+"Some years ago a whale fleet was caught in the ice near Point Barrow,
+and in danger of starving to death, and word of this was sent to the
+government. The President ordered the revenue cutter _Bear_ to go as far
+north as possible and send a relief party over the ice by sledge with
+provisions.
+
+"When the _Bear_ could go no farther, her commander landed Lieutenant
+Jarvis, who was familiar with the region, and a relief party. They were
+to seek the nearest reindeer station and drive a reindeer herd to the
+relief of the starving people. The party reached Cape Nome and secured
+some deer, and the rescue was made, but under such difficulties that it
+is one of the most heroic stories of the age. These men drove four
+hundred reindeer over two thousand miles north of the Arctic Circle,
+over frozen seas and snow-covered mountains, and found the starving
+sailors, who ate the fresh reindeer meat, which lasted until the ice
+melted in the spring and set them free."
+
+"I think that was fine," said Ted. "But it seems a little hard on the
+reindeer, doesn't it, to tramp all that distance just to be eaten?"
+
+"Animals made for man," said Kalitan, briefly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A golden glory filled the sky, running upwards toward the zenith,
+spreading there in varying colours from palest yellow to orange and
+deepest, richest red. Glowing streams of light streamed heavenward like
+feathery wings, as Ted and Kalitan sailed southward, and Ted exclaimed
+in wonder: "What is it?"
+
+"The splendour of _Saghalie Tyee_,"[16] said Kalitan, solemnly.
+
+"The Aurora Borealis," said Mr. Strong, "and very fortunate you are to
+see it. Indeed, Teddy, you seem to have brought good luck, for
+everything has gone well this trip. Our faces are turned homeward now,
+but we will have to come again next summer and bring mother and Judith."
+
+"I'll be glad to get home to mother again," said Ted, then noting
+Kalitan's wistful face, "We'll find you at Sitka and go home with you to
+the island," and he put his arm affectionately over the Indian boy's
+shoulder. Kalitan pointed to the sky, whence the splendour was fading,
+and a flock of birds was skimming southwards.
+
+"From the sky fades the splendour of _Saghalie Tyee_," he said. "The
+summer is gone, the birds fly southward. The light goes from me when my
+White Brother goes with the birds. Unless he return with them, all is
+dark for Kalitan!"
+
+
+THE END.
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[16] Way-up High Chief, i.e., God.
+
+
+
+
+THE LITTLE COUSIN SERIES
+
+
+The most delightful and interesting accounts possible of child life in
+other lands, filled with quaint sayings, doings, and adventures.
+
+Each one vol., 12mo, decorative cover, cloth, with six or more full-page
+illustrations in color.
+
+ Price per volume $0.60
+
+
+_By MARY HAZELTON WADE_ (_unless otherwise indicated_)
+
+ =Our Little African Cousin=
+ =Our Little Alaskan Cousin=
+ By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
+ =Our Little Arabian Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little Armenian Cousin=
+ =Our Little Brown Cousin=
+ =Our Little Canadian Cousin=
+ By Elizabeth R. Macdonald
+ =Our Little Chinese Cousin=
+ By Isaac Taylor Headland
+ =Our Little Cuban Cousin=
+ =Our Little Dutch Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little English Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little Eskimo Cousin=
+ =Our Little French Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little German Cousin=
+ =Our Little Hawaiian Cousin=
+ =Our Little Hindu Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little Indian Cousin=
+ =Our Little Irish Cousin=
+ =Our Little Italian Cousin=
+ =Our Little Japanese Cousin=
+ =Our Little Jewish Cousin=
+ =Our Little Korean Cousin=
+ By H. Lee M. Pike
+ =Our Little Mexican Cousin=
+ By Edward C. Butler
+ =Our Little Norwegian Cousin=
+ =Our Little Panama Cousin=
+ By H. Lee M. Pike
+ =Our Little Philippine Cousin=
+ =Our Little Porto Rican Cousin=
+ =Our Little Russian Cousin=
+ =Our Little Scotch Cousin=
+ By Blanche McManus
+ =Our Little Siamese Cousin=
+ =Our Little Spanish Cousin=
+ By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
+ =Our Little Swedish Cousin=
+ By Claire M. Coburn
+ =Our Little Swiss Cousin=
+ =Our Little Turkish Cousin=
+
+
+
+
+THE GOLDENROD LIBRARY
+
+
+The Goldenrod Library contains stories which appeal alike both to
+children and to their parents and guardians.
