B s;v i-'i if m m li. Ill ill'' in. I' i ik Pji k h at ksp P'K. i r i:-,' av KB r I- few i Dn4 fir H ' . BivmraEMaVZj " if i I as I i " " ' X '. a -' Pacy c v i WipBWiw cJBrta in3iE: Y . SYNOPSIS. . Elnm Itarnlsh, known all through Alas tea an "llurnlng Daylight." celnbratos his 30th birthday with a crowd of mlnura ut th Clrclo City Tlvoll. Tho danco leads to houvy Rumbling, In which over $100,000 .Is stakod Ilarnlsh losos his mnnoy and 'Ills tnlno but wins the mall contract. Ho tarts on tils mall trip with dogs and sledge, tolling his frlonds that he will bo in tho big Yukon gold strlko at tho sturt. llurnlng Daylight mukes a sensationally rapid run across country with tho mall, appears at tho Tlvoll nnd Is now rciuly to Join his friends In n dash to the new ?:otd rtolds. Deciding that gold wltl be ound In tho up-rlvur district Hnrnlsli buys two tons of Hour, which ho declares Will be worth Its weight In gold, but when hn arrives with his flour he finds tho big Hat desolate. A comrade discov ers gold and Daylight reaps a rich liar VosL CHAPTER V. Continued. Hack In Duwuon, though ho remained true to his word and never touched hand to pick nnd shovel, he worked as hard qb ever In his life. He had a thousand Irons in the (Ire, and they kept him busy. Heavy ns were bis expenses, ho won more heavily. Ho took lays, bought half shares, shared with the men ho grub-staked, and mndo personal locations. Day and night bis dogs were ready, and he owned tho fSBteat teams; so that when a Btnm- pede to a new discovery was on, It was Durnlng Daylight to tho foro through the longest, coldest nights till ho blazed bis fitakcB next to Discovery. In one way or another (to say nothing of the many worthless creeks) ho came Into possession of properties on the good creeks, such ob Sulphur, Do minion, Excclsls, Slwash, Crlsto, Al hambra, and Doollttle. The thousands ho poured out flowed back In tens of thousands. Dawson grow rapidly that winter of 1896. Money poured In on Daylight from tho sale of town lots. Ho prompt ly Invested It where It would gather more. In fnct, ho plnyed tho danger ous game of pyramiding, and no moro perilous pyramiding thnn In a placor camp could bo Imagined. But ho played with his eyes wldo open. Corner lota In deslrnble locations old that winter for from ten to thirty thousand dollars. Daylight sent word out over the trails and pnsscs fd tho nowconierB to bring down log-rafts, and, as a result, tho summer of 1897 aw bis saw mills working day nnd night, on three shifts, and still he bnd logs loft over with which to build cabins. These cabins, land Included, old at from one to several thousand dollars. Two-story log buildings, In the business part ot town, brought him from forty to fifty thousand dollars apiece. Theso fresh accretions of cap ital were Immediately Invested In oth er ventures'. Ho. turned gold over and over, until everything that he touched eomod to turn to gold. With tbe'summer rush from the Out Ide came special correspondents for the big newspapera and magazines, and one and all, using unlimited space, they wrote Daylight up; so that, so far as the world was concerned, Daylight loomed the largest figure in Alaska, or course, after several months, the world became interested in the Span ish War, and forgot all nbout him; but In the Klondike itself Daylight still re mained the most prominent figure. . CHAPTER Vl. A c - It was held by the thousands ot bero-worshipplng checbaquos that Day light was a man absolutely without fear. But Bettles and Dan MacDonald and other sourdoughs shook their heads and laughed as they mentioned women. And they wore right. He had always been afraid of them from tho time, himself a lad of seventeen, when Queen Anne, of Juneau, made open and ridiculous lovo to htm. For that matter, bo never had known women. Born In a mining-camp whoro they wore rare and mysterious, having no titers, his mother dying while he was an Infant, be had never been in con tact with thorn. But It wna loft to tho Virgin to give him his final fright She was found one morning dead In her cabin. A hot through tho head bad dono it, and she had loft no message, no ex planation. Then caroo tho talk. Some wit, voicing public