THE 8EMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. tFWqlH "ykF II BTrl T1 Am Alaskan Love Jl fee ukn Jl rani II copyright, wiiiinm Macicod ituinc. , By William Macleod Raine CHAPTER XIX Continued. 11 So far tho mind of the Scotsmnn fol lowed tho probabilities logically, but nt this point It mndo n Jump. Thoro were nt least two robbers. Ho wns morally vura of thrtt, for this wns not a onM&an Job, Now, if Holt had with hln ?l companion, who of all those In Baslnk wa3 the most likely man? lie wns a friendless, crabbed old fellow. Since costing to Kuslnk old Gideon hnd been seen constantly with ono man. They had been with each other nt din ner and had later left tho hotel to gether. The nnmc of tho mun who had been so friendly with old Ilolt was Gordon Elliot and Elliot not only was nnother enemy of Macdonnld, but had .very good reasons for getting out of the country Just now. Tho strong Jtiw of tho mine-owner (stood out sallently ns ho gnvo short, sharp orders to men In tho crowd. Ono W08 to get tho coroner, a second Wally Selfrldge, another tho United States district attorney, no divided the rest Into squads to guard tho roads leading out of town and to sco that nobody passed for tho present. " Tho coroner took chargo of tho body and Wnlly of tho bank. Tho mine owner nnd tho district attorney walked up to tho hotel together. As soon ns they had explained what they wnntcd, tho landlord got n pnsskcy nnd took them to the room Holt had used. Apparently tho bed had been slept In. In tho waste-paper basket tho dis trict attorney found something which he held up In a significant silence. Macdonnld stepped forward and took from him a small cloth' sack. "Ono of thoso wo keep our gold In at tho bank," said tho Scotsman after a close examination. "This definitely ties up Holt with tho robbery. Now for Elliot." "Do loft tho hotel with Holt about llvo this morning, tho porter enys." Tills was tho contribution of tho land lord. Tho room of Gordon Elliot was In great disorder. Garments had been tossed on tho bed and on every chnlr and had been left to Ho wherever they had chanced fcto fall. Plainly their ewner had been In great haste. Macdonnld looked through tho closet where clothes hung. "Ills new fur coat Is not hero nor his trail boots. Looks to mo as though Mr. Gordon bad hit tho trail with his friend Holt." All doubt of this was removed when a prospector reached town with tho bows that ho had mot Ilolt and Elliot traveling toward tho dlvldo ns fust aa thoy could drlvo the dogs. Tho big Scotsman ordered his team f Siberian wolMiounds mndo ready for tho trail. As ho donned his heavy furs, Colby Mncdonald smiled with deep satisfaction, llo had Elliot on tho run at last. Just ns ho closed tho door of his room, Macdonnld heard tho telephono bell ring. Ho hesitated, then shrugged his shoulders and strodo out luto tho storm. If ho hnd answered tho call ho would havo learnod from Dlnne, who was nt tho other end of tho line, that tho stage upon which Shebn had started for Katma hnd not reached tho roadhouso nt Smith's Grossing. Flvo minutes Inter tho winners of lb' grcnt Alaska sweepstakes wero The Winners of tho Great Alaska Sweepstakes Wero Flying Down the Street tying down tho streot In the teeth of tfeo slorin. Armed with a rlfio and revolver, their owner was muBhlng into tho hills to bring back tho men who fead robbed his bank and killed tho ashler. Ho traveled nlono because ho fould go faster without a companion it nover occurred to him that ho was ot a match for any two men ho might face. r CHAPTER XX. i In the Bllizard. "Swlftwnter" Poto, tho driver of the i stago between' Kusluk and Katma, did not like tho look of tho sky as his sonleif breasted tho long uphill climb Vst vaiai at tho puss. "Glttia' her bnck up for a bllzznrd. looks like. Doggono It, If that wouldn't Jest bo my luck," he murmured fretfully. Shcba hoped there would bo one, not. of course, u really, truly blizzard such as Mncdonald had told her nbout, but tho tall of u mnko-belicvo one, enough to send her glowing with exhilaration Into tho roudliouso with tho happy sense of an ndventuro nchloved. Tho girl was buoyed up by a senso of free dom. For a time, nt least, sho