ITHE RIVER of SKULLS t -by George Marsh • PENN PUBLISHING CO. WNU SERVICE CHAPTER I —1— ' Billowing away, like the mighty waves of a white sea, to a horizon wiped clear of haze by the intense cold, the naked tundra glittered un der the March sun. Slowly over the Ungava wastes that lifted above the timbered val ley of an ice-locked river crawled three dark shapes, like crippled ants crossing white earth. Twice within a mile as they labored over the naked ridge toward the valley the two hooded figures slumped to the hard snow beside the great dog. When they rose to go on, rawhide thongs, sliped over their shoulders and made fast to the almost empty sled, aided the dog. Far back on their trail, unnoticed by the three, slunk four skeleton shapes. When the two men and the dog stopped to rest, the four gray wraiths also lay down, slavering tongues lolling from red jaws rimmed with icicles. After a space the larger of the two men raised his hooded head and pushed up his wooden eye shields, pierced by slits, from frost blackened features. It was the face of a boy of twenty, cracked skin tight on the bones of strongly mod eled jaw and cheeks, deep-set gray eyes bright from starvation. “If we don’t find the Montagnais camps—today—tomorrow—’’ For an instant he buried his face In the thick black ruff of the dog that lay beside him, then sat up and gazed intently over their back trail. “Noel!” he said, quietly, “Did you ever eat wolf! If I can keep my sights lined we’re going to eat some tonight, or they’re going to eat us.” "W’at you see, Alan?” The other hooded figure got stiffly to his feet, pushed back the eye-shields and the long wolf-hair fringe of his hood and stared at the sky-line behind them. The face was that of an In dian. “By gar!” he cried. “We boil de kettle tonight. You nevaire eat wolf but you eat wolf tonight!” The breeze had shifted and the great dog, following his master, painfully got to his feet, testing the air with dilating nostrils. Swaying giddily on his feet while he rested a rabbit-skin mitten on the ^black-and-white skull of the husky, Alan Cameron pointed to the four wolves in the distance. “See them, Rough?” he said to the excited dog. The hair on the husky’s back and neck rose. A deep rumble came from the hairy throat as the gaunt frame stiffened. With shaking hands Alan drew his rifle from its skin case, where it lay lashed on the sled. “You go on with Rough, Noel! They’ll follow the trail up. I’ll play dead on the snow and try for a shot. It’s the only way we'll get one!” The Indian scowled, slowly shak ing his head. “Dose are white wolf from de nord—starved out! Dey see you lie on de snow, here, dey weel rush you! Suppose you miss dem, Rough and I weel be too far for to help.” “They won’t come close in on us until dark I tell you. The only way we can get a daylight shot is to do as I say!” the other insisted. “Here’s a chance for some meat— to keep us alive, man! If these spots will stop dancing—in my eyes, I can get one—from an elbow rest.” Reluctantly, with much shaking of his head, the Indian acquiesced. “Marche, Rough!” commanded Alan. “You go with Noel. D’you iiuai mcs The gaunt husky stood stubbornly in his traces gazing up at his mas ter with uncomprehending, slant eyes. There were enemies back on the trail and Alan was ordering him to leave him. Bending over the bewildered husky Alan spoke sharply into a hairy ear: "You go with Noell Marche! Y’understand?" A low. protesting whine and the raising of a white muzzle as the dark eyes of the great dog searched his master’s scowling face was the answer. Lifting his nose, his great throat rumbled in bitter protest as he slowly started the sled. Harassed by uncertain vision and weakness, Alan settled himself on the snow to wait for the approach of the arctic wolves. Lying flat on the crust, his body shook with the pounding of his heart, but the fear that gripped him, as he practiced lining his sights on the slinking gray-white shapes, was that his un certain eyes and jumping nerves would cause him to miss when food for Rough and Noel and himself lay within his reach. Without food they would never have the strength to reach the trappers’ camps—two days, perhaps more, beyond them. So the youth who was already known at the fur-posts along the East Coast as a better shot than even his dead father, Graham Cam eron, once Hudson’s Bay factor at Fort George, lay hoping against hope that when the time came the rifle in his hands would hold true. As Alan lay waiting the cautious approach of the four assassins of the tundra his thoughts turned back to his home at Fort George far to the west