opinion, cnlled it a ease of too much Daylight. Sho bad killed herself because of him. Every body knew this, and said so. Tho cor respondents wrote it up, and once more Burning Daylight, Iflng of tho Klondike, was sensationally featured In the Sunday suppioments or the United States. Tho Virgin had straightened up, so tho feature-stories ran, and correctly bo.v Never had sho entered a Dawson City dance-hall, When she first arrived from Circle City, she bad earned her living by washing clothes. Next, she bad bought a sewing-machine and' made men's drill parkM, fur caps, and moosehlde mittenB. Then she bad gone as a clork into the First Yukon Bank. All this, and more, was known and told, though ope and all were agreed that Day light, while the cause, bad been the innocent cause of her untimely end. And the worst ot it was that Day light knew It was true. Always would BR&fflK jakack ho remember that Inst night ho had soon her. He had thought nothing of It at tho ttmo; hut, looking back, he was haunted by every Itttlo thing that had bapponed. In tho light of the tragic ovent, ho could understand ovorythtng her quietness, that calm certitude as If all vexing questions of living had boon smoothod out and wcro gone, and that certain ethereal HwectnoBB about all that she bad said nnd dono that had bocn almost mater nal. Ho remembered the way sho had (poked at him, how she had laughed when he narrated Mickey Dolan's mis tnko in staking tho fraction on Skook n ni Gulch. Her laughter had boon lightly Joyous, whllo at tho same time It had lacked Its old-time robustness. Not that sho nnd been grave or sub dued. On tho contrary, sho had been so patently content, so filled wjth poaco. Sho had fooled hlm.ool that ho was. Ho had oven thought thnt night that her feeling for him had passed, nnd he had takon delight in tho thought, and caught visions of tho satisfying future friendship that would bo theirs with this perturbing lovo out ot tho way. And then, when ho stood at tho door, cap In hand, and said good night. It had struck him at tho time as a funny and embarrassing thine hnr bonding over his hnnd nnd kissing it. He had folt llko n fool, but he shivered Through It All Moved Daylight, now when ho looked back on It and felt again tho touch ot hor lips on his hand. Sho was saying good-by, an eternal good-by, and he had never guossed. At that very moment, nnd for all the moments ot the evening, coolly and dollbcrntoly, as he well knew her way, she hnd been resolved to die. If ho had only known It! Un touched by tho contagious malady himself, nevertheless ho would have married hor If ho had had the slight est Inkling ot what buo contemplated. And yet he know, furthermore, that hors was a certain stiff-kneed pride that would not have permitted her to accept murringo as on net ot philan thropy. There had really been no sav Ing her, after all. Tho lovo-dlseaso bad fustened upon her, nnd she had been doomed from the first to perish or it Six thousand spent the wlntor or 1897 In Dawson, work on tho creeks wont on apace', whllo beyond tho pass es it was reported that one hundred thousand more woro waiting for the fepring. Late ono brief nftornoon, Day light, on tho benches between French Hill nnd Shookum Hill, caught a wid er vision ot things. Bonoath him lay tho richest part of Eldorado Creek, while up and down Bonanza ho could see for miles. It was a scene of a vast devastation. The hills, to tbolr tops, had been shorn of trees, and thoir naked sides showed signs of gor ing and perforating that eyen the l 4S2 " (Copyright, 1910, by tho Now York ITcrnld Company.) (Copyrlfht. 