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+Project Gutenberg's Dave Porter and the Runaways, by Edward Stratemeyer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Dave Porter and the Runaways
+ Last Days at Oak Hall
+
+Author: Edward Stratemeyer
+
+Illustrator: H. Richard Boehm
+
+Release Date: May 1, 2009 [EBook #28654]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DAVE PORTER AND THE RUNAWAYS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: HE SAW AN ARM AND A HEAD COME UP.--_Page 240._]
+
+
+
+
+Dave Porter Series
+
+DAVE PORTER
+
+AND THE RUNAWAYS
+
+OR
+
+LAST DAYS AT OAK HALL
+
+BY
+
+EDWARD STRATEMEYER
+
+Author of "Dave Porter at Oak Hall," "The Lakeport Series,"
+"Old Glory Series," "Pan-American Series," etc.
+
+ILLUSTRATED BY H. RICHARD BOEHM
+
+BOSTON
+
+LOTHROP LEE & SHEPARD CO.
+
+
+
+
+Published, March, 1913
+
+Copyright, 1913, by Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co.
+
+All Rights Reserved
+
+Dave Porter and the Runaways
+
+Norwood Press
+
+Berwick & Smith Co.
+
+Norwood, Mass.
+
+U.S.A.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+"Dave Porter and the Runaways" is a complete story in itself, but
+forms the ninth volume of a line issued under the general title of
+"Dave Porter Series."
+
+In the first volume of this series, entitled "Dave Porter at Oak
+Hall," the reader was introduced to a typical American lad, and the
+particulars were given of his doings at an up-to-date boarding
+school.
+
+There was a cloud over Dave's parentage, and in order to solve the
+mystery of his identity he took a long voyage over the ocean, as
+related in the second volume, called "Dave Porter in the South Seas."
+Then he came back to his schoolmates, as told of in "Dave Porter's
+Return to School," and then took a long trip to Norway, to hunt up his
+father, the particulars of which are given in "Dave Porter in the Far
+North."
+
+Having settled the matter of his identity to his satisfaction, our
+hero came back to Oak Hall and had a number of strenuous contests,
+related in detail in "Dave Porter and His Classmates." Following this
+came the summer vacation, and the youth made a trip West, the
+happenings of which are set down in "Dave Porter at Star Ranch."
+
+When Dave returned to Oak Hall once more he found the school rivalries
+as bitter as ever, and what these led to has been related in "Dave
+Porter and His Rivals." His enemies tried hard to do our hero much
+injury, but he exposed them and they were forced to flee, to escape
+the consequences of their actions.
+
+The winter holidays found Dave homeward bound. He had anticipated some
+jolly times among his relatives and friends, but a robbery upset all
+his plans, and, almost before he knew it, he found himself bound
+southward, as related in "Dave Porter on Cave Island." On the island
+he had many adventures out of the ordinary, and he came home more of a
+hero than ever, having saved Mr. Wadsworth, his benefactor, from
+ruin.
+
+In the present story Dave is back once again at school. There are some
+queer happenings, and then some lads run away. How Dave proved his
+common sense, and brought the runaways back, I leave for the pages
+which follow to tell. I trust the reading of this volume will do all
+my young friends good.
+
+ Edward Stratemeyer.
+ _February_ 1, 1913.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I. Dave and His Chums 1
+ II. A Glimpse at the Past 11
+ III. A Talk of the Future 21
+ IV. Mr. Job Haskers's Doings 31
+ V. At Oak Hall Once More 41
+ VI. Phil Shows His Stubbornness 52
+ VII. Phil and Ben Make a Move 62
+ VIII. An Unusual Compact 72
+ IX. The King of Sumatra 82
+ X. Nat Poole Wants to Know 91
+ XI. Bonfire Night at the Hall 101
+ XII. Plans for a Spread 111
+ XIII. The Cabin on the Island 121
+ XIV. The Bandanna Handkerchief 131
+ XV. At the Hotel 141
+ XVI. The Blowing up of the Bridge 151
+ XVII. A Serious Accusation 161
+ XVIII. The Meeting on the Road 171
+ XIX. Looking for the Runaways 181
+ XX. The Wild Man Again 190
+ XXI. Something of a Clew 200
+ XXII. After the Runaways 210
+ XXIII. At the Camp 220
+ XXIV. Out in the Storm 230
+ XXV. Perils of the Flood 239
+ XXVI. Back to the School 249
+ XXVII. The Trail Through the Woods 259
+ XXVIII. The Capture of the Wild Man 268
+ XXIX. A Bit of Evidence 278
+ XXX. The Exposure--Good-By to Oak Hall 287
+
+
+
+
+DAVE PORTER AND THE RUNAWAYS
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+DAVE AND HIS CHUMS
+
+
+"I say, Dave, here's an odd piece of news."
+
+"An odd piece of news, Roger? What about?"
+
+"A wild man in the woods back of Oak Hall," answered Roger Morr, who
+held a letter in his hand. "Queerest thing you ever heard of."
+
+"I should say it was, if it's about a wild man," returned Dave Porter.
+"Who sent that letter?"
+
+"Shadow Hamilton."
+
+"Maybe it's another one of Shadow's innumerable yarns," suggested
+Dave, with a faint smile. "If he can't tell them by word of mouth, he
+writes them down."
+
+"What has Shadow got to say about the wild man?" asked Phil Lawrence,
+looking up from the suit-case he was packing. "Has he been trying to
+clean out Oak Hall, or anything like that?"
+
+"No, not exactly," returned Roger, turning back to the letter, which
+he had not yet finished. "He keeps in the woods, so Shadow says, and
+scares everybody who comes that way."
+
+"How does he scare them?" asked Dave, pausing in the act of stowing a
+suit of clothing in a trunk.
+
+"Shadow writes that he and Lazy were out walking one day and the wild
+man came after them with a big club. He wears long hair and a long
+beard, and his clothes are in tatters."
+
+"What did they do?" questioned Phil.
+
+"They ran back towards the school. The wild man followed 'em as far as
+the bridge over the brook, and then jumped into the bushes and
+disappeared."
+
+"Humph!" muttered Phil. "Is that all?"
+
+"Oh, no! The day before that, Chip Macklin and two other of the
+smaller boys went out, along the river, and the wild man came after
+them and shoved Chip into the water. He yelled to them never to come
+near him again. The other fellows ran away, and as soon as Chip could
+get out of the water he went after 'em. Then, three days later, Doctor
+Clay sent out Mr. Dale and Horsehair, the driver, to look into the
+matter, and the wild man met them at the bridge and threw mud balls at
+'em. One mud ball hit the teacher in the arm, and one struck Horsehair
+in the nose and made it bleed. Horsehair was afraid to go on, because
+the wild man jumped around and shouted so furiously. Mr. Dale tried to
+catch him, but he ran away."
+
+"Poor chap! He must be crazy," was Dave's comment. "He ought to be
+taken care of by the authorities."
+
+"Yes, but they can't catch him," continued Roger. "They have tried
+half a dozen ways, but he slips 'em every time."
+
+"Who is he?" asked Dave, as he continued to pack his trunk.
+
+"Nobody has the least idea, so Shadow writes."
+
+"Say, that will give us something to do--when we get back to Oak
+Hall!" cried Phil. "We'll organize a posse to round up the wild man!"
+
+"I think we'll have plenty of other things to do when we get to
+school, Phil," remarked Dave. "Just remember that we have lost a lot
+of time from our lessons, and if we want to make up what we have
+missed, and graduate from Oak Hall with honor, we've got to buckle
+down and study."
+
+"Oh, I know that," answered Phil, and gave a little sigh. "Just the
+same, I'm going to have a try at the wild man--if he comes my way."
+
+"So am I," cried Roger. "And Dave will try with us; won't you, old
+man?" And Roger caught his chum affectionately by the shoulder. "You
+are the fellow to solve mysteries!"
