Kalitan, Our Little Alaskan Cousin
g 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 c
an friend, whom he spied heaping wood upon the c
Kalitan, briefly. "Th
l say something ex
aid Kalitan, as he prepared
u get the fis
fished when I got up
ing already," exclaimed the lazy T
said: 'Catch fish for Boston
ed his father, but there were times when he wasn't anxious to an
!" he sai
the camp if we all g
," said
o watch, I suppos
hy?" aske
me one will steal ou
man come along and steal from his brothers; Indians not. If we
mean by cache
ld 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
Thlinkits, my boy," said Mr. Strong, who had come up in time to
e hunting to-day, and that you'll get
ed, dancing up and
pon it and see how the land lies, or, rather, the ice. It is getting warmer, and, if it continues
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 s
eads and tails," said Ted, and
es, and hymn
asked Ted, as Kalitan
or any word in the English language, and a man replied, 'Y
ere a C
ains of T
up a mis
s, and hymn
but Kalitan
ston missionary, he
ska?" asked Ted, as they tramped
reat country,"
ever saw anything like this at home," pointi
bination 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 a
which had no bottom. Beyond the glacier itself, the snow-capped mountains rose grand and serene, their glittering peaks clear against the bl
rred, a thing of such wonder and beauty that T
thedrals appeared, and before them arose a wonderful city of white marble, dream-like and shadowy,
ed, and the old chie
he Dead," but
hese regions, but you are fortunate in seei
mirage?" de
e queer thing about a mirage is that you usually see the very thing most unlikely to be found in that particular
l in his father's talk because of Kalitan, whose dark eyes never left Mr. Strong's face, an
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 ai
you're likely to be satisfied with your new friends, for I shall have to go to many
ry and chalcedony,-but there's something which will interest you m
im 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 pra
, almost as excited as the boy himself, and they ran to pick up t
his arrow through the bird's side, for he
ter, a Nimrod who killed two birds with one st
one I shot at,
d roasted them on a hot stone over the spruce logs, and Ted, tired and wet