1910, by the MacMlllan Company. mantle of enow could not hide. Be neath hlm, in every direction, wore tho cabins ot men. But not many men were visible. A blanket of sraoko filled tho valleys and turned tho gray day to melancholy twilight. Smoke nroflo from a thousand holes In the snow, where, deep down on bed-rock, In the frozen muck and gravel, mon crept and scratched and dug, and ever built more fires to break the srln or tho frost. Organization was what was needed, he decldod; and his quick imagination sketched Eldorado Creek, from mouth to source, and from mountain tan tn mountain top, in tho hands of one ca pablo management. Even steam-thawing, as yet untried, but bound to come, ho saw would be a makeshift. Whnt should be done wos to hydraulic the valloy sides and benches, and then, on the creek bottom, to use gold-dredges. There was tho vory chanco for another big killing. He had' wondered just what was precisely the reason for the Ouggonhnmmors nnd tho big English coucorns Bending in their high-salaried exports. That wns their scheme. That wns why they had approached him for tho Bale of worked-out claims and tail ings. They" wcro content to lot the small mine-owners gopher out whnt they could, for there would bo mil lions In tho loavings. And, gazing down on the smokv in ferno of crude effort, Daylight outlined tho now gamo ho would play, a game In which tho Uuggcnhnmmers and tho rest would hnvo to reckon with him. But along with the delight In the new concoptlon camfc a weariness. Ho was tired of the long Arctic years, and ho was curious about the Outside the Hell- Roaring, Burning Daylight. great world of which he had heard other men talk and or which he was as Ignorant as a child. There were gameB out there to play. It was n larger table, and there was no reason why bo with his millions should not sit In and take a hand. So it was, that artornoon on Skookum Hill, that ho resolved to play this last best Klon dike hand and pull tor tho Outside. It took time, however. He put trusted agents to work on tho heels or great exports, and on tho CreokB whore they began to buy bo likewise bought Whorover they tried to corner a worked-out croek, thoy found him standlug in the way, owning blocks or claims or artfully scattered claims that put all their plans to naught. followed wars, truces, compromises, victories, and defeats. By 1898, sixty thousand men were on tho Klondike, and all their fortunes and affairs rocked back nnd forth nnd wero af fected by the battles Daylight fought. And more and more the tasto for tbe larger game urgod In Daylight's mouth. Horo he was already locked In grap ples with tbe great Quggonbammers, and winning, fiercely winning. Pos sibly tho severest struggle was waged on Ophlr, the veriest of moose-pastures, whose low-grado dirt was valu able only because of Its vastness. Tbe ownorsblp of a block of seven claims In the heart ot it gave Daylight bis grip, and they could not come to terms. The Quggenhammer experts conclud LPNDOM cu or MMIB? ed thnt It was too big for him to handle, nnd when they gave him an ultimatum to that effect he accepted and bought thorn out The plan was his own, hut ho sent down to the States for competent engineers to car ry It out. In tho Rlnkabilly water shed, eighty miles away, he built his reservoir, nnd for eighty miles the huge wooden conduit carried tho wa ter across country to Ophlr. Est mated at three millions, tho reservoir and conduit cost nearer tour. Noi did he stop with this. Electric power plants wero installed, and his work ings wero lighted as well ns run hv electricity. Other sourdoughs, who had struck it rich in excess ot nil their dreams, shook their hoads gloom' lly, warned him that he would go broke, nnd declined to invest in so ox travngant a venture. But Daylight smiled, and sold out tho remainder or his town-site holdings. He sold at the right time, at the height or the placer boom. When ho prophesied to his old cronies, In tho Moosehorn Saloon, that within ilvo years town lots In Dawson could not be given away, whllo the cnbins would bo chopped up tor fire wood, he was laughed at roundly, nnd nssurcd that tho mother-lodo would bo round ere that tlmo. But he went ahead, when his need for lumber was finished, selling out his sawmills ns well. Likewise, ho beean to net rid of his scattered holdings on the vari ous creeks, nnd wlthouHhanks to any ono ho finished his conduit, built his dredges, Imported his machinery, and mnde tho gold of Ophlr immediately accessible. And ho, who five years before had crossed over tho divide from Indian River nnd threaded the silent wilderness, his dogs packing In dian fnshloi, himself living Indian fashion on straight moose meat, now heard tho hoarso whistles calling bis hundreds of laborers to work, and watched