+
+Dave was about to answer when there came a knock on the bedroom door.
+He opened it to find himself confronted by a middle-aged lady, who was
+smiling but anxious.
+
+"How are you getting along, boys?" she asked.
+
+"First-rate, Mrs. Wadsworth," answered Roger. "We'll soon be finished
+now."
+
+"Are the girls getting anxious?" questioned Dave.
+
+"Say, what do you think?" burst out Phil. "We are going back to Oak
+Hall to capture a wild man who----"
+
+"Phil!" burst out both Dave and Roger, and the other youth stopped
+short in confusion.
+
+"A wild man?" cried the lady of the house, in consternation. "Oh,
+Dave, I hope----"
+
+"Oh, don't let him worry you, Mrs. Wadsworth," responded Dave,
+quickly. "There is a wild man up there, but I don't think he will
+bother us any, and we've got too much to do to hunt for him." And the
+lad gave his chum a look that said as plainly as words: "What did you
+want to mention it for?"
+
+"Oh--I--er--I was only fooling," stammered Phil. "Of course, if there
+is a wild man he won't come near us. Tell the girls we'll be ready in
+five minutes--at least I will," he added, and resumed his packing.
+
+"Can I do anything for you?" asked the lady.
+
+"You might try to find my striped cap," answered Dave. "I can't seem
+to locate it."
+
+"It is in the library--I saw it a while ago, Dave."
+
+"And my baseball bat--the new one with the black handle."
+
+"That is in the back hall, in a corner. How about your books?"
+
+"I've got all of them. Send Laura with the bat and cap, will you,
+please?"
+
+"Yes;" and Mrs. Wadsworth hurried off, anxious to be of all the
+assistance possible.
+
+"Say, that was a bad break for me," murmured Phil, as the door closed,
+and before Dave or Roger could speak. "I didn't want to worry her,
+Dave. I'm sorry I mentioned the wild man."
+
+"And the man may be caught before we get back to Oak Hall," said
+Roger. He crossed the room and peered into a closet. "Has anybody seen
+my baseball shoes?"
+
+"You left those at the Hall, Roger," answered Dave.
+
+"Did I? All right, then. I came away in such a hurry I can't remember
+what I took and what I didn't."
+
+"I guess we've got about everything now," resumed Dave, looking
+around the bedroom. He glanced at his watch. "Ten minutes to twelve.
+We are to have lunch at a quarter past, and start at one, sharp."
+
+"Provided the auto is ready," interposed Phil.
+
+"It will be--trust my Uncle Dunston for that," answered Dave. "My, but
+isn't it jolly to think we are going back to school in the auto
+instead of by train!"
+
+"Yes, and to think that the girls and your uncle are going with us!"
+added Roger.
+
+"Dave, look out for Roger, he's got his eye on Laura!" said Phil,
+slyly.
+
+"Oh, you give us a rest, Phil Lawrence!" burst out Roger, growing red.
+"I guess you've got an eye on her yourself."
+
+"Poor me! Poor me!" murmured Phil, as if talking to himself. "Roger
+will talk to nobody but Laura, and Dave will see and hear and think of
+nobody but Jessie, and I'll be left in the cold! Oh, what a cruel
+world this is! If only--wow!" and Phil's pretended musings came to a
+sudden end, as Dave shied a pair of rolled-up socks at him and Roger
+followed with a pillow. In another instant a mimic battle was on, with
+pillows and various articles of clothing for ammunition. Then came
+another knock on the door and Laura Porter appeared, with a baseball
+bat in one hand and her brother's cap in the other.
+
+"Oh dear me!" she cried, and then stopped short, for a red sweater,
+thrown by Roger at Phil, had missed its aim and landed on her head.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Laura, really I do!" gasped Roger, as he sprang
+forward and took the sweater from its resting-place. "I--I didn't mean
+that for you."
+
+"Oh, Roger, of course you did!" cried Phil, with a twinkle in his eye.
+"That's the way he salutes girls always, Laura."
+
+"Is this the way you are packing up?" demanded Dave's sister, with a
+little smile, while poor Roger grew redder than ever.
+
+"Oh, we were only waiting for you to bring my things, Laura," answered
+her brother, coolly. "We'll be ready in three minutes and a half by
+the factory whistles."
+
+"Say, what is this I hear about a wild man?" continued Laura, as she
+sat down on a chair Roger shoved towards her. "You've made Mrs.
+Wadsworth and Jessie all excited over it."
+
+"Oh, it isn't anything," burst out Phil, quickly. "I made a mistake
+even to mention it."
+
+"She came down and told Jessie and me that she was afraid you'd have
+more trouble, when you got back to school. As if you haven't had
+troubles enough already!" And Laura looked affectionately at her
+brother, and then at his chums.
+
+"Oh, this won't amount to anything, Laura," said Dave. "So tell Mrs.
+Wadsworth and Jessie not to worry about it."
+
+"But I want to know what it means?" demanded the sister; and in the
+end Dave and his chums had to relate what they knew about the wild
+man. As they finished the girl shook her head doubtfully.
+
+"I don't like that a bit," she said. "I am sure you'll get mixed up
+with that wild man somehow. Why, he might attack you and try to kill
+you!"
+
+"We'll be on our guard--when we go near the woods," answered Roger.
+
+"You had better not go alone," insisted the girl.
+
+"We seldom travel alone," said her brother. "Generally Roger, Phil,
+and I are together, and very often some of the other fellows are with
+us. But don't you worry, Laura, and tell Jessie and her mother it will
+be all right."
+
+"And there is another thing to be careful about, Dave," went on Laura,
+as she prepared to leave.
+
+"What is that?"
+
+"Be careful of how you treat Nat Poole."
+
+"Why, what do you mean?" cried Dave, and then he added quickly, as he
+saw that his sister had something on her mind: "What has happened
+now?"
+
+"I don't know exactly, Dave. But I got word through Ben Basswood's
+cousin that Nat had told Ben he wasn't going to let you ride over him
+this term. I think Nat is jealous because you were so successful in
+that trip to Cave Island."
+
+"Did you learn of anything Nat intended to do?" questioned Roger,
+curiously.
+
+"No, excepting that he said he wasn't going to play second fiddle to
+your crowd any longer. He tried to get into a quarrel with Ben, but
+Ben would have nothing to do with him."
+
+"Did Nat go back to the Hall when it opened?" asked Phil.
+
+"Yes, the same day Ben went back."
+
+"I am not afraid of Nat Poole," declared Dave, stoutly. "He is a
+bully, always was, and I suppose he always will be. I tried to do him
+a favor the last time I saw him--but he doesn't seem to have
+appreciated it."
+
+"Laura!" called a musical voice, from the stair landing.
+
+"Coming, Jessie!" answered Laura. "Now you boys, hurry--lunch will be
+served in a few minutes;" and she left the room.
+
+"So Nat Poole wants to make more trouble, eh?" mused Dave, as he
+resumed packing. "What a chap he is! Why can't he be decent and mind
+his own business?"
+
+"Because he isn't that breed, that's why," answered Phil. "He hates to
+see another fellow become popular. Dave, you take my advice and watch
+him, when we get back to school."
+
+"I'll do it," answered Dave, thoughtfully.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+A GLIMPSE AT THE PAST
+
+
+"Everything ready?"
+
+"Yes, so far as I know."
+
+"Then we are off! Good-by, everybody!"
+
+"Good-by! Take care of yourself, Dave!"
+
+"I will!"
+
+There was a tooting of an automobile horn, a chorus of cries and
+cheers, a waving of caps, and then the big touring car that had been
+drawn up in front of the Wadsworth mansion rolled from the piazza
+steps through the spacious grounds; and Dave Porter and his chums were
+once more on their way to boarding school.
+
+To those who have read the previous volumes of this line of stories
+Dave Porter will need no special introduction. For the benefit of new
+readers allow me to state that Dave was a wideawake American lad, now
+well along in his school years.
