Page:Amazing Stories Volume 07 Number 08.djvu/62

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CAPTAIN BRINK OF THE SPACE MARINES
733

sarcastic tone. "And you blinking smart-Alecks had the nerve to ask me if I have been sleeping all this time! Say: Who do you think replenished the fuel tanks?"

"We thought it was Santa Claus," Brink declared solemnly.

"Don't tell me you did it."

"Sure I did it. When the Titanians sneaked up on me, I happened to be in the storage chamber. They were all over the control cabin before I had time to do anything. I thought the best thing to do was to hide. So I got inside a sack and tried to look like some hecto-liters of beans. Lucky for me they didn't find me. But they must have monkeyed with the valves and let all our fuel escape.

"When they had all gone away, I sneaked out and discovered that they had moved our ship into a building where there was another space-flier. In the dead of night, I shifted the tanks. It was a dickens of a job. I got so blooming tired that I crawled into a hammock for a bit of a nap."

The girls greeted this recital with a chorus of laughter.

"Surely," Vera giggled—"surely you don't mean to tell us that you slept all through that hullabaloo while we were diving into the lake, playing submarine and shaking off the Titanians."

"Nothing remarkable about that," Sullivan declared. "At least to anyone who is familiar with Captain Hawkins' sleeping proclivities."

Brink was busy at the instrument board. He slowly opened the throttle and headed the ship toward the colorfully brilliant star which he knew to be Jupiter.

When he had set the course he called to Hawkins, "Here. you lazy, somnolent lout. Come here and take the controls. The rest of us have some important business to attend to."

"Business?" Hawkins questioned. "What kind of business?"

To which Brink replied with a significant grin, "Business that we hope will be both pleasant and profitable. It is about time Jimmy and I got acquainted with the Valentine sisters."

The End


The Finger of the Past

(Continued from page 707)

of a fur coat you want. And, would you like to—would you like to go to Peacock's and pick you out a ring, an engagement ring?"

By way of reply, she threw her arms about Buffum's neck and buried her face in his shoulder. In order to address Oliver, Buffum had to bury his neck and chin in her tousled hair.

"Oliver!" he said. "Ah—hrrr! You young scamp, from now on you are manager of the publicity department. Do you hear? And Regina, I can see business coming in again; so you may have that new airplane you've been wanting so long.

The End


The Man Who Lived Twice

(Continued from page 721)

And so, the slow parade of stars and earth and moon faded and died. I had come to the end of my first adventure.

When I awoke again, I was back in the laboratory on a deep pile of cushions in the centre of the triangle formed by the three vacuum tubes. The professor was bending over me anxiously. My strength had returned. I felt my chest—no bullet hole there. I grinned up at him and reported: "Your theory is correct. I have been to the year 8117 A. D—seen machines utilizing the energy of the atom—but died before I could get the secret. Got darn close to it, though."

The End


What Do You Know?

READERS of Amazing Stories have frequently commented upon the fact that there is more actual knowledge to be gained through reading its pages than from many a text-book. Moreover, most of the stories are written in a popular vein, making it possible for anyone to grasp important facts.

The questions which we give below are all answered on the pages as listed at the end of the questions. Please see if you can answer the questions without looking for the answer, and see how well you check up on your general knowledge of science.

  1. What is the name of the great palace, the fountain head of the Tibetan religion? (See page 693).
  2. Can there be a variation in rate of passage of time and how is it shown? (See page 710.)
  3. What is the most accurate available clock (time measurer) known? (See page 710.)
  4. What horsepower is expressed by twenty million kilowatts? (See page 712.)
  5. What is matter considered to be? (See page 713.)
  6. Give an example of graphic control of an airship. (See page 718.)
  7. Name three large satellites of the planet Jupiter. (See page 722.)
  8. How could the planet Jupiter be recognized? (See page 722.)
  9. Name a fourth satellite of Jupiter. (See page 724.)
  10. Name the sixth satellite of Saturn. (See page 724.)
  11. Which is the largest satellite of Saturn? (See page 726.)
  12. How many moons has Saturn? (See page 727.)
  13. What is the nucleus of an amoeba? (See page 728.)
  14. How would one recognize volcanic action if the ground was warm to the touch? (See page 745.)
  15. What might we anticipate as the cause of heated ground under foot? (See page 745.)