on the coast of the great bay. If he and Noel and Rough never returned with the rest of the trappers for the spring trade, how long would his name linger in the memory of black-eyed Berthe Des sane? That sleek Arsene Rivard, clerk at the Revillon Freres, would win her over with his tale of life down at Quebec and Montreal. She'd soon forget Alan Cameron whose bones lay somewhere in the name less tundra country of the Big river headwaters. And his cabin at the post, with the few earthly posses sions his mother and father had left him, who— Suddenly the man lying on the snow stiffened; the four white wolves were approaching at a slow lope. On they came until, a short rifle shot away, they separated and Hit lightly, one of the snarling wolves paused a moment. began to circle the still shape on the crust, until the scarcely mov ing air had given them the strange man scent. The starved beasts squatted on their haunches and, pointing their noses at the sky, sent the wailing cry of the wolf pack, close to the kill, out over the white tundra to where a man and a dog were making their reluctant way to ward the frozen river. Suddenly, not fifty yards from the man on the snow, the skulkers stopped their stealthy circling and swiftly bunched together. They were comingl They started their charge! The rifle roared! It roared again! With a yelp the lead wolf somer saulted in the air—then slid limp along the crust, followed by a sec ond who rolled over and over, fran tically snapping at his bleeding flanks. Behind them the remaining two, mad with the sight of blood, fell upon their wounded mates, sav agely ripping and tearing at their throats with slashes of powerful tusks. Again the whip lash crack of a rifle waked the tundra. The man on the snow got stiffly to his feet and reeled toward the two blood maddened brutes slicing their kin to ribbons. He stopped, took de liberate aim at the milling beasts and fired. But, in his increasing weakness, his rifle barrel swayed like a branch in the wind. Hit light ly, one of the snarling wolves paused a moment and then loped stiffly away on three legs, followed by the fourth. Firing again and miss ing, Alan turned to see a great black-and-white dog coming at a painful, stiff-legged lope over the tundra, slipping and falling, in his weakness, rising again to struggle on, on to the master who was bat tling alone back on the trail. Be hind the dog, stumbling forward in a half-trot, came Noel, rifle in hand. “Bless their hearts!” panted the excited boy. "They sneaked back to help old Alan!” Then turning to the fast freezing carcasses in the snow, he cried deliriously: "But to night we eat! Not much on their bones, but there’s enough to keep us alive—alive! Wolf stew—a feast for a king! Wolf stew! Food for us all and—bones for Rough to gnaw!" For two days the famished boys and the dog rested in the shelter of a windbreak of timber beside the frozen river while the wind drove the fine snow before it like smoke over the crusted tundra. Wise in the lore of the "bush,” they ate fre quently but little at a time while their weak stomachs gained strength. But the nourishment af forded by the leathery thews and sinews of the two starved wolves was limited. While Rough, with the marvelous vitality of the Ungava bred on Hudson Straits, was fast gaining strength, Alan and Noel were still weak and unsteady on their feet when, on the third morn ing, the three set olT up the river valley toward the Sinking Lnkes in search of the camps of the Montag nais trappers. It was morning of the third day of their march up the valley. They had stopped to rest on the river ice, the two men sprawled on the wind packed snow beside the husky. "Three days now,” sighed Alan, "and the river has narrowed little.” "We are still long piece from de lac,” groaned the Indian. "One more thin stew of wolf— that’s all, Noel.” “Ah-hah! We go wan—two sleep more—an’ den de fox an’ de car cajou chew our bones.” Alan reached over to his recum bent dog and, dropping the rabbit skin mitten which hung from his neck by a rawhide thong, rubbed the massive muzzle. His heart shin ing out of his eyes, the dog lifted his head, and with a staccato intake and expulsion of breath through his nostrils, gave what Alan called Rough’s “love-snuffle.” For a moment the man buried his face In the thick, black ruff of the dog’s neck, then sat up and gazed far up the valley where a stand of spruce and poplar occupied the flat country between the river and the lifting shoulders of the tundra. His eyes wandered aimlessly; then, of a sudden, his mittened hand brushed back the wolf-hair rim of his