+
+When a small child our hero had been found one day, walking along the
+railroad tracks near the town of Crumville. He could tell nothing
+about himself, and as nobody came to claim him, he was taken to the
+local poorhouse, where he remained a number of years. Then he was
+bound out to a broken-down college professor named Caspar Potts, who
+was farming for his health. The professor did what he could for the
+lad, but soon got into difficulties with a mean money-lender named
+Aaron Poole, and would have lost his farm had it not been for
+something out of the ordinary happening.
+
+On the outskirts of the town lived a wealthy jewelry manufacturer,
+Oliver Wadsworth. Mr. Wadsworth had a daughter named Jessie, and one
+day, through an explosion of an automobile tank, the little miss was
+in danger of being burned to death, when Dave came to her assistance.
+This so pleased the Wadsworths that they came not only to the boy's
+aid but also helped Caspar Potts.
+
+"The lad shall go to boarding school and get a good education," said
+Oliver Wadsworth. And how Dave was sent off has already been related
+in the first book of this series, entitled "Dave Porter at Oak Hall."
+At the school he made many warm friends, including Roger Morr, the son
+of a United States senator; Phil Lawrence, the offspring of a wealthy
+shipowner; Buster Beggs, who was fat as he was jolly, and Maurice,
+otherwise "Shadow" Hamilton, who would rather spin yarns than eat. He
+also made some enemies, not the least of whom were Gus Plum, a great
+bully, and Nat Poole, son of the money-lender already mentioned. Plum
+had since reformed, but Nat was as overbearing and dictatorial as
+ever.
+
+The great cloud resting over Dave in those days was the question of
+his identity, and when some of his enemies spoke of him as "that
+poorhouse nobody" he resolved to find out who he really was. Getting a
+strange clew, he set forth on his travels, as described in "Dave
+Porter in the South Seas," where he found his uncle, Dunston Porter.
+Then he came back to Oak Hall, as told of in "Dave Porter's Return to
+School," and next went to the Land of the Midnight Sun, as set forth
+in "Dave Porter in the Far North," where he was gladdened by a
+long-hoped-for meeting with his father.
+
+"They can't say I'm a poorhouse nobody now," he told himself, and went
+back to Oak Hall once again, as set forth in "Dave Porter and His
+Classmates." Here he made more friends than ever, but he likewise made
+enemies, the most bitter of the latter being one Link Merwell, the son
+of a ranch-owner of the West. Merwell did his best to get Dave into
+trouble, but in the end was exposed and had to leave the school.
+
+Vacation time was now at hand, and through Laura Porter, our hero's
+newly-found sister, Dave and his chums were invited to visit some of
+Laura's friends in the Far West. Laura Porter and Jessie Wadsworth
+went along; and what a grand time the young folks had can be realized
+by reading "Dave Porter at Star Ranch." The boys went hunting and
+fishing, and learned to do some broncho-riding, and they likewise fell
+in with Link Merwell again and showed that bully up in his true
+colors.
+
+"Back to the grind now!" said Dave, after the vacation was over, and
+back he did go, to Oak Hall, as told of in "Dave Porter and His
+Rivals." That term was a lively one, for some lads came there from
+another school, and they, led by Nat Poole, tried to run matters to
+suit themselves. But when the newcomers lost an important football
+contest, Oak Hall woke up to the true condition of affairs, and Dave
+and his chums quickly regained their places on the eleven, and then
+won a grand victory. During this time Link Merwell, in company with
+another bad boy named Nick Jasniff, became a student at Rockville
+Military Academy, a rival institution of learning. Both bullies did
+their best to make trouble for our hero, but, as before, he exposed
+them, and this time they had to flee to escape arrest.
+
+When the Christmas holidays came around Dave went back to Crumville,
+where he and his family and old Caspar Potts now lived with the
+Wadsworths. At that time Mr. Wadsworth had at his jewelry works some
+rare diamonds, waiting to be reset. Directly after Christmas came a
+startling robbery. The diamonds were gone, and it was learned by Dave
+that if they were not recovered, not only would Mr. Wadsworth be
+ruined, but that his own father and his uncle would be seriously
+crippled financially, as they had gone on a bond for the return of the
+gems.
+
+At first, clews to the robbers were scarce, but soon Dave made a queer
+discovery, and followed this up by another, as set forth in the volume
+preceding this, entitled, "Dave Porter on Cave Island." He and his
+chums became satisfied that Link Merwell and Nick Jasniff had
+committed the theft, and they followed the evil pair, first to Florida
+and then to Cave Island, so named because of the numerous caverns it
+contained. The evil-doers were caught and the diamonds recovered, but,
+at the last moment, Link Merwell managed to escape.
+
+"Let him go," said Dave. "He acts as if he wanted to turn over a new
+leaf."
+
+"I am glad it wasn't Jasniff," returned Phil. "He is the worse of the
+pair."
+
+"Right you are," agreed Roger.
+
+The senator's son and Phil had accompanied Dave to Crumville, and all
+had received a warm reception at the hands of those who were waiting
+for them. Mr. Wadsworth was delighted to get back the jewels, and
+thanked Dave over and over again for what he had done. Dave's father
+and his uncle were also happy, and as for Laura, she had to hug her
+brother over and over again. Jessie wanted to hug him, too, but her
+maidenly modesty prevented this, but she gave Dave a look and a hand
+squeeze that meant a good deal, for our hero was her hero, too, and
+always had been.
+
+The boys knew they had to go back to Oak Hall, but the older folks had
+insisted that they rest up a bit, after their traveling. So they
+"rested" by going skating and sleigh-riding for the last time that
+season, taking the girls along.
+
+"I've got an idea," said Dave's uncle, one morning, after the snow had
+cleared away. "The roads are so fine just now, what is to prevent my
+taking you to Oak Hall in the touring car? We can make it in a day, I
+think."
+
+"Grand!" shouted Dave.
+
+"Just the thing!" added Phil.
+
+"Couldn't be better," supplemented Roger.
+
+"You can ship your baggage on by express," went on Dunston Porter,
+"and then we'll have room enough to take Laura and Jessie, if they
+want to go along."
+
+"Fine!" burst out Roger, so quickly that it made Phil wink, and then
+the senator's son grew red. "Isn't it all right?" he demanded.
+
+"Sure thing," responded the shipowner's son.
+
+The matter was talked over; and that night it was arranged that the
+two girls should go along on the trip, returning later to Crumville
+with Mr. Porter. Not to tire Laura and Jessie too much, it was decided
+to leave after lunch the next day, stopping over night at Ryeport, and
+finishing the trip to Oak Hall the morning following.
+
+"If only the good weather holds out," said Roger, wistfully. And then
+he added suddenly: "Who is going to sit in front with your uncle,
+Dave?"
+
+"Why, you are, of course," broke in Phil, with a grin.
+
+"Why--er--I----" stammered the senator's son.
+
+"Now, Phil, you know you said you'd like that seat," broke in Dave.
+"He's only fooling you, Roger." And then Roger looked quite satisfied,
+for, it might as well be confessed, Roger and Laura were very friendly
+and liked greatly to be in each other's company. The senator's son had
+a manly regard for Dave's sister--the same kind of a feeling that our
+hero had for dear little Jessie.
+
+The trunks and suit-cases had been shipped off, and the big
+six-cylinder car--a new machine belonging to the Porters--had been
+brought around, with Dunston Porter at the wheel, for the old hunter
+and traveler had taken a strong liking to autoing. The girls and boys
+had piled in, after much handshaking and some kisses, and now the car
+was rolling out of the grounds, leaving Mr. and Mrs. Wadsworth, Dave's
+father, and old Caspar Potts standing on the piazza, waving the
+travelers adieu.
+
+"Take care of yourself, my boy!" shouted Mr. Porter.
+
+"I will, Dad!" called back Dave. "You take it easy till I get back,"
+he added, for he knew that his parent had been working hard of late.