+
+Each volume is well illustrated from drawings by competent artists,
+which, together with their handsomely decorated uniform binding, showing
+the goldenrod, usually considered the emblem of America, is a feature of
+their manufacture.
+
+ Each one volume, small 12mo, illustrated $0.35
+
+
+LIST OF TITLES
+
+ =Aunt Nabby's Children.= By Frances Hodges White.
+ =Child's Dream of a Star, The.= By Charles Dickens.
+ =Flight of Rosy Dawn, The.= By Pauline Bradford Mackie.
+ =Findelkind.= By Ouida.
+ =Fairy of the Rhone, The.= By A. Comyns Carr.
+ =Gatty and I.= By Frances E. Crompton.
+ =Helena's Wonderworld.= By Frances Hodges White.
+ =Jerry's Reward.= By Evelyn Snead Barnett.
+ =La Belle Nivernaise.= By Alphonse Daudet.
+ =Little King Davie.= By Nellie Hellis.
+ =Little Peterkin Vandike.= By Charles Stuart Pratt.
+ =Little Professor, The.= By Ida Horton Cash.
+ =Peggy's Trial.= By Mary Knight Potter.
+ =Prince Yellowtop.= By Kate Whiting Patch.
+ =Provence Rose, A.= By Ouida.
+ =Seventh Daughter, A.= By Grace Wickham Curran.
+ =Sleeping Beauty, The.= By Martha Baker Dunn.
+ =Small, Small Child, A.= By E. Livingston Prescott.
+ =Susanne.= By Frances J. Delano.
+ =Water People, The.= By Charles Lee Sleight.
+ =Young Archer, The.= By Charles E. Brimblecom.
+
+
+
+
+COSY CORNER SERIES
+
+ It is the intention of the publishers that this series
+ shall contain only the very highest and purest
+ literature,--stories that shall not only appeal to the
+ children themselves, but be appreciated by all those
+ who feel with them in their joys and sorrows.
+
+ The numerous illustrations in each book are by
+ well-known artists, and each volume has a separate
+ attractive cover design.
+
+ Each 1 vol., 16mo, cloth $0.50
+
+
+_By ANNIE FELLOWS JOHNSTON_
+
+
+=The Little Colonel.= (Trade Mark.)
+
+The scene of this story is laid in Kentucky. Its heroine is a small
+girl, who is known as the Little Colonel, on account of her fancied
+resemblance to an old-school Southern gentleman, whose fine estate and
+old family are famous in the region.
+
+
+=The Giant Scissors.=
+
+This is the story of Joyce and of her adventures in France. Joyce is a
+great friend of the Little Colonel, and in later volumes shares with her
+the delightful experiences of the "House Party" and the "Holidays."
+
+
+=Two Little Knights of Kentucky.=
+
+WHO WERE THE LITTLE COLONEL'S NEIGHBORS.
+
+In this volume the Little Colonel returns to us like an old friend, but
+with added grace and charm. She is not, however, the central figure of
+the story, that place being taken by the "two little knights."
+
+
+=Mildred's Inheritance.=
+
+A delightful little story of a lonely English girl who comes to America
+and is befriended by a sympathetic American family who are attracted by
+her beautiful speaking voice. By means of this one gift she is enabled
+to help a school-girl who has temporarily lost the use of her eyes, and
+thus finally her life becomes a busy, happy one.
+
+
+=Cicely and Other Stories for Girls.=
+
+The readers of Mrs. Johnston's charming juveniles will be glad to learn
+of the issue of this volume for young people.
+
+
+=Aunt 'Liza's Hero and Other Stories.=
+
+A collection of six bright little stories, which will appeal to all boys
+and most girls.
+
+=Big Brother.=
+
+A story of two boys. The devotion and care of Steven, himself a small
+boy, for his baby brother, is the theme of the simple tale.
+
+
+=Ole Mammy's Torment.=
+
+"Ole Mammy's Torment" has been fitly called "a classic of Southern
+life." It relates the haps and mishaps of a small negro lad, and tells
+how he was led by love and kindness to a knowledge of the right.
+
+
+=The Story of Dago.=
+
+In this story Mrs. Johnston relates the story of Dago, a pet monkey,
+owned jointly by two brothers. Dago tells his own story, and the account
+of his haps and mishaps is both interesting and amusing.
+
+
+=The Quilt That Jack Built.=
+
+A pleasant little story of a boy's labor of love, and how it changed the
+course of his life many years after it was accomplished.
+
+
+=Flip's Islands of Providence.=
+
+A story of a boy's life battle, his early defeat, and his final triumph,
+well worth the reading.
+
+
+_By EDITH ROBINSON_
+
+
+=A Little Puritan's First Christmas.=
+
+A Story of Colonial times in Boston, telling how Christmas was invented
+by Betty Sewall, a typical child of the Puritans, aided by her brother
+Sam.
+
+
+=A Little Daughter of Liberty.=
+
+The author introduces this story as follows:
+
+"One ride is memorable in the early history of the American Revolution,
+the well-known ride of Paul Revere. Equally deserving of commendation is
+another ride,--the ride of Anthony Severn,--which was no less historic
+in its action or memorable in its consequences."
+
+
+=A Loyal Little Maid.=
+
+A delightful and interesting story of Revolutionary days, in which the
+child heroine, Betsey Schuyler, renders important services to George
+Washington.
+
+
+=A Little Puritan Rebel.=
+
+This is an historical tale of a real girl, during the time when the
+gallant Sir Harry Vane was governor of Massachusetts.
+
+
+=A Little Puritan Pioneer.=
+
+The scene of this story is laid in the Puritan settlement at
+Charlestown.
+
+
+=A Little Puritan Bound Girl.=
+
+A story of Boston in Puritan days, which is of great interest to
+youthful readers.
+
+
+=A Little Puritan Cavalier.=
+
+The story of a "Little Puritan Cavalier" who tried with all his boyish
+enthusiasm to emulate the spirit and ideals of the dead Crusaders.
+
+
+=A Puritan Knight Errant.=
+
+The story tells of a young lad in Colonial times who endeavored to carry
+out the high ideals of the knights of olden days.
+
+
+_By OUIDA_ (_Louise de la Ramee_)
+
+
+=A Dog of Flanders=: A CHRISTMAS STORY.
+
+Too well and favorably known to require description.
+
+
+=The Nurnberg Stove.=
+
+This beautiful story has never before been published at a popular price.
+
+
+_By FRANCES MARGARET FOX_
+
+
+=The Little Giant's Neighbours.=
+
+A charming nature story of a "little giant" whose neighbours were the
+creatures of the field and garden.
+
+
+=Farmer Brown and the Birds.=
+
+A little story which teaches children that the birds are man's best
+friends.
+
+
+=Betty of Old Mackinaw.=
+
+A charming story of child-life, appealing especially to the little
+readers who like stories of "real people."
+
+
+=Brother Billy.=
+
+The story of Betty's brother, and some further adventures of Betty
+herself.
+
+
+=Mother Nature's Little Ones.=
+
+Curious little sketches describing the early lifetime, or "childhood,"
+of the little creatures out-of-doors.
+
+
+=How Christmas Came to the Mulvaneys.=
+
+A bright, lifelike little story of a family of poor children, with an
+unlimited capacity for fun and mischief. The wonderful never-to-be
+forgotten Christmas that came to them is the climax of a series of
+exciting incidents.
+
+
+_By MISS MULOCK_
+
+
+=The Little Lame Prince.=
+
+A delightful story of a little boy who has many adventures by means of
+the magic gifts of his fairy god-mother.
+
+
+=Adventures of a Brownie.=
+
+The story of a household elf who torments the cook and gardener, but is
+a constant joy and delight to the children who love and trust him.
+
+
+=His Little Mother.=
+
+Miss Mulock's short stories for children are a constant source of
+delight to them, and "His Little Mother," in this new and attractive
+dress, will be welcomed by hosts of youthful readers.
+
+
+=Little Sunshine's Holiday.=
+
+An attractive story of a summer outing. "Little Sunshine" is another of
+those beautiful child-characters for which Miss Mulock is so justly
+famous.
+
+
+_By MARSHALL SAUNDERS_
+
+
+=For His Country.=
+
+A sweet and graceful story of a little boy who loved his country;
+written with that charm which has endeared Miss Saunders to hosts of
+readers.
+
+
+=Nita, the Story of an Irish Setter.=
+
+In this touching little book, Miss Saunders shows how dear to her heart
+are all of God's dumb creatures.
+
+
+=Alpatok, the Story of an Eskimo Dog.=
+
+Alpatok, an Eskimo dog from the far north, was stolen from his master
+and left to starve in a strange city, but was befriended and cared for,
+until he was able to return to his owner.