was es caping Mncdonald's driving energy, the nppcnl of Gordon Elliot's warm friend liness, and tho unvoiced urging of Diane. Good old Peter nnd the kid dles wero tho only ones that let her ulonc. Sho looked bnck nt tho horses labor ing up tho hill. Swlftwatcr had got down and was urging them forward, his long whip crackling nbout tho cars of tho leudcrs. Ho wus worried. Ho would have liked to turn and run for It. But tho last roadhouso was twenty-seven miles back. If tho bllz znrd enmo howling down tho slopo they would hnvo a sweet tlmo of It Teaching safety. Smith's Crossing was on tho other sldo of tho divide, only nlno miles nwny. Thoy would hnvo to worry through somehow. Miss O'Neill knew thnt Swlftwatcr Pete wns anxious, and though sho was not yet afraid, tho girl understood tho reason for It. Tho road ran through tho heart of n vnst snow-field, tho sur faco of which was being .swept by n screaming wind. Tho air was full of sifted whlto dust, and tho road furrow "was rapidly filling. Soon It would bo obliterated. Shcba tramped behind tho stnge-drlvcr nnd In her tracks walked Mrs. Olson, tho other passenger. Through tho muffled scream of tho storm Swlftwatcr shouted back to Shcbn. "You wnnta keep closo to me." Sho nodded her head. His order needed no explanation. Tho world was narrowing to a lnno whoso walls sho could almost touch with her fin gers. A pall of white wrapped them. Upon them bent n wind of stinging Blcet. Nothing could bo seen but tho blurred outlines of tho stngo and tho driver's figure Tho bitter cold searched through Shoba's furs to her soft flesh nnd tho blast of powdered Ico bent upon her fuco. Tho snow wns getting deeper ns tho road filled. Onco or twlco sho stumbled and fell. Her strength ebbed, and tho hinges of her knees gave un expectedly beneath her. How long wns It, sho nsked herself, that Macdon nld hod enld men could llvo In a bliz zard? Staggering blindly forward, Shoba bumped Into tho driver. Ho had drawn up to glvo tho horses n moment's rest beforo sending them plunging nt tho buow again. "No chnnco," ho cnllcd Into tho young womnn's cnr. '"Never mnko Smith's In tho world. Goln' try for miner's cabin up gulch llttlo wny." Tho team stuck In tho drifts, fought through, nnd was blocked ngnln ten yards beyond. A dozen times tho horses gnvo up, answered tho sting of tho whip by diving head first nt tho white banks!, nnd wero stopped by fresh snow-combs, Pcto gnvo up tho fight, no begnn unhitching tho horses, while Slieba nnd Mrs. Olson, clinging to ench other's hands, stumbled forward to join htm. Tho words ho shouted across tho back of a horso wero almost lost ln tho roar of tho shrieking wind. ", . . hcluvntlme . . . rldo . . gulch," Shcba iiiude out Ho fiung Mrs. Olson nstrldo ono of tho wheelers and helped Shebu to tho back of tho right leader. Swlftwnter clambered upon Its mato himself. Tho girl paid no attention to whero thoy wero going. Tho urgo of life wns so fnlnt within her that sho did not greatly euro whether sho lived or died, ncr f aco was bluo from tho cold, her vitality was sapped. Sho seemed to herself to hnvo turned to Ico be low tho hips. Numb though her fin gers were, sho must keep them fns tened tightly In tho frozen inane of tho animal. Sho recited her lesson to her self ltko a child. Sho must stick on she must sho must. whether sho lost consciousness or hot Shcbn never knew. Tho next alio realized was thnt Swlftwatcr Pcto was pulling her from tho horse. He dragged her Into u cnbln whero Mrs. Olson luy crouched on tho floor. "Got to stable' tho horses," ho ox plained, and left them, After a tlmo ho came back and lit a flro In the ulieet-lron stove. As tho cir culation thnt mennt life flooded bnck Into her chilled veins Shcbn endured n half-hour of excruciating pnln. Sho hnd to clench heHHceth to keep back the groans. Tho cabin was empty of furnlturo except for n hdmo-mado table, rough stools, Und tho frnnio of n bed. The Inst occupant hnd left a little firewood beside tho stove, enough to lust per haps for twenty-four hours. Shcbn did not need to bo told that If tho bllz znrd lasted long enough, they would starve to death. In the handbag loft In tho stngo wero u box of candy