+
+"I hate to see Dave go--he is so full of life and good cheer,"
+murmured Mrs. Wadsworth, with a sigh.
+
+"Best lad in the world," added her husband.
+
+"Yes, yes! The very best!" came in a quavering voice from old Caspar
+Potts, and the tears stood in his glistening eyes.
+
+"I trust he comes through this year at Oak Hall all right," resumed
+Mr. Porter, as, the automobile having disappeared, those left behind
+reentered the house. "He wishes to graduate, you know."
+
+"Don't you think he'll come through?" asked the manufacturer,
+quickly.
+
+"I'm not sure about it. He has lost so much time--on that trip he and
+the others took--you know."
+
+"That is true."
+
+"Oh, Davy will come through, never fear!" cried Caspar Potts. "I know
+the lad. If he makes up his mind--well, it's as good as done," and he
+nodded his whitened head several times. To the old college professor
+who knew him so well, there was no youth quite so clever and manly as
+Dave Porter.
+
+In the meantime the big touring car was leaving Crumville rapidly
+behind. On the front seat, beside Mr. Porter, sat Phil, waving an Oak
+Hall banner and cracking all kinds of jokes. In the back were the two
+girls with Dave and Roger. All were well bundled up, for the air,
+though clear, was still cold.
+
+"Here is where we make fifty miles an hour!" cried the shipowner's
+son, gayly.
+
+"Oh, Phil!" burst out Laura. "Fifty miles an hour! Uncle Dunston,
+don't you dare----"
+
+"Phil is fooling," interrupted her uncle.
+
+"That's it--I made a mistake--we are to go at sixty miles an hour,
+just as soon as we pass the next chicken coop. We won't dare do it
+before, for fear of blowing the coop over. We----"
+
+"Why not make it seventy-five miles while you are at it," broke in
+Dave. "Nothing like going the limit." And at this there was a general
+laugh.
+
+"There is a bad turn ahead," said Dunston Porter, a minute later.
+"They have torn up part of the road around the hill. We'll have to
+take it pretty slowly."
+
+The touring car crept up the hill, past several heaps of dirt, and
+then started to come down on the other side. Here there was a sharp
+curve, with heavy bushes on both sides. Mr. Porter blew the horn loud
+and long, to warn anybody ahead that he was coming.
+
+"Look out!" yelled Phil, suddenly. But the warning was not necessary,
+for Dunston Porter saw the danger and so did the others. A horse and
+buggy were just ahead on the torn-up highway, going in the same
+direction as themselves. The horse was prancing and rearing and the
+driver was sawing at the lines in an effort to quiet the steed. It
+looked as if there might be a collision.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A TALK OF THE FUTURE
+
+
+The girls screamed and the boys uttered various cries and words of
+advice. Dave leaned forward, to jam on the hand-brake, but his uncle
+was ahead of him in the action. The foot-brake was already down, and
+from the rear wheels came a shrill squeaking, as the bands gripped the
+hubs. But the hill was a steep one and the big touring car, well
+laden, continued to move downward, although but slowly.
+
+"Keep over! Keep over to the right!" yelled Dunston Porter, to the
+driver of the buggy. But the man was fully as excited as his horse,
+and he continued to saw on the reins, until the turnout occupied the
+very center of the narrow and torn-up highway.
+
+It was a time of peril, and a man less used to critical moments than
+Dunston Porter might have lost his head completely. But this old
+traveler and hunter, who had faced grizzly bears in the West and lions
+in Africa, managed to keep cool. He saw a chance to pass on the right
+of the turnout ahead, and like a flash he let go on the two brakes
+and turned on a little power. Forward bounded the big car, the right
+wheels on the very edge of a water-gully. The left mud-guards scraped
+the buggy, and the man driving it uttered a yell of fright. Then the
+touring car went on, to come to a halt at the bottom of the hill, a
+short distance away.
+
+"Hello!" exclaimed Dave, as he looked back at the turnout that had
+caused the trouble. "It's Mr. Poole!"
+
+"You mean Nat's father?" queried Phil.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Hi, you! What do you mean by running into me?" stormed the
+money-lender, savagely, as he presently managed to get his steed under
+control and came down beside the touring car.
+
+"What do you mean by blocking the road, Mr. Poole?" returned Dunston
+Porter, coldly.
+
+"I didn't block the road!"
+
+"You certainly did. If we had run into you, it would have been your
+fault."
+
+"Nonsense! You passed me on the wrong side."
+
+"Because you didn't give me room to pass on the other side."
+
+"And your horn scared my horse."
+
+"I don't see how that is my fault. Your horse ought to be used to
+auto-horns by this time."
+
+"You've scraped all the paint off my carriage, and I had it painted
+only last week," went on the money-lender, warming up. "It's an
+outrage how you auto fellows think you own the whole road!"
+
+"I won't discuss the matter now, Mr. Poole," answered Dunston Porter,
+stiffly. "I think it was your fault entirely. But if you think
+otherwise, come and see me when I get back from this trip, which will
+be in four days." And without waiting for more words, Dave's uncle
+started up the touring car, and Aaron Poole was soon left far behind.
+
+"If he isn't a peach!" murmured Roger, slangily. "It's easy to see
+where Nat gets his meanness from. He is simply a chip off the old
+block."
+
+"He's a pretty big chip," returned Phil, dryly.
+
+"I don't see how he can blame us," said Dave. "We simply couldn't pass
+him on the left. If we had tried, we'd have gone in the ditch sure.
+And the scraping we did to his buggy amounts to next to nothing."
+
+"I am not afraid of what he'll do," said Dunston Porter. "A couple of
+dollars will fix up those scratches, and if he is so close-fisted I'll
+foot the bill. But I'll give him a piece of my mind for blocking the
+road."
+
+"But his horse was frightened, Uncle Dunston," said Laura.
+
+"A little, yes, but if Poole hadn't got scared himself he might have
+drawn closer to the side of the road. I think he was more frightened
+than the horse."
+
+"He certainly was," declared Phil. "When we scraped the buggy his face
+got as white as chalk, and he almost dropped the lines."
+
+"He'll hate all of us worse than ever for this," was Dave's comment.
+
+"I am not afraid of him," answered the uncle.
+
+On and on sped the big touring car, and soon the stirring incident on
+the road was, for the time being, forgotten. Crumville had been left
+far behind, and now they passed through one pretty village after
+another. On the broad, level stretches Dunston Porter allowed the boys
+to "spell" him at the wheel, for each knew how to run an automobile.
+
+"Twenty miles more to Ryeport!" cried Dave, as they came to a
+crossroads and read a signboard.
+
+"And it's just half-past five," added the senator's son, consulting
+his watch. "We'll get there in plenty of time to wash up and have a
+fine dinner."
+
+"And, say, maybe we won't do a thing to that table!" murmured Phil,
+smacking his lips.
+
+"Oh, you boys are always hungry," was Jessie's comment.
+
+"Well, you know, we've got to grow," answered Phil, with a grin.
+
+"I think I'll enjoy eating after such a long ride," said Laura. "The
+fresh air certainly does give one an appetite."
+
+"I think I'll order bread and milk for all hands," remarked Dunston
+Porter, with a sly smile.
+
+"Bread and milk!" murmured Jessie, in dismay.
+
+"Sure. It's famous for your complexion."
+
+"A juicy steak for mine!" cried Dave. "Steak, and vegetables, and
+salad, and pudding or pie."
+
+"Well, I guess that will do for me, too," said his uncle, simply. "You
+see, I suppose I'll have to eat to keep you company," and he smiled
+again.
+
+"Uncle Dunston, what a tease you are!" murmured Laura. "Your appetite
+is just as good as that of any of the boys."
+
+Dave was at the wheel, and he sent the touring car along the smooth
+highway at a speed of twenty miles an hour. He would have liked to
+drive faster, but his uncle would not permit this.