hood as his gaze focused on the timber, blue in the distance. Scrambling to his feet, he cried to the man on the snow beside him: "Look, Noel! Look at the timber up there on the shore!" The Indian rose to his knees. "Wat you see?" "In that black spruce up the riv er, Noel!" Alan pointed with a shak ing mitten. "My eyes are tricky. Is that haze or smoke?” "Smoke! Dat ees smoke! De Mon tagnais!" "D’you hear, Rough?” cried Alan to the dog who had risen and was shaking himself. "Fish tonight for a hungry dog and two men. Maybe tea and—flour, bannock! Maybe caribou!" His great brush of a tall sweeping the crust in his excitement, Rough fidgeted in his harness, impatient to be off. while the arms of the men circled each other’s shoulders in a delirious hug. Standing over his dog, two tears slowly froze on his frost-cracked cheeks, as Alan choked: "We eat—food—real grub! Tonight we eat, Roughy! Marche, boy! Marche on!" The crust offered good footing and with snowshoes on the sled and with what strength remained in their un certain legs Noel and Alan followed the dog over the river ice up the valley. Turning in shore at the water hole in the Ice they followed a beaten trail back into the timber. "Somet’ing ver’ strange here," said the puzzled Indian, shaking his hooded head. "Dis ees no Mon tagnais camp. W ere are de dog sign?” "No, there are no signs of dogs, no signs of—well, look at that!" "By gar, white men on de Talk eeng Riviere!” Standing beside the husky whose throat rumbled as he suspiciously sniffed the air while the hair of his mane and back slowly rose, Alan and Noel gazed in amazement at the substantial log building, banked high with snow, which stood in the center of the clearing that opened before them. "White men on the Talking Riv er!” Alan repeated, his curious eyes noting the size of the log cabin with its large mud-plastered chimney, the huge platform cache evidently piled with supplies which were cov ered by canvas, the two pairs of snowshoes and the toboggan sled stuck in the snow beside the door, and close by, the ample remains of what had evidently been an enor mous wood-pile in the autumn. (TO BE CONTINUED) Flooding of Illinois Coal Mine Many Years Ago Developed a Boiling Spring % % The flooding of a mine near Pinckneyville in 1880 caused a tem porary phenomenon in the nature of a true geyser, probably the only occurrence of this kind in the re corded history of Illinois. Research workers of the Federal Writers’ Project, WPA, have found an ac count of this event in a Pinckney ville newspaper of the time, notes a correspondent in the Chicago Daily News. Flood waters on Beaucoup creek had covered a tract of land above the coal mine of Bernhard Blume. A break in the roof of the mine sud denly admitted the flood water in great volume, "for a short time al most diverting the current of the swollen creek, carrying away whole sections of the rail fence which stood near a bank of the creek, many of the rails as well as other timber and driftwood being caught in the maelstrom and whirled down the capacious throat of the gaping crevasse.” The sudden inrush of the water “compressed the air in an extraor dinary degree, and the rebound was such that the descending flood was forced back as in the action of a gey ser, and for several minutes’ time heaved skyward in vast quantities to the height of at least 100 feet.’’ This upheaval of water, dirt and drift was succeeded by a few min utes of quiet, during which the floods again poured down the funnel. The air was again compressed and again the geyser-like reaction oc curred, higher than before. This process was twice more repeated before the mine had been entirely flooded. All but one of the miners had escaped before the break in the roof occurred. The Blume mine re mained flooded for nearly 39 years. In 1918 the body of Joseph Neising, which had been preserved by the mineral-laden water, was finally re covered. "It lay face down on the floor of his room and conditions indicated that he had his working place in order. A sack of tobacco and a small clay pipe, with a ‘heel’ of to bacco tapped tightly in it, were found in the pockets.” WHAT TO EAT AND WHY (2. 4fouiton (foudfos Discusses the NEED FOR IODINE Key Substance of the Thyroid Gland— Tells How to Avoid Iodine Starvation By C. HOUSTON GOUDISS A Eaat 39th St.. Naw York City ^p HE discovery of our vital need for iodine is one of 4he 1 most thrilling chapters in the long history of scientific research. Many investigators contributed to our understanding of iodine hunger, but special credit is due to Dr. David Marine a a a a a a A _ and his co-worKcrs; and tov Dr. E. C. Kendall of the Mayo Clinics at Rochester, Minn. Today we know that al though it constitutes only about one part in three mil lion parts of the body weight, iodine is so essential that its absence from the diet may have the gravest conse quences. Thyroid—The Gland of Gland* Iodine is necessary for the nor mal functioning of the thyroid gland, situated in the front part of the neck. The thyroid is so im portant that it is often regarded as the throttle which governs the human locomotive, and when It fails to function normally, the body machinery may be thrown out of balance. Thyroid disturbance during childhood may affect mental and physical development, and many children have been accused of laziness who are suffering from thyroid deficiency. Thyroid disor der may be a complicating factor in obesity, and specialists have found that it is associated with many stubborn skin diseases. It is also claimed that iodine starva tion influences mental make-up and emotional tendencies. Disfiguring Goiter Simple goiter is a common dis order of the thyroid gland. At one time the very mention of this disease terrified girls and women, who feared the unsightly lump in the neck which disfigures the vic tim. Now, thanks to dramatic ex periments, we know that simple goiter is an iodine deficiency dis ease. Animal Experiments Point the Way In 1916, it was estimated that a million young pigs died annually in Wisconsin. Investigation dis closed that their thyroid glands were abnormally large and ab normally low in iodine. When io dine was administered to the mothers, the young pigs were born normal. Scientists reasoned that if goiter could be prevented in animals, it could be prevented in humans, and undertook the now famous census in Akron, Ohio. A study was made of the thyroid glands of all school girls from the fifth to the twelfth grades. Almost 50 per cent were found to have enlarged thyroid glands. The girls were given small doses of sodium iodide dissolved in drinking water at given periods over 2]/fe years. At the end of that time, investigators found that of 2,000 pupils, only 5 developed thyroid enlargement. Of the same number not treated, 500 showed enlargement. —it— Danger Periods This demonstration aroused the interest of the scientific world and Semi for This FREE CHART Showing the Iodine Content of Various Foods —it— V OU are invited to write C. Houfr ton Goudiia for a chart showing the foods rich in iodine and those which are poor in this substance. It will serve as a valuable guide in preparing balanced menus. Just ask for the Iodine Churl, ad dressing C. Houston Goudiss, at 6 I',nst 39th Street, New York City. A post card is sufficient to carry your request. F gave impetus to additional experi ments which increased our knowl edge of the iodine requirement The great danger periods are during pregnancy, childhood and adolescence. The diet of the ex pectant mother must include an adequate supply to protect herself and avoid the early development of simple goiter in the child. It is also essential to provide sufficient iodine for growing chil dren, as the incidence of the dis ease increases steadily up to the eighteenth year in girls; in boys it reaches its peak at twelve. Some investigators also claim that one way to enhance the ac tion of the glands after middle life, and so prolong youth, is to include in the daily diet some foods with a high iodine content. —★— Nature's Storehouse of Iodine It la the duty of every home maker to learn where the neces sary iodine can be obtained and to include iodine-rich foods in the daily diet, but It is especially im portant for those living in "the goiter belt." This area stretches along the Appalachian mountains, as far north as Vermont, west ward through the basin of the Great Lakes to the state of Washington, and southward over the Rocky Mountain and Pacific states. —★— Iodine-Rich Foods The sea is the great storehouse of iodine and hence, the most abundant sources are sea food, in cluding salmon, cod, crabmeat and oysters; cod liver oil; and salt. Fruits and vegetables grown near the sea contain varying amounts of iodine, depending upon the water and soil, and the season, the iodine content being at a max imum in the autumn and winter. In general, it may be said that the leaves of plants contain more iodine than the roots, and that leafy vegetables and legumes store more than fruits, with the exception of cranberries, which are a good source. When the soil is rich in iodine, watercress be comes a fine source of this sub stance. —★— Iodized Salt One of the most satisfactory methods for adding iodine to the HOUSEHOLD ( QUESTIONS \ _-< For a Flakier Crust.—One-half teaspoonful of vinegar, added to the water when making pie crust, will assure a flakier crust. • • * Improving Fudge.—If you will add a small spoonful of cornstarch to the next batch of fudge you make, you will be amazed at the improvement in flavor. • * • Butter Marshmallow Fork.— When toasting marshmallows to prevent them from sticking to stick or fork when toasted, have handy a cube of butter so the toasters can thrust their stick or fork into it before putting the marshmallows on. • * • Stoning Raisins.—To stone rai sins easily, first place them in boiling water for a short time. • • * Cooking Cauliflower.—Cauliflow er will remain a beautiful white and be most delicate in flavor if cooked in a mixture of half milk and half water. For some reason this method practically elimi nates any odor during cooking. I,----— Have You a Question? Ask C, Houston Goudiss C. Houston Goudiss has put at the disposal of readers of this newspaper all the facilities of his famous Ex perimental Kitchen laboratory in New York City. He will gladly an swer questions concerning foods and diet. It’s not necessary to write a letter unless you desire, for post card inquiries will receive the same careful attention. Address him at 6 East 39th Street, New York City. diet, especially in goiterous re gions, is through the use of iodized salt. In Detroit, a city-wide test of iodized salt reduced the preva lence of simple goiter from 36 per cent to 2 per cent. Similar fig ures have been cited for other lo calities. Iodized salt costs no more than ordinary table salt and is an excellent safeguard against simple goiter. Iodine in Drinking Water Even in early times, it was be lieved that there was some rela tion between goiter and drinking water, and recent evidence has disclosed that there was a sound basis for this belief. Two investi gators found that the water in a large part of the northern half of the United States falls into a low iodine classification. Several communities have given consideration to the prevention of goiter by the addition of iodine to the water supply. This method is commendable, but it must be borne in mind that wherever io dine is taken in forms other than food, careful supervision by the physician or the public health au thorities is necessary. To those homemakers Interested in planning the best possible diet for their families, I shall gladly send lists showing which foods are rich In Iodine and which are poor in this substance. I-1 Questions Answered Miss 8. G.—There is no Justifi cation for serving toast at every meal instead of bread. It is true that proper toasting changes some of the starch to dextrine which is quickly and easily digested. But laboratory experiments reveal that the proteins of toasted bread and crusts have a lower digesti bility, and' animals gain less weight when fed on them than on the untoasted bread and the in side crumbs of the loaf. Mrs. B. R. 8.—The average meal leaves the stomach within four hours, though a large meal may stay for five hours. How ever, the length of time food re mains in the stomach is only a fraction of that required for the entire digestive process, which va ries in normal individuals from 12 to 47 hours. Carbohydrates leave the stomach most quickly, pro teins are next, and fats require the longest period. Miss C. T.—Agar-agar is a non irritating, indigestible carbohy drate. As it is not digested, its caloric value is zero, and it could not possibly be fattening. Mrs. M. 8. F.—I do not approve of the strictly vegetarian diet be cause it is unbalanced. One who desires to omit all animal foods from the diet must also omit the top-notch protective foods, milk and eggs. It is doubtful if adequate protein could be supplied without milk, eggs or meat. Good health is best maintained on a balanced diet, and is such a priceless pos session that I CEfhnot understand why anyone should risk the con sequences of consuming a one sided diet. © WNU —C. Houston Ooudlss—1938—11 »_ THE ALL-WEATHER LIGHT Light it Up and go..anywhere, *•*» 3 any time, In any weather. Genuine Pyrex Globe protecta mantle* against wind, snow, rain. Clear, powerful brilliance ... Just the light for u*e around the farm... dandy for hunting, camp ing. “The Light of 1000 Use*”, lias oversite, long-service generator. Sea the Coleman at your dealer’*. Send Postcard for From Foldera THE COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE CO. Dapt. WU-I 03, Wichita, Hans.i Chicago, lll.g Philadelphia, Pa.i Los Angolas, Calif. 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