Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER III OT for several years had Mar made mention of the far northern experience which, beside laming him for life, had as yet but one visible effect upon his circumstancesthat of ruining his credit as a man of judgment among those nearest to him. People had recognized Nathaniel Mar as one marked out for misfortune, when, upon his father's death, he had been obliged to give up his theological studies, and come back from college, to take the first thing that offered him a little ready money for the assistance of his mother. His modest salary as surveyor's clerk was presently augmented, in recognition of his good draftsmanship and his surprisingly quick mastery of the new field. But it was not till the work he did the following year, over in the Rock Hill district, brought him the friendship of the prosperous young mine owner Galbraith, that Mar found an opportunity of following the more scientific side of his new profession. It was Galbraith who got him the post on the Coast Survey, that led to Mar's joining the Russian-American Expedition. After his return the handsome schoolmistress, who had reluctantly said "no" to the penniless surveyor, consented to look with favor upon the Discoverer of Gold in the new territory of Alaska. But she warmly opposed Mar's design of going to Bock Hill to share the great secret with his friend Galbraith. No, indeed! The Rock Hill mining magnate was in small need of "tips." It was clearly Mar's duty to give the men of Miss Trennor 's family the first chance of joining in this glorious scheme that was to enrich them all. When Harriet Trennor called the Trennor brothers "the men of her family," she made the most of what was a second cousinship. It was even the case that she was not on very good terms with those go-ahead young ...