+
+"The law says twenty miles an hour, and I believe in obeying the law,"
+said Dunston Porter. "Besides, you can never tell what may happen, and
+it is best to have your car under control."
+
+The truth of the latter remark was demonstrated less than five
+minutes later, when they came to another crossroads. Without warning
+of any kind, a racing car came rushing swiftly from one direction and
+a coach from the other. Dave could not cross ahead of the racing car,
+and the approach of the coach from the opposite direction cut him off
+from turning with the car. So all that was left to do was to jam on
+both brakes, which he did, and then, as the racing car shot past, he
+released the wheels and went on, just ahead of the coach. But it was a
+narrow escape all around, and the girls and Roger leaped to their feet
+in alarm.
+
+"Phew! see them streak along!" was Phil's comment, gazing after the
+racing car, which was fast disappearing in a cloud of dust.
+
+"They ought to be arrested!" was Laura's comment. "Why, we might have
+been smashed up!"
+
+"Good work, Davy!" cried Dunston Porter. "You did just the right
+thing."
+
+"Even if that coach driver is shaking his fist at us, eh?" answered
+Dave, and he bobbed his head in the direction of the coach, which had
+hauled up but was now going on.
+
+"If you had been going a little faster it would have been all up with
+us," said Phil, with a grave shake of his head.
+
+"Let me take the wheel now," said Dunston Porter, quietly, and Dave
+slid out of the driving-seat willingly enough, for the excitement had
+left him somewhat limp.
+
+Half-past six found them in Ryeport, and a few minutes later they
+rolled up to the National Hotel, and the girls and boys got out, while
+Mr. Porter took the car around to the garage. They had sent word ahead
+for rooms, and all soon felt at home. The girls had a fine apartment
+on the second floor, front, with Dunston Porter next to them, and the
+three boys in a big room across the hallway.
+
+When the young people assembled in the dining-room, after brushing and
+washing up, a surprise awaited them. They had a table to themselves,
+ordered by Dunston Porter, and decorated with a big bouquet of roses
+and carnations. A full course dinner was served.
+
+"Oh, this is lovely!" cried Jessie, as she caught sight of the
+flowers.
+
+"Just grand, Uncle Dunston!" added Laura. And then she added, in a
+lower voice: "If there wasn't such a crowd, I'd give you a big hug for
+this!"
+
+"And so would I," added Jessie.
+
+"All right, that's one you owe me, girls, remember that," answered the
+old hunter and traveler.
+
+They spent over an hour at the table, enjoying the bountiful spread
+provided, and telling stories and jokes. The boys were in their
+element, and kept the girls laughing almost constantly.
+
+"We'll be back to the grind day after to-morrow, so we had better make
+the best of it," was the way Dave expressed himself.
+
+After the meal, Dunston Porter went out to give directions concerning
+the touring car, and Phil accompanied him. This left our hero and
+Roger alone with the two girls. They sought out the hotel parlor,
+which they found deserted, and Dave and Jessie walked to the far end,
+where there was an alcove, while Roger and Laura went to the piano.
+
+"Dave, won't it be hard work to go back to the grind, as you call it?"
+questioned Jessie, as both stood looking out of the window.
+
+"In a way, yes, but it's what a fellow has got to expect, Jessie," he
+returned. "A chap can't get an education without working for it."
+
+"I trust you pass with high honors," the girl went on, with a hopeful
+look into his face.
+
+"I'll try my best. Of course, I've lost some time--going to Cave
+Island and all that. Maybe I'll flunk."
+
+"Oh, Dave, that would be--be----" Jessie could not go on.
+
+"As soon as I get back I'm going to buckle down, and get to be a
+regular greasy grind, as they call 'em. I've made up my mind to one
+thing I'm afraid the others won't like."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"I'm going to cut the baseball nine, if I can. It takes too much time
+from our studies."
+
+"Won't that be easy?"
+
+"I don't know. I made quite a record, you know. Maybe the crowd will
+insist on it that I play. Of course, I don't want to see Oak Hall lose
+any games. But I guess they'll have players enough--with all the new
+students coming in."
+
+"And if you do graduate, Dave, what then?" asked Jessie, after a
+pause. This question had been on her mind a long time, but she had
+hesitated about asking it.
+
+"To tell the honest truth, Jessie, I don't know," answered Dave, very
+slowly. "I've thought and thought, but I can't seem to hit the right
+thing. Your father and Professor Potts seem to think I ought to go to
+college, and I rather incline that way myself. But then I think of
+going to some technical institution, and of taking up civil
+engineering, or mining, or something like that. Uncle Dunston knew a
+young fellow who became a civil engineer and went to South America and
+laid out a railroad across the Andes Mountains, and he knew another
+young fellow who took up mining and made a big thing of a mine in
+Montana. That sort of thing appeals to me, and it appeals to Dad,
+too."
+
+"But it would take you so far from home, Dave!" and Jessie caught hold
+of his arm as she spoke, as if afraid he was going to leave that
+minute.
+
+"I know it, but--er--but--would you care, Jessie?" he stammered.
+
+"Care? Of course, I'd care!" she replied, and suddenly began to blush.
+"We'd all care."
+
+"But would you care very much?" he insisted, lowering his voice.
+"Because, if you would, I'd tell you something."
+
+"What would you tell me?" she asked.
+
+"The young fellow who went to South America as a civil engineer took
+his wife with him."
+
+"Oh, Dave!" and for the moment Jessie turned her head away.
+
+"If I went so far off, I'd want somebody with me, Jessie. A fellow
+would be awfully lonely otherwise."
+
+"I--I suppose that would be so."
+
+"If you thought enough of a fellow, would you go to South America, or
+Montana, or Africa with him?" And Dave looked Jessie full in the
+face.
+
+"I'd go to the end of the world with him," she answered, with sudden
+boldness.
+
+Then Mr. Porter and Phil came back, and the conversation became
+general.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+MR. JOB HASKERS'S DOINGS
+
+
+"And now for Oak Hall!"
+
+It was Dave who uttered the words, the next morning, after a good
+night's rest and an early breakfast. The big touring car had been
+brought around by Dunston Porter, and the young folks had climbed in
+and stowed away the limited baggage they carried. All felt in
+excellent spirits, and Dave was particularly gay. What Jessie had said
+the evening before, and the way she had said it, still hung in his
+mind. She was a splendid girl, and if it was in him to do it, he was
+going to make himself worthy of her. He was still young, so he did not
+dwell long over these things, but his regard for her was entirely
+proper, and likely to make him do his best in his endeavors.
+
+Phil had asked for permission to run the car for a while and took the
+wheel as soon as Ryeport was left behind. The shipowner's son knew how
+to handle an automobile almost as well as any of them, but he had one
+fault, which was, that he did not steer out of the way of sharp
+stones and like things calculated to bring on punctures and
+blow-outs.
+
+"My, what a glorious morning!" exclaimed Laura, as they bowled along
+over the smooth roads.
+
+"Couldn't be better," answered Roger. "Wish we were going on all day!"
+he added.
+
+"So do I," added Dave. They expected to reach Oakdale by noon, get
+dinner there, and then run up to the school.
+
+"Not too fast, Phil," warned Mr. Porter, as the shipowner's son "let
+her out a bit," as he expressed it. "You don't know what sort of a
+road you've got beyond the turn."
+
+"We'll soon be coming to some roads we know," answered Phil. "Those we
+used to travel on our bicycles."
+
+They passed through several towns and villages. Then they reached a
+crossroads, and here some men and a steam roller were at work, and the
+road was closed. One of the workmen motioned for them to take the road
+on the left.
+
+"Must be a road around," said Dunston Porter. "It doesn't look very
+good, but you can try it. Shall I take the wheel?"
+
+"Oh, I can run the car easily enough," answered Phil.
+
+For half a mile they went on without trouble, through a rolling
+country where the scenery was very fine. Then they reached a point
+where the road was full of loose stones.
+
+"Be careful!" cried Mr. Porter.
