Boy Scouts in Northern Wilds; Or, The Signal from the Hills
E-text prepared by Al Haines
Or, The Signal from the Hills
Author of
Boy Scout Rivals; or, A Leader of the Tenderfoot Patrol, Boy Scouts on Old Superior; or, The Tale of The Pictured Rocks, Boy Scouts' Signal Sender; or When Wigwag Knowledge Paid, Boy Scout Pathfinders; or, The Strange Hunt for the Beaver Patrol etc., etc.
Chicago, 1913
Four Boy Scouts, of the Beaver Patrol, Chicago, were in camp on Moose river. They were all athletic young fellows, not far from seventeen years of age, and were dressed in the khaki uniform adopted by the Boy Scouts of America.
If you take a map of the British Northwest Territories and look up Moose river, you will discover that it runs through nearly three hundred miles of wilderness, from Lake Missinale to Moose Bay. The reader will well understand, then, how far Sandy Green, Will Smith, George Benton and Tommy Gregory had traveled from civilization.
The camp of the Boy Scouts was situated some fifty miles up the river from Moose Factory, a trading point famous in old Indian days for its adventurous spirits and its profits to the factors. Those who have read the preceding books of this series will doubtless remember the four Boy Scouts named above. Together they had visited the Pictured Rocks of Old Superior, the Everglades of Florida, and the great Continental Divide.
During all their journeys the boys had shown courage and resourcefulness beyond their years, and because of these qualities they had been chosen, by Mr. Horton, a noted criminal lawyer of Chicago, to undertake a difficult and dangerous mission to the Hudson Bay country.
They had traveled by way of the Canadian Pacific to Missanabie, from which point they had proceeded to Lake Missinale. Here they had purchased a Mackinaw, a great flat-bottomed craft, in which to transport their tents and supplies down Moose river to the bay of the same name.
They had made most of the journey in native canoes, which they had learned to handle with considerable skill, but now and then they had taken refuge on the big boat, just to stretch their limbs, as they expressed it. They left Chicago late in September and it was now almost the last of October.