and an Irish plum pudding. She had brought tho latter from the old coun- try with her and wus taking It and the chocolates to the nustcd children. But Just now tho stngo was as far from the.ni ns Droghcda. Like many rough frontiersmen, Swlftwatcr Pete was n diamond In tho raw. So far ns could be he made a hopeless nnd Impossible situation com fortablc. Ills Judgment told him that they were caught In n trap from which there wns no escape, but for tho sake of tho women he put n cheerful face on things. "Lucky wo found this cnbln," ho growled amiably. "By this time we'd h' been up Salt creek : If we hadn't. Seeing ns our luck hns stood up so far, I reckon we'll bo all right. Mighty kind of Mr. Last Tenant to leave us this firewood. Wo uln't so worso off." "If we only hnd some food," Mrs. Olson suggested. "Food I" Pcto looked nt her In ns- sumed surprise. "Huh J What nbout nit that llvo stock I got In tho stable? I've .heard tell, ma'am, thnt broncho tenderloin Is n fnvorlto dish with them thcro French chiefs that do tho cook ing. They kinder trim It up bo's It's most ns good ns frawgs' legs." Shcbn had never before slept on bnro bonrds with n sealskin coat for n sleeping bag. But sho was very tired and dropped off almost Instantly, Twice sho woko during tho night, dls turbed by tho stiffness nnd tho pnln of her body. "When sho awakened for tho third tlmo It wns morning. It seemed to her thnt tho hard, whlp- sawed planks wero pushing through tho soft flesh to the bones. Sho was cold, too, and crept closer to tho stout Swedish woman lying bcsldo her. Pres ently sho fell asleep again to tho sound of the blizzard howling outside. When sho wakened for tho third time It wns morning. In the afternoon tho, blizzard died nwny. As far as tho eyo could see, Shcba looked out upon n wnsto of snow. Her eyes turneu from tho deso lation without to tho bnro nnd cheer less room In which they hnd found shelter. In Bplto of herself n little shiver rati down tho spine of tho girl. Hnd sho como Into this Arctic soli tude to And her tomb? As soon ns tho storm hnd moderated enough to let him go out with safety, Swlftwnter Pcto had taken ono of tho horses for an attempt nt trail break ing. "Me, I'm after that plum pudding. I gotta get a feed of oats from the stago for my bronchs too. Tho scenery hero Is suro flno, but it ain't whnt you would call nourishing. Huh I Watch our smoko when mo and old Bnldfnce git to bucking them drifts." Ho hnd been gono two hours and tho dusk wns already descending over tho whl to wnsto when Shcbn ventured out to sco what had becomo of tho stago driver. But the cold was so bitter that sho soon gnvo up tho attempt to fight her way through tho drifts nnd turned bade to tho cnbln. Somo tlmo Inter Swlftwnter Peto camo stumbling Into their temporary home. Ho wn3 fagged to' exhaustion but triumphant. Upon tho tnblo ho dropped from tho crook of his numbed arm two packages. "Tho makings for a Christians din ner," ho snld with a grin. Mrs. Olson thnwed out tho pudding and tho chocolates In tho oven nnd mndo n kind of mush out of somo oats Pcto hnd saved from tho horso feed. They uto their one-sided mcnl In high spirits. Tho freeze hud saved their lives. If It held clear till to morrow they could reach Smith's crossing on tho crust of tho enow. Swlftwatcr broko up tho chairs for fuel and demolished tho legs of tho table, after which ho lay down beforo tlio stovo und fell at onco Into a sod den sleep. Presently Mrs. Olson lay down on tho bed nnd began to Bnoro regularly. Shcba could not sleep. Tho bonrds tired her bones nnd sho wns cold. Sometimes sho slipped into cat naps that wero full of bad dreams. When she wakened with a start It wns to find thnt tho flro had died down. Sho was shivering from lack of cover. Qui otly tho girl replenished tho flro and lay down again. When sho wakened with a start It was morning. A fnlnt light elftcd through tho single wlndqw of the sbnek. Slieba whispered to the older womnn thnt sho was going out for a llttlo walk. As she worked her way down tho gulch Shcbn wondered . whether tho news of their loss hnd reached Ku Blnk. Wero search parties out already to rescue them? Colby Macdonnld had gono Into tho