+
+They rolled on, past a pretty farmhouse and some barns. They were just
+on the point of making another turn when there came a sudden bang!
+from under the car, and the turnout swayed to one side of the road.
+Phil threw out the clutch and put on the brakes, and they came to a
+standstill. Then the driver shut off the engine.
+
+"What is the matter?" queried Jessie.
+
+"A blow-out, I guess," answered Dave. "We'll soon see."
+
+Dunston Porter and the boys got down to the ground and made an
+examination. The shoe of the rear left wheel had been badly cut by the
+sharp stones and the inner tube had been blown out through the cut.
+
+"We'll have to put on one of the other shoes," said Mr. Porter. They
+carried two with them, besides half a dozen inner tubes.
+
+"All right, here is where we get to work!" cried Dave. "Somebody time
+us, please," and he started in by getting off his coat and cuffs and
+donning a working jumper. His uncle quickly followed suit, while Phil
+and Roger got out the lifting-jack and some tools.
+
+The girls stood watching the proceedings for a while and then strolled
+back towards the farmhouse. The boys and Mr. Porter became so
+engrossed in putting on a new inner tube and a shoe that they did not
+notice their absence. The new shoe fitted the rim of the wheel rather
+tightly and they had all they could do to get it into place.
+
+"Phew! this is work and no mistake!" murmured Roger. "I wonder why
+they can't get tires that won't blow out or go down."
+
+"Maybe some day they will have them," answered Dunston Porter.
+
+"I reckon this is all my fault," put in Phil, ruefully. "I must have
+gone over some extra sharp stone, and it cut like a knife."
+
+"Oh, such accidents are liable to happen to anybody," answered Dave.
+He looked at his watch. "Twenty-five minutes, and we haven't blown it
+up yet! No record job this time."
+
+"Thank fortune we've got a patent pump to do the pumping for us,"
+remarked his uncle. Pumping tires by hand he found a very disagreeable
+task.
+
+At last the shoe and tube were in place and the pump was set in
+motion. Dave watched the gauge, and when it was high enough he shut
+off the air. The tools were put away, and they were ready to go on
+again.
+
+"The girls went back to that farmhouse," said the senator's son,
+pointing to a small cottage.
+
+"Let us run back and pick them up, and wash our hands at the well."
+
+Once in front of the house, Dunston Porter, who was at the wheel,
+sounded the horn. At the same time the boys made for the well, which
+stood between the house and one of the barns.
+
+"Maybe the girls went inside," remarked Dave, as he looked in vain for
+them.
+
+"Must be somewhere around," returned Phil.
+
+All washed up, using soap and towels carried in the car. Then Dave
+went to the door of the farmhouse and knocked. In answer to the
+summons Laura appeared.
+
+"Oh, Dave, come in!" she cried. "I want you to meet the lady here."
+
+Wondering what his sister wanted, our hero stepped into the
+sitting-room, which was small and plainly but neatly furnished. In a
+rocking-chair sat an elderly woman, pale and careworn.
+
+"Mrs. Breen, this is my brother," said Laura. "And these are his
+school chums," she added, nodding towards Phil and Roger.
+
+"How do you do, boys?" said the woman, in a thin, trembling voice.
+
+"We just told her we were bound for Oak Hall," said Jessie, who was
+also present. "And she says she knows somebody there."
+
+"She knows Mr. Job Haskers," finished Laura.
+
+"Mr. Haskers!" repeated Dave, mentioning the name of one of the
+teachers--a dictatorial individual nobody liked, and who was allowed
+to keep his position mainly because of his abilities as an instructor.
+The chums had had more than one dispute with Job Haskers, and all
+wished that he would leave the school.
+
+"Yes, yes, I know him," answered Mrs. Breen, nodding her head gravely
+and thoughtfully. "He is a great scholar--a very great scholar," and
+she nodded again. She was not well and her mind did not appear to be
+overly bright. She lived alone in the cottage, a neighboring farmer
+taking care of her few acres of ground for her.
+
+"Dave, come here," whispered Laura, and led her brother to a corner of
+the room. "Mrs. Breen tells me that Mr. Haskers owes her money--that
+he used to board with her and that he borrowed some--and she says he
+writes that he can't pay her because he gets so little salary, and
+that sometimes he has to wait a long while himself."
+
+"How much is it?" asked Dave, with interest. He remembered how
+close-fisted Job Haskers had been on more than one occasion.
+
+"Nearly two hundred dollars, so she says."
+
+"He ought to be able to pay that, Laura. I think he gets a fair
+salary--in fact, I am sure of it--and I am also pretty sure that
+Doctor Clay doesn't keep him waiting for his money."
+
+"It is too bad! She looks so helpless and so much in need," murmured
+the girl.
+
+"I'll find out about this," answered Dave.
+
+He sat down, as did the others, and soon had the elderly lady telling
+her story in detail. It was not very long. Job Haskers had boarded
+with her one summer, just before obtaining his position at Oak Hall,
+and he owed her sixty dollars for this. During the time he had spent
+with her he had spoken of a school-book he was going to publish that
+would bring him in much money, and she had loaned him a hundred and
+twenty-five dollars for this. But she had never seen the school-book,
+nor had he ever paid back a cent. His plea, when she had written to
+him, had been that his pay was poor and that he had to wait a long
+time to get money, and that his publishers had not yet gotten around
+to selling his book.
+
+"I never heard of any book he got out," said Roger. "And I think I
+would hear if there was such a book."
+
+"That's so," added Phil. "Old Haskers would be so proud of it he would
+want everybody to know."
+
+"It is certainly a shame he doesn't pay this lady, if he has the
+money," was Dunston Porter's comment. "Did he give you a note?" he
+asked of Mrs. Breen.
+
+"He wrote out some kind of a paper and was going to give it to me. But
+I never got it."
+
+"He's a swindler, that's what he is!" murmured Phil, wrathfully.
+
+"It looks that way," answered Dave, in an equally low tone.
+
+"He knows this lady is next to helpless and he intends to do her out
+of the money!"
+
+"He ought to be sued," exclaimed Roger.
+
+"You have no note, or other writing about the money?" questioned Mr.
+Porter.
+
+"I have his letters," answered the elderly lady. "They are in the
+bureau yonder." And she pointed to an ancient chest of drawers.
+
+"Shall I get them?" asked Jessie, for she saw that it was a task for
+the old lady to move around.
+
+"If you will, my dear. I am so stiff it is hard to get up."
+
+Both girls went to the chest of drawers and brought out a small box of
+letters. Mrs. Breen put on her glasses and fumbled them over and
+brought forth three communications which were, as the boys recognized,
+in Job Haskers's well-known jerky handwriting. She passed them over to
+be read, and all present perused them with interest.
+
+The contents, however, were disappointing, especially to the boys and
+Dunston Porter, who had hoped to find something by which legally to
+hold the school-teacher. Not once did Job Haskers mention that he owed
+Mrs. Breen any money. He simply stated that he regretted he could do
+nothing for her, that times were hard, and that his income was limited
+and hard to get. He said as little as possible, and the tone of the
+communications showed that he hoped he would hear no more from the old
+lady who had done what she could to aid him.
+
+"I think this is the limit!" said Dave to his uncle. "Don't you think
+he ought to be sued?"
+
+"I don't know about suing him, Dave; but I think this ought to be put
+in a lawyer's hands."
+
+"He makes money enough to pay this lady," said Phil. "Say, I've a good
+mind to give him a piece of my mind!" he added, hotly.
+
+"I'll look into this when I come back this way," said Dunston Porter,
+after a little more talk. "Perhaps I can get one of our lawyers to
+prod this Haskers a little, and also state the case to Doctor Clay."
+
+"Oh, will you do that, Uncle Dunston?" cried Laura, brightening, for
+she, as well as all of the others, felt sorry for Mrs. Breen, who
+seemed so poor, old, and lonesome.
