Alaska and the Klondike gold fields : containing a full account of the discovery of gold; enormous deposits of the precious metal; routes traversed by miners; ... . STRIKE IT RICH ON KLONDIKE. 101. pay, he drifted froin one end of the gulch to the other, alwayskeeping his shrevvcd eye open for a chance to fix a claim of hisown. There was a slump in the prospects of the district andhe concluded to go back to the world. The slump was not the onlyreason. There was a youngwoman back in Fresno whohad promised to be his came from the hiddenworld without injury and MissEthel D. Bush kept h
Alaska and the Klondike gold fields : containing a full account of the discovery of gold; enormous deposits of the precious metal; routes traversed by miners; ... . STRIKE IT RICH ON KLONDIKE. 101. pay, he drifted froin one end of the gulch to the other, alwayskeeping his shrevvcd eye open for a chance to fix a claim of hisown. There was a slump in the prospects of the district andhe concluded to go back to the world. The slump was not the onlyreason. There was a youngwoman back in Fresno whohad promised to be his came from the hiddenworld without injury and MissEthel D. Bush kept herpledge. They were married. Berry told his bride aboutthe possibilities of Alaska. Shewas a girl of the said she had not marriedhim to be a drawback, but acompanion. If he intendedor wanted to go back to theEldorado, she proposed to gowith him. She reasoned thathe would do better to haveher at his side. His picturesof the dangers and hardships had no effect upon her. Itwas her duty to face as much as he Avas willing to both decided it was worth the tr>—success at a boundrather than years of common toil. Berry declared he knewexactly where he could find a fortun
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublisherchica, bookyear1897