blizzard years ago to save her father. Pcrhuns ho might hnvo been out nil night trying to suvo her father's dnughter. Peter would go, of course nnd Gordon Elliot. Tho work In tho mines would stop nnd men would volunteer by scores. Thnt wns ono flno thing nbout tho North it rosponded to tho unwritten Inw that a mun must risk lils own life to save others. From a llttlo knoll Shebn looked down upon tho top of tho stngo three hundred yards below her, and while sho stood there tho promlso of the new day wns bluzoned on tho sky. It camo with amazing beauty of green nnd primrose and amethyst, whllo tho stars flickered out and tho- heavens took on the bluo of sunrise. Sho drew a, deep, slow brenth of adoration and turned away. As sho did so her eyes dilated and her body grew rigid. Across tho snow waste n mn wns coining. Ho wns moving townr the cabin and must cross tiro trencb '.lose to her. Tho heart of tho girl stoned, then beat wildly to make up tho last stroke. He had como through tho bliz zard to snvo her. At that very Instant, ns If the stngo had been set for it, the wonderful Alaska sun pushed up Into tho crotch of the penks nnd poured Its radiance over tho Arctic wnstc. The pink glow swept In u tldo of delicate color over the snow nnd transmuted it to mil lions of spnrkllng dlnmonds. The Grcnt Mnglclnn's wund hud recreated tho world instantaneously. CHAPTER XXI. Two on the Trail. Elliot nnd Holt left Kuslnk In a spume of whirling, blinding snow. They traveled light, not more than Across tho Snow Waste Coming. a Man Was forty pounds to tho dog, for they want ed to make speed. It was not cold for Alaskn. They packed their fur conts on tho sled and woro mittens of mooschldo with diiffel lining, on their feet mukluks abovo "German" socks, nolt hnd been a sour-dough miner too long to let his pnrtner perspire frpm overmuch clothing. Ho knew tho dnn gcr of pneumonia from a sudden cool ing of tho heat of tho body. Old Gideon took seven of his dogs, driving them two abreast. Six were huskies, rnngy, muscular nnlmuls with thick, denso conts. They wero In tho best of spirits nnd cnrrlcd their tails erect llko their Malemuto lender. liutcn, tiiQugu n Malemuto, hnd a strong strain of collie In him. It gnvo him n souse of responsibility. His bus lncss wns to seo thnt tho tenm kept strung out on tho trull, nnd Butch wns pnst-mnster In tho mntter of disci pllno. His weight wns 03 fighting pounds, and ho could thrash in short order any dog In tho team. Tho snow wns wet nnd soft It clung to everything It touched. Tho dogs cnrrlcd pounds of it in tlio tufts of hair that roso from their backs. An Icy pyramid hnd to bo knocked from tho sled every hnlf-hour. Tho enow shoes wero heuvy with whlto slush, Densely lnden spruco boughs brushed the faces of tho men and showered tnem with unexpected llttlo ava lanches. They took turns In nolng ahead of tho team and breaking trail. It was heavy, muscle-grlndlng work. Beforo noon they wero both utterly fatigued. They dragged forwnrd through tho slush, lifting their lnden feet sluggish ly. They must keep going, nnd they did, but It seemed to them thnt every step must bo tho Inst Shortly after noon tho storm wore Itself out. Tho temperature had been steadily falling and now It took a rapid drop. They wero pnsslng through Urn ber, and on a little slopo they built with a good dcnl of difficulty a Are, By enreful nursing they soon hnd great bonflro going, in front of which they put their wet socks, mukluks, scarfs and parkas to dry. Tho toes of tho dogs had becomo packed with little Ico balls. Gordon and nolt had to go carefully over tho feet of ench animal to dig theso out. Tho old-timer thawed out a slab of dried salmon till tho fat began to frizzle and fed ench husky a pound of tho fish and a lump of tnllow. Ho and Gordon mndo a pot of tea and ate somo meat sandwiches thoy had brought with them, to save cooking until night. When they took the trull ngaln It wns In moccasins Instend of mukluks. Tho weather was growing steadily colder, and with each degree of fall In tho thermometer tho trail was easier. "Mnshlng at fifty below zero Is all right when It is all right" explained Holt in ho words of tho old prospec tor. "But