+
+"Yes, I'll do it. And now we had better be on our way,--if we want to
+reach Oakdale by noon," went on Mr. Porter.
+
+The boys went out, followed by Jessie. Laura lingered, to whisper
+something in her uncle's ear. Dunston Porter nodded, and then Laura
+joined the others.
+
+"Mrs. Breen, I will be back in a day or two, to see you about this
+money affair," said Mr. Porter, when he and the old lady were alone.
+"In the meantime, as you were so kind as to take the young ladies in
+while we were mending our machine, allow me to make you a little
+present," and as he finished he placed a five-dollar bill in her lap.
+
+"Oh!" she cried, taking up the banknote. "Why, it's five dollars! I--I
+can't really take all that money!"
+
+"Oh, yes, you can," said Mr. Porter, smiling. "Use it as you see fit,
+and remember that I'll be back, and we'll do what we can to get that
+money from Mr. Haskers."
+
+"You are very, very kind!" murmured the old lady, and tears stood in
+her eyes. The past winter had been a severe one for her, and she had
+had a hard struggle to get along.
+
+"Good-by!" shouted the girls and boys to her, and she waved her hand
+to them. Then the automobile started off once more, in the direction
+of Oakdale.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+AT OAK HALL ONCE MORE
+
+
+"Hurrah! here we are at Oakdale at last!"
+
+"Old town looks natural, doesn't it?"
+
+"So it does, Roger. See any of the fellows?"
+
+"Not yet, Dave. But we are sure to meet somebody, even if it is a
+school-day," went on the senator's son.
+
+"Uncle Dunston, let me take the auto around to the hotel," said our
+hero. "I know the streets better than you do. We have to make several
+turns."
+
+"All right, Dave," was the ready answer, and Dunston Porter arose and
+allowed his nephew to crowd into the driver's seat.
+
+The run to the town in the vicinity of which Oak Hall was located had
+been made without further incident. On the way the party had talked
+over Mrs. Breen's affairs, and Dunston Porter had promised to take the
+matter up, through his lawyer.
+
+"I think it best that our names don't appear in the case," said he.
+"Otherwise, Mr. Haskers might not treat you so well during the term."
+
+"He never treats us well, anyway," grumbled Phil. "But you are right,
+don't mention our names."
+
+On this late winter day the town looked rather dreary, but the young
+folks were in high spirits, and Dave, with a grand flourish, ran the
+car up to one of the best hotels the place afforded. As before, word
+had been sent ahead that they were coming, and the host of the resort
+came out to meet them.
+
+"We'll have dinner ready inside of quarter of an hour," he said. "Come
+in and make yourselves at home."
+
+The repast was fully as good as the dinner served at Ryeport, and
+everybody enjoyed it greatly.
+
+"And now for the Hall!" cried Dave.
+
+"Glad to leave us?" asked Jessie, half-reproachfully.
+
+"You know better than to ask such a question," he replied. "But if we
+have got to get back to the grind, why, we might as well do it."
+
+"And I'm a bit anxious to see how the old place looks," added the
+senator's son.
+
+"Dave, you can run the car to the Hall, if you wish," said Mr. Porter,
+feeling sure the youth would like to do that very thing.
+
+"All right."
+
+The touring automobile was brought around, and they were just getting
+in when there came a sudden hail from across the way.
+
+"Hello, there, everybody!"
+
+"It's Dave Porter, and Roger, and Phil!" said somebody else.
+
+"Why, how are you, Shadow!" cried our hero. "And how are you, Buster?"
+he added, as Maurice Hamilton and Buster Beggs came across the road to
+greet them.
+
+"Fine!" puffed Buster, who was very fat and jolly. "Only Shadow has
+been walking the feet off of me!" And then the stout youth shook hands
+all around.
+
+"Now, just to hear that!" cried Shadow, as he, too, shook hands. "Why,
+all we did was to walk from the Hall to here."
+
+"And up one street and down another for half an hour," burst in
+Buster.
+
+"Say, that puts me in mind of a story!" cried Shadow, who was noted
+for his yarn-spinning weakness. "Once two men started to walk----"
+
+"Stow it!" came from three of the other lads in concert.
+
+"It's too early yet to tell stories, Shadow," said Dave, with a smile.
+"You can tell them to-night. Tell us now, is there anything new at the
+Hall?"
+
+"There sure is."
+
+"What?" asked Phil and Roger.
+
+"The wild man."
+
+"Oh, has he turned up again?" asked the girls, with interest.
+
+"Twice--yesterday morning and this morning," said Buster.
+
+"He didn't turn up at all, Buster," interposed Shadow. "When you start
+to tell a story, why don't you tell it straight?"
+
+"Oh, you tell it," grumbled the fat boy. "You have that sort of thing
+down to a science."
+
+"There isn't very much to tell," went on Shadow Hamilton. "He left his
+mark, that's all."
+
+"Left his mark?" queried Dave.
+
+"That's it--wide, blue marks. He must have about a ton of blue
+chalk."
+
+"Say, Shadow, you are talking in riddles," burst out the shipowner's
+son. "Give it to us in plain United States, can't you?"
+
+"Sure I can. Well, this wild man visited the school yesterday morning
+and this morning, before anybody was up. The first time he went into
+the big classroom and took some books, and the next time he visited
+the kitchen and pantry and took some grub--I beg the ladies' pardon--I
+should have said food--a ham, a chicken, and some doughnuts."
+
+"And the blue chalk----?" queried Mr. Porter.
+
+"I was coming to that. In the classroom he left his mark--a big
+circle, with a cross inside, in blue chalk."
+
+"And how do you know that is the mark of the wild man?" asked Laura.
+
+"Oh, we found that out some time ago," answered Shadow. "He seems to
+have a mania for blue chalk, and even puts it on his face sometimes,
+and he chalks down that circle with the cross wherever he goes."
+
+"Then, if he does that, why can't they trail him down?" asked Dave.
+
+"Because he is like a flea--when you try to put your hands on him he
+isn't there," answered Shadow. "And say, that puts me in mind of
+another story. Once three boys were----"
+
+"That will do, Shadow!" cried Roger. "About the wild man is enough for
+the present."
+
+"Have they any idea who he is?" asked Dunston Porter.
+
+"Not the slightest," answered Buster. "And they don't know where he
+keeps himself, although it must be in the woods near the school."
+
+"Oh, Dave, I hope he doesn't harm anybody!" cried Jessie, with a
+shiver.
+
+"Are you boys ready to go back to the Hall?" asked Dunston Porter.
+
+"I am," responded Buster, readily.
+
+"So am I," added the story-teller of the school.
+
+"Then we'll take you along, provided you don't mind being crowded."
+
+"We won't mind, if the young ladies won't," returned the fat youth.
+
+"Oh, come in by all means!" cried Laura.
+
+"We'll make room somehow," added Jessie.
+
+A minute later the big car started on the way to Oak Hall, with Dave
+at the wheel and his uncle beside him.
+
+"Looks familiar, doesn't it?" called out Roger, as they spun along the
+turnpike.
+
+"It certainly does!" answered Roger, and then he added, "What do you
+say to the old school song?"
+
+"Fine!" came back the answer, and then the senator's son commenced a
+song they all knew well, which was sung to the tune of "Auld Lang
+Syne." The girls knew the song, too, and readily joined in.
+
+ "Oak Hall we never shall forget,
+ No matter where we roam;
+ It is the very best of schools,
+ To us it's just like home!
+ Then give three cheers, and let them ring
+ Throughout this world so wide,
+ To let the people know that we
+ Elect to here abide!"
+
+Loud and clear over the cool air sounded the song, and it was sung
+several times. Then, just as the car rolled into the grounds of the
+school, the boys gave one of the Hall yells, and Dave honked the horn
+of the automobile loud and long.
+
+"Hello! It's the Porter crowd!"
+
+"Welcome to our city!"
+
+"How about Cave Island, Dave! Did you bring it with you?"