thorn toll under tho whlto glare of tho arc-lamps. But having done the thing, he was ready to depart. And when he let the word go out, the Guggenhammers vied with the English concerns and with a new French company in bid ding for Ophlr nnd all Its plant. The Guggenhammors bid highest, nnd the price they paid netted Daylight a clean million. It wns current rumor that ho was worth anywhere froni twenty to thirty millions. But he alono knew Just how he stood, nnd that, with his last claim sold and tho table swept clean or his winnings, ho had ridden his hunch to the tuno or Just n tritlo over cloven millions. His departure was a thing that passed Into tho history or tho Yukon along with his other deeds. All the Yukon wns his guest, Dawson tho seat or tho festivity. On that one Inst night no man's dust save his own wns good. Drinks were not to be pur chased. Every saloon ran open, with extra relnys of exhausted bartenders, and tho drinks were given away. A man who refused this hospitality, and persisted in paying, round a dozen fights on his hands. The veriest chechaquos rose up to defend tbe name of Daylight from such Insult. And through it all, on moccasined feet, moved Daylight, hell-roaring Burning Daylight, overspilllng with good na ture and camaraderie, howling his he wolt howl nnd claiming the night as his, bending men'a arms down on tbe bars, performing feats of strength, his bronzed race flushed with drink, his black eyes flashing, clad in overalls and blanket coat, his ear-flaps dang ling and his gauntleted mittens swing ing from the cord across the should ers. But this time It was neither an ante nor a stake that he threw away, but a mere marker in the game that he who held so many markers would not miss. TO BE CONTINUED.) At IT SOMETIMES HAPPENS. The man at tbe corner of tbe down town alley was selling some kind of cement It was worth 25 cents a bottle, as he explained to his hearers, but In or dor to Introduce It he was making a special price of one dime, good for this particular occasion only, and be guar anteed satisfaction or money re funded. "Will it mend broken chlnar in quired a lean, undersized man In the crowd. "It will mond anything but a broken promise or a ruined character. Say, my friend, here's a couple of sticks ot wood, fastened together at the ends. If you break them apart I'll make you a present ot a bottle." Carelessly tbe undersized man took the Joined sticks In his hands. Then he gave them a. sudden, vio lent wrench. Bu they didn't break apart It Is saddening to have to spoil a story In his manner, but sometimes, in tbe Interests of historical accuracy, It has to be done. Dire Necessity. "Yes, sir, In a year from now, tbls Amalgamated Balloon stock will be worth $10,000 and I'll sell it to you for 60 cents." "If It'll be worth $10,000 In a year from now, why don't you keep It your self?" , "Well, you see, I need a shave and a' hair cut, and I'd be a holy show if I waited that long." Judge. E OF SILENCE Kept At a Memorial to Dead Wife. Hoosfer Home In Which Nothing Hat Been Touched Since the Death Angel's Visit Three Decades Ago. Center, Ind. Tho story, however strange, is now bo old that the people in and about this village have long ceased to discuss it. Occasionally an' elder of tho neighborhood, in driving with a stranger along the narrow highway, will point out the "Houbo of Silence" and in a matter-of-fact way relate its half forgotten history the home that for 30 yenrs or more to all the world, save alono Its master, who Uvea elsewhere, has been as closo locked as the tomb that for as many years has held its one-time mistress. And so it will remain they say until James Perry Mugg is laid beside the wife of bis youth, whose Blmplest thing touched by her vanquished hnnd he treasures as never miser treasured hoarded gold. Without the old house Is not unlike scores of the humblo structures one will see in a day's drive in the conn. try, with weatherboarded front and window lighting either cramped room, the paint rain-washed nnd sun-burned from every board theso many years. But about all Is the scar of decay. The plank stop at the doorway crumbles under tho lightest footfall. Tho time stained blinds kro closo-drnwn, shut ting out every ray of light. Tho swallows and tile wasps huve nested in the eaves nnd in tho window ledges und Bplders draw their feathery films over the unwashed panes. Nearer the highway the bluegrass lawn has been close cropped by tho grazing cattle, but about the house the weeds grow rank and wild. At the rear is a de tached shed, mounted by a dlnnor bell In which the sparrows have found a homo. Within not one thing has been changed Blnce tho call, of the death angel three decades ago. On an old fashioned dressing caso such as might Well awaken envy In the lover of the antique, lies a copy of "Christian Hymns," and by Us side an open Bible, used, doubtless, In the sad rites. Hung over the back of a mohalr cushloned chair a shawl of some fine fabric Is fast falling to pieces. On the table by the side of the shaded lamp sits a work-basket, with the spools of cotton. Us needles and skeins of yarn. On a wall shelf tbe dishes are ar ranged Just as they were left after the final meal. By a peg on the wall a sunbonnet had hung, but the strings have rotted away and It has fallen to the floor. A broom standB In the corner, having swept tho now faded rag ccrpet the last time when hands now folded upon a pulseless bosom were vigorous and strong. And by the table wltb Its shaded lamp, Its work basket, and ( a few stmyle books, is a child's rush-bottomed rocking chair. How it links the dead past, with the living present! Out with the thresh ers in one of the fields of the CO odd acres which James Perry Mugg holds here, is a stalwart young man, sing ing as ho thrusts tho yellow sheaves into the greedy maw of the noisy ma chine. It was he who sat in the rush bottomed chair and; hoard the stories ot the dust-covered books from his mother's lips. Says Crows Are Good to Eat. Topeka, Kan. Prof. L. L. Dycho has eaten crow, but unliko a few of our politicians he considers it "first-class eating." Tho professor avers that "the flesh of the young crow is as good, as that of tho guinea hen. It la a lit-, tlo dark, but It has a good flavor and is fine of texturo." Ho is also fond, ot tbe young rod-tailed hawk which, cooked right, he declares, could not bo distinguished from chicken. Hog In Well Lives 52 Days. Henryetta, Okla. A hog that had bene at tbe bottom of a dry well for 62 days was found alive by John B. Jordan, farmer. .When tho animal was pulled out by Jordan and four neigh bors It was only a skeleton. It walked a quarter of a mile to the barn. Man Decapitated by a Car. Spokane, Wash. Robert Cool, a re tired Illinois farmer aged seventy-four, slipped on tho snow in crossing a Great Northern track and was decapi tated by an empty mall car which was being switched. His body was crushed beneath the wheels, HOUS A FEDERAL HEALTH BOARD. It Is gratifying to note that tho bill for the creation of a federal health board will not be allowed to pass with out n protest. Reports of organized resistance como from all parts or the country, nnd It may bo that tho oppo sition will soon bo sufficiently solidi fied to defeat a project that promises inflnlto mischief for tho community, nnd suffering nnd injustlco for thoJn divldal. Tho proposal Is based upon thoso specious claims that aro notoriously hard to controvert. If a federal health board were to confine its uctlvltleB to tho promulgation of salutary ndvlco upon hygienic mattcra, to tho abate ment of quackery, and to tlm mirltv nf drugs, It might be possible to Bay much In Its favor, although It would Btlll be difficult to say that such an organization is needed. But we know that it will attompt to do far more than this, soelng that its ndheronts have loudly proclaimed their Intcn tlons. Indeed, there is no socrocy about them. It is confidently expected that tho board will consist of advo cates of one school of medicine only and thnt thA methods of thnt school Will bo not only recommended, but enforced upon tho nntlon. Indeed a board thnt wns In any way representa tive of the medical profession as a wholo would bo stultified by Its own disagreements. Outside tho domnln of simple hygiene, for which wo need no federal board at nil, there is no single point of medical practice upon which allopaths, homeopaths, eclectics nnd osteopaths could bo in unison. Any board that could be devised by tho wit of man must bo composed of representatives of ono school only, and this mentis that all other schools aro branded as of an Inferior caste, even though nothing worao happened to them. And something worse would happen to them. If we aro to establish a school of medicine, If we are to as sert that tho government of the Unit ed States favors ono variety or prac tice more than others, why not estab lish also a sect of religion and be stow special authorities upon Bap tists, Methodists and Episcopalians? An established school of religious conjecturo seoms somewhat less ob jectionable than an established sect of pseudo-sclontlflc conjecture. Those who suppose thnt a federal board of health would have no concern with Individual rights aro likely to find themselves undeceived- It Is for tho purpose of interfering with Indi vidual rights that tho proposal has been mnde. We need no special knowledgo of conditions to be nwaro thnt what may be called unorthodox methods of healing have made sad In roads Into tbe orthodox. Homeopathy clnlps a vast number of adherents whcVaro Just as well educated and Just as injtelllgeut ns thoso who adhere to tliOyOldor school. Osteopathy, eclecti cism, and half a dozen other, methods of practice aro certainly not loslncr ground. Beyond them la tho vast and increasing army or tlioso who may bo classed under tho general and vaguo name of mental healers. Those who aro addicted to any of theso forms of unorthodoxy need have no doubt as to the purposes of tho federal health board. Thoso purposes are to mako it dimcult for them to follow their particular fadB and fancies, to lead them, and If necessary to drive them, from medical unorthodoxy to medical orthodoxy. Now tho Argonaut holds no brief for any of tho excesses and tho super stitions connected with the care of the body In which this ago Is so rife. But It does feel concerned for tbe preser vation of human liberty and for the rights of the individual to doctor him self in any way be pleases so long as he does not indubitably threaten the health of the community. He may take large doses or small ones, or no doses at all; he may be massaged, anointed with oil, or prayed over, JuBt as tbe whim of tho moment may dic tate, and probably it makes no par ticle of difference which he does. But he has the right to choose, Just as he chooses tho color of his necktie or the character of his underclothing. It is not a matter in which any wise gov ernment will seek to Interefere. This is preclsoly the liberty that the health board Intends to take from him. Orthodox medicine, conscious of Its losses, Is trying to buttress Itself by federal statute, to exalt allopathy to tbe status of a privileged caste, and to create un established school ot medicine Just as some other countries have allowed themselves to create nn established school of religion. It Is for the common sense of the commu nity to rebuke that effort and to re- pel an unwarranted invasion upon elo mentnry human rights. Nan Fran Cisco Argonaut. Waiting. "Have you named your baby yet?" "No." "Ho's getting pretty old to be with out a name, isn't ho?" "Yes; but mywifo wishes to call him Perclvnl, und we're waiting to Bnd out whether he's going to havo i lisp." Stung. "You call this cako angel food." said tbe harsh husband. "Yes, dear," said the timid wlro, "but If tho diet doesn't seem oxactly what you want, hero aro .some devilled crabs." Washington Star. 8ounds Plausible. "Why do people speak or a 'cool' million?" "I don't know, unless It's because a twin with a mllllou dollars can keep cool, no matter ho'w high the coBt ot living soars." B 'V..1 Ni ft , ,rt 'w'Sr f, .. .xrt : 'Mat t' . ,W 'w. , 4 h -ijTV J&! i'V.rttrv,', .' i- 'ft-. , r, i-'jL' urfm, ..... ri.wiiiav .lM.JMW'jt,.4 Y C 2t 7? Ua .4..rTtVW ,-, s JL nmM . iki jf .. MM immnu,mmr,Mrnmmi i mmmiammmmmmmmm .-mm iiimhh it wmi i ii'ii naammHwawsj wwwJLEtttaja m'i";',iiirMiHn'ijif.n-;i s t,-rwi ..- ' 'wvi ,v 22 ammmmtmm & V-.rt.u V l.wm, TV . -"rr,fl, -.u--b-w ' ' ..'rt'JtM"f' ,i. , , .ve. ';.(, v ,i.'. . rri ji;, , ja?.x 1 ffi'iO..- iimwww j JUflUMHHMlH HMMHiSUMHatlti