when it isn't all right It' h 1." "It Is not fifty below yet, Is it?" "Nope. But she's on tho wny. When your brenth makes a kinder crackling nolso she's fifty." There soon wns a crust on the snow that held up tho dogs and the sled so thnt trail breaking wns not nccessury. Tho llttlo purty pounded stpadlly over tho barren hills. There wns no sign of llfo except whnt they brought with them Into tho grentcr silence beyond. Each of tho men wrapped a long scarf around his mouth and noso for protection, nnd ns tho pnrt In front of his faco became n sheet of Ice shifted tho muffler to another place. Night fell In the mlddlo of tho aft ernoon, but they kept traveling. Not till they wero well up toward the sum mit of the divide did they dccldo to camp. They drove Into a little draw nnd unharnessed tho ,wcary dogs. It was bitterly cold, but they were forced to set up the tent and stove to keep from freezing. Their numbed fingers made a slow job of the camp prepara tions. At last tho stovo was going, the dogs fed, nnd they themselves thnwed out They fell UBleep shortly to the sound of the mournful howling of the dogs outside. Long beforo dnybrcuk they were afoot again. Holt went out to chop somo wood for the stovo while Gordon mndo breakfast preparations. The llttlo miner brought in an armful of wood and went out to get n second supply. A few moments later Elliot henrd a cry. no stepped out of tho tent nnd ran to tho spot whero Holt wns lying under mnss of Ico nnd snow The young mnn threw nsiao tho broken blocks thnt hnd plunged down from n ledge above. "Bndly hurt, GId?" ho nsked. "I done bust my lulg, son," tho old mnn answered with n twisted grin. "You menn thnt It is broken?" "Tell you thnt In a minute." He felt his leg carefully and with Elliot's help tried to get up. Groan ing, ho slid back to the snow. "Yep. She's busted," ho announced. Gordon cnrrlsd him to tho tent and lnid him down carefully. Tho old miner sworo softly. 'Ain't this a devil of a note, boy? You'll havo to get me to Smith's Cross ing and leave mo there." It was tho only thing to bo done. Elliot broke camp and packed the sled. Upon the load ho put his companion, well wrapped up In furs. Two miles up the road Gordon stopped his team sharply. He had turned a bend in the trail nnd had como upon ap empty stage burled in tho enow. The fear that had been uppermost In Elliot's mind for twenty-four hours clutched at his throat. Wns It trag edy upon which ho had como after his long Journey? Holt guessed tho truth. "Thoy got stalled nnd cut loose tho horses. Must hnvo tried to rldo tho cuyuses to shelter." "To Smith's Crossing?" asked Gor don. "Expect so." Then, with a whoop, tho man on tho sled, contradicted him self. "No, -by Moses, to Dick Fiddler's old cnbln up tho draw. That's whero Swlftwnter would aim for till tho bliz- znrd wns over." "Where is It?" demunded his friend. "Swing over to tho right nnd follow tho little gulch. I'll wait till you como buck." Gordon dropped tho gee-polo and started on tho Instant Eagerness, anxiety, dread, fought In his heart Ho know that any moment now ho might stumblo upon tho evidence of the sad story which Is repeated In Alaskn many times every winter. It rang in him like a bell that where tough, hardy miners succumbed a frail girl would hnvo smnll chance. He cut ncross over tho hill toward tho draw, and at what he saw his pulse quickened. Smoko wns pouring out of tho chimney of a cnbln and fulling groundwnrd, as It doeskin tho Arctic during very cold weather. Hnd Shcba found safety there? As ho pushed forwnrd tho rising sun flooded the earth with pink and struck a million sparkles of color from tlio snow. Tho wonder of It drew the eyes of tho young mun for a moment toward tho hills. A tumult of joy flooded his veins. Tho girl who held In her soft hnnds the happiness of his llfo stood looking at him. It seemed to him Hhat 6he was tho coro of all that lovely tldo of radiance. He moved toward her and looked down Into tho trench where she waited. Swiftly ho kicked off his snowBhoes and leaped down beside her, Tho gleam of tears was In her eyes as sho held out both hands to htm. During tho long look they gnvo ench other something wonderful