+
+"Heard you caught Jasniff and Merwell, Roger. Good for you!"
+
+"Say, Phil, you're as sunburnt as if you'd been to the seashore for a
+summer."
+
+So the talk ran on as half a dozen students flocked up to the car. The
+afternoon session was over, and despite the chilliness many lads were
+out on the campus. Many knew the girls--having met them at some
+athletic games and at a commencement--and those that did not were glad
+of a chance for an introduction.
+
+"I am real glad to see you back, boys," said Doctor Hasmer Clay, the
+head of the institution, as he appeared and shook hands. "Glad to see
+you, Mr. Porter, and also the young ladies," he added. "So you came
+all the way by automobile, eh? It must have been a delightful trip."
+
+"It was," answered Dave's uncle.
+
+All went inside, and the visitors were permitted to accompany Dave and
+his chums to their dormitory. The boys' baggage had already arrived,
+so it did not take the lads long to settle down.
+
+"And now we'll have to start back," said Dunston Porter, a little
+later. "Dave, take good care of yourself, and make a good record."
+
+"I'll do my best, Uncle Dunston."
+
+"And don't let that wild man get you," added Jessie, as she took his
+hand and allowed him to hold her own, perhaps longer than was
+necessary.
+
+"And don't forget to write," put in his sister.
+
+"Oh, I'll not forget that!" answered Dave, with a smile, both to his
+sister and to the girl whom he regarded so warmly.
+
+It was a trying moment--this parting--but it was soon over, and, with
+Dunston Porter at the wheel, and the girls and boys waving their
+hands, the touring car left the Oak Hall grounds, on its return
+journey to Crumville.
+
+"Well, here we are, as the pug dog said to the looking-glass, when he
+walked behind it to look for himself," remarked Phil, dropping into a
+chair.
+
+"I suppose it will take us a few days to get settled down," answered
+Dave, resting on the top of a table. "I don't feel much like unpacking
+yet, do you?"
+
+"No, let us wait until to-night or to-morrow," returned Roger,
+dropping on one of the beds. He was still thinking of how clear and
+deep Laura's eyes had appeared when she had said good-by to him.
+
+"I really hope you will not be homesick," said a girlish voice, and
+Bertram Vane, one of the students, appeared from the next room and sat
+down on a chair. "Homesickness is such an awfully cruel thing, don't
+you know."
+
+"No homesickness here, Polly," answered Dave. "I guess we are just
+tired out, that's all. We've done a lot of traveling since we left Oak
+Hall."
+
+"So I understand. Wasn't it dreadful that Jasniff and Merwell should
+prove such villains!" went on the girlish student. "Weren't you really
+afraid to--er--to touch them?"
+
+"Not much!" cried Phil. "I am only sorry Merwell got away."
+
+"But you got the diamonds, I heard?" put in Sam Day, who was another
+of the chums.
+
+"We did."
+
+At that moment came musical sounds from another room near by--the
+sounds of somebody strumming on a guitar.
+
+"Hello, there's Luke Watson!" cried Roger. "Hi, come in with that
+guitar and give us a tune, Luke!" he called out.
+
+"Thought I might cheer you up," said Luke, appearing. "How would you
+like me to play 'The Girl I Left Behind Me,' or something like that?"
+
+"Make it 'Oh, Those Eyes So Tender!'" suggested Buster.
+
+"Or else that beautiful ditty called, 'He Loved, But Had to Leave
+Her,'" suggested Shadow. "Say, that puts me in mind of a story," he
+went on. "This is true, too, though you may not believe it. A young
+man went to call on his best girl and took a bouquet of flowers along.
+The bouquet was done up in several thicknesses of tissue paper. Some
+of his friends who were jokers got hold of that bouquet and fixed it
+up for him. He gave it to the girl, and when she took off the tissue
+paper what do you suppose she found? A bunch of celery and some soup
+greens! He was so fussed up he didn't know what to say, and he got out
+in a hurry."
+
+"Hurrah for the chaps who fixed up the bouquet!" cried Phil. "But
+start up, Luke. Something in which we can all join."
+
+"But not too loud," cautioned Roger. "Old Haskers might not like----"
+
+"Oh, hang old Haskers!" interrupted Phil. "He can't----"
+
+"Sh-sh!" came from Dave, suddenly, and silence fell on the group of
+boys. All turned towards the doorway leading to the hall. There, on
+the threshold, stood the instructor just mentioned, Mr. Job Haskers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+PHIL SHOWS HIS STUBBORNNESS
+
+
+Not one of the boys knew how to act or what to say. All wondered if
+Job Haskers had heard his name mentioned.
+
+If the ill-natured instructor had heard, he made no mention of it. He
+looked sharply about the apartment and waved his hand to Luke.
+
+"Watson, how many times have I told you that you make too much noise
+with your musical instruments?" he said, harshly. "You disturb the
+students who wish to study."
+
+"I thought this was the recreation hour, Mr. Haskers," answered the
+lad, who loved to play the guitar and banjo.
+
+"True, but I think we get altogether too much of your music," growled
+the instructor. He turned to Dave, Roger, and Phil. "So you are back
+at last. It is high time, if you wish to go on with your regular
+classes."
+
+"We told Doctor Clay that we would make up what we have missed, Mr.
+Haskers," answered Dave, in a gentle tone, for he knew how easy it
+was to start a quarrel with the man before him. As Phil had once said,
+Job Haskers was always walking around "with a chip on his shoulder."
+
+"And how soon will you make up the lessons in my class?" demanded the
+instructor.
+
+"I think I can do it inside of ten days or two weeks."
+
+"That won't suit me, Porter. You'll have to do better. I'll give each
+of you just a week--one week, understand? If you can't make the
+lessons up in that time I'll have to drop you to the next lower
+class."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Haskers!" burst out Roger. He knew what that meant only too
+well. They would not have a chance to graduate that coming June.
+
+"I'll not argue the point, Morr. I'll give you a week, starting
+to-morrow. When you come to the classroom I will show you just what
+you have to make up." Job Haskers looked around the room. "Now, then,
+remember, I want less noise here." And so speaking, he turned on his
+heel and walked away.
+
+For a moment there was silence, as the boys looked at each other and
+listened to the sounds of Mr. Haskers's retreating footsteps. Then
+Phil made a face and punched one of the bed pillows, savagely.
+
+"Now, wouldn't that make a saint turn in his grave?" he remarked.
+"Isn't he the real, kind, generous soul!"
+
+"He ought to be ducked in the river!" was Buster's comment. "Why, how
+can anybody make up the lessons you've missed in a week? It's absurd!
+Say, do you know what I'd do if I were you? I'd complain to the
+doctor."
+
+"So would I," added Sam Day. "Two weeks would be short enough."
+
+"I'll not complain to the doctor," returned Phil. "But I know what I
+will do," he added, quickly, as though struck by a sudden idea.
+
+"What?" came from several.
+
+"Never mind what. But I'll wager he'll give us more time."
+
+"I guess I know what you think of doing," said Dave. "But take my
+advice and don't, Phil."
+
+"Humph! I'll see about it, Dave. He isn't going to run such a thing as
+this up my back without a kick," grumbled the shipowner's son.
+
+"Well, wait first and see if he doesn't change his mind, or if we
+can't get through in the week," cautioned Dave.
+
+"What was Phil going to do?" questioned Luke, strumming lowly over the
+strings of his guitar.
+
+"Oh, don't let's talk about it," cried Dave, before Roger could speak.
+He did not wish the Mrs. Breen affair to become public property.
+"Tell us about the wild man, and all the other things that have
+happened here since we went away."
+
+"And you tell us all about Cave Island and those stolen jewels," said
+Buster.
+
+Thereafter the conversation became general, Dave and his chums telling
+of their quest of the Carwith diamonds, and the other students
+relating the particulars of a feast they had had in one of the
+dormitories, and of various efforts made to catch the so-called wