CHAPTER | | PAGE |
I. | Phil and Serge | 1 |
II. | Winning the Prize | 8 |
III. | An Undesirable Acquaintance | 15 |
IV. | Across the Continent | 22 |
V. | Five Bull’s-eyes in Six Shots | 28 |
VI. | Phil’s Sad Predicament | 36 |
VII. | The Value of a True Friend | 43 |
VIII. | One Result of Good Shooting | 49 |
IX. | Introducing “Old Kite Roberson” | 56 |
X. | Phil Discovers What He Is | 62 |
XI. | Seals and Seal-skins | 68 |
XII. | Captain Duff’s Shrewdness | 75 |
XIII. | The First Seal-hunt | 81 |
XIV. | Overboard in the North Pacific | 88 |
XV. | Phil Becomes “High Line” | 94 |
XVI. | A Venture into Forbidden Waters | 101 |
XVII. | Cruel Killing of Mother-seals | 107 |
XVIII. | Chased by a Revenue-cutter | 113 |
XIX. | Castaways on Oonimak | 119 |
XX. | Brimstone and Feathers | 125 |
XXI. | Luxury on a Desolate Aleutian Island | 132 |
XXII. | How Jalap Coombs Got His Name | 139 |
XXIII. | Kooga the Aleut, and His Bidarkie | 145 |
XXIV. | A Double Watch for Schooners | 151 |
XXV. | Hunting the Sea-otter | 158 |
XXVI. | Serge Kills a Bear, and Jalap Coombs Disappears | 165 |
XXVII. | Phil Sees Himself as Others See Him | 171 |
XXVIII. | Phil and Serge as Prisoners of War | 178 |
XXIX. | A Cruise on a Bering Sea Cutter | 185 |
XXX. | The Third Lieutenant’s Humiliating Position | 192 |
XXXI. | Where is the Centre of the United States? | 199 |
XXXII. | Why the Cutter Departed without Her Passengers | 206 |
XXXIII. | In Hot Pursuit | 213 |
XXXIV. | Mr. John Ryder’s Story | 220 |
XXXV. | Jalap Coombs’s Philosophy | 227 |
XXXVI. | Lost and Drifting in Bering Sea | 234 |
XXXVII. |
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