+
+
+_By WILL ALLEN DROMGOOLE_
+
+
+=The Farrier's Dog and His Fellow.=
+
+This story, written by the gifted young Southern woman, will appeal to
+all that is best in the natures of the many admirers of her graceful and
+piquant style.
+
+
+=The Fortunes of the Fellow.=
+
+Those who read and enjoyed the pathos and charm of "The Farrier's Dog
+and His Fellow" will welcome the further account of the adventures of
+Baydaw and the Fellow at the home of the kindly smith.
+
+
+=The Best of Friends.=
+
+This continues the experiences of the Farrier's dog and his Fellow,
+written in Miss Dromgoole's well-known charming style.
+
+
+=Down in Dixie.=
+
+A fascinating story for boys and girls, of a family of Alabama children
+who move to Florida and grow up in the South.
+
+
+_By MARIAN W. WILDMAN_
+
+
+=Loyalty Island.=
+
+An account of the adventures of four children and their pet dog on an
+island, and how they cleared their brother from the suspicion of
+dishonesty.
+
+
+=Theodore and Theodora.=
+
+This is a story of the exploits and mishaps of two mischievous twins,
+and continues the adventures of the interesting group of children in
+"Loyalty Island."
+
+
+_By CHARLES G. D. ROBERTS_
+
+
+=The Cruise of the Yacht Dido.=
+
+The story of two boys who turned their yacht into a fishing boat to earn
+money to pay for a college course, and of their adventures while
+exploring in search of hidden treasure.
+
+
+=The Young Acadian.=
+
+The story of a young lad of Acadia who rescued a little English girl
+from the hands of savages.
+
+
+=The Lord of the Air.=
+
+THE STORY OF THE EAGLE
+
+=The King of the Mamozekel.=
+
+THE STORY OF THE MOOSE
+
+=The Watchers of the Camp-fire.=
+
+THE STORY OF THE PANTHER
+
+=The Haunter of the Pine Gloom.=
+
+THE STORY OF THE LYNX
+
+=The Return to the Trails.=
+
+THE STORY OF THE BEAR
+
+=The Little People of the Sycamore.=
+
+THE STORY OF THE RACCOON
+
+
+_By OTHER AUTHORS_
+
+
+=The Great Scoop.=
+
+_By MOLLY ELLIOT SEAWELL_
+
+A capital tale of newspaper life in a big city, and of a bright,
+enterprising, likable youngster employed thereon.
+
+
+=John Whopper.=
+
+The late Bishop Clark's popular story of the boy who fell through the
+earth and came out in China, with a new introduction by Bishop Potter.
+
+
+=The Dole Twins.=
+
+_By KATE UPSON CLARK_
+
+The adventures of two little people who tried to earn money to buy
+crutches for a lame aunt. An excellent description of child-life about
+1812, which will greatly interest and amuse the children of to-day,
+whose life is widely different.
+
+
+=Larry Hudson's Ambition.=
+
+_By JAMES OTIS_, author of "Toby Tyler," etc.
+
+Larry Hudson is a typical American boy, whose hard work and enterprise
+gain him his ambition,--an education and a start in the world.
+
+
+=The Little Christmas Shoe.=
+
+_By JANE P. SCOTT WOODRUFF_
+
+A touching story of Yule-tide.
+
+
+=Wee Dorothy.=
+
+_By LAURA UPDEGRAFF_
+
+A story of two orphan children, the tender devotion of the eldest, a
+boy, for his sister being its theme and setting. With a bit of sadness
+at the beginning, the story is otherwise bright and sunny, and
+altogether wholesome in every way.
+
+
+=The King of the Golden River=: A LEGEND OF STIRIA. _By JOHN RUSKIN_
+
+Written fifty years or more ago, and not originally intended for
+publication, this little fairy-tale soon became known and made a place
+for itself.
+
+
+=A Child's Garden of Verses.=
+
+_By R. L. STEVENSON_
+
+Mr. Stevenson's little volume is too well known to need description.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Obvious punctuation errors repaired. Text uses both kyak and kiak for
+our more modern kayak. This was retained.
+
+Final page of book ads, "L. R." changed to "R. L." (By R. L. Stevenson)
+
+Page 5, "alway" changed to "always" (always dear to a boy)
+
+Page 82, "Tahgeah" changed to "Tah-ge-ah" (Tah-ge-ah would take them)
+
+Page 83, "Kalakash" changed to "Kala-kash" (Kala-kash had not asked)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Our Little Alaskan Cousin, by Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR LITTLE ALASKAN COUSIN ***
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