to both of them was born Into tho world. When ho tried to qpenk his hoorso volco broko. "Sheba little Sheba! Safe, after nil. Thank God, you you" Ho swallowed the lump in his throat and tried ngnln. "If you knew God, how I havo suffered I I was afraid I dared not let myself think." A live pulso bent In her whlto throat. Tho tenrs brimmed over. Then, somo how, sho wus In his arms weeping. Her eyeu fliowly turned to his, nnd he BMt tho touch of her surrendered Hps. Nnture hnd brought them together by ono of her resistless and unpremedi tated impulses. A stress of emotion had swept her Into hla nrms. Now sho drew away from him shyly. The conventions In which sho hnd been brought up assert ed themselves. An nbsurd llttlo fear obtruded Itself Into her happiness. Had she rushed Into his arms llko a love sick girl, tnklng it for granted that he cared for her? "You came to look for -us? ahe asked, with tho llttlo shy stiffness of embarrassment "For you yes." Ho could not take his ores irom her. It seemed to him thnt n bird was sing ing In his heart the gladness ho could not express. Ho hnd for mnny hours pushed from his mind pictures of hot lying white nnd rigid on tho snow. In stead sho stood beside him. her dell cntc benuty vivid as tho flush of a flame. "Did they telepliont that wo were lost?" "Yes. I was troubled when tho storm grew. I could not sleep. So I. called up the rondhouse by long dls tuncc. They hud not heard from tho stugc. Later I culled nguln. When X could stnnd It no longer, I started." "Not on foot?" ' "No, with Holt's dog tenm. He Is bnck there. His leg Is broken. A snow-slide crushed him this morning whqro we cumped." "Bring him to tho cnblu. I will tell the others you nro coming." "Hnve you hnd nny food?" he asked. A tired smile lit up the shadows of , weariness under her soft, dark eyes. "Boiled oats, plum pudding and choco lates," she told him. "Wo have plenty of food on tho sled. I'll bring It at once." She nodded, and turned to go to the cnbln. He watched for a moment tho lilt in her walk. An expression from his rending jumped to his mind. Me lodious feet I Some poet hnd said thnt hndn't he? Surely It must hnve been Shebn of whom he wns thinking, this girl so vlrglnnl of body and of mind, free nnd' light-footed as a caribou on the hills. Gordon returned to the sled nnd drove the tenm up tho draw to the cnbln. Tho three who hnd been ma rooned came to meet their rescuer. "You must 'a' como right through the storm llckltty split," Swlftwater said. "You're right wo did. This side pard ner of mine wns bent on wrestling with a blizzard," Holt answered dryly. "Sorry you broko your lnlg, GId." "Then there's two of us sorry, Swift water. It's ono of the best lnlgs I've got." Shebn turned to tho old miner Im pulsively. "If you could be knowing whnt I urn thinking of you, Mr. Holt how full our henrts are of the grati tude " Sho stopped, tenrs In her voice. "Sho I No need of thnt, miss. Ho dragged me ulong." His thumb Jerked townrd the mnn who wns driving. "I've seen better dog punchers thnn Elliot but he's got tho world bent nt routln' old-timers out of bed nnd persundln' them to kick in with him nnd buck a blizzard. Me, o course, I'm un old fool for comln' " Tho dnrk eyes of the girl wero llko sturs In a frosty night. "Then you're He (Viet the Touch of Her Surrendered Lips. tho kind of a fool I love, Mr. Holt I think It wns just fine of you, nnd 111 never forget It as long as I live." Mrs. Olson hnd cooked too long In lumber nnd mining camps not to know something nbout bone setting. Under her direction Gordon mnde splints and helped her bundngo the broken leg. Shebu cooked nn appetizing breakfast The aroma of coffee and tho smell of frying bucon stimulated appetites that needed no tempting. nolt, propped up by blankets, ala with the others. For a good many years ho had taken his luck as it came with philosophic endurance. TSbw he wnsted no time In mourning what could not bo helped. He was lucky tho Ice slldo had not hit him in the head. A broken leg would mend. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Change Bad Ways. Instead of trying to mend thclij ways some people would snvo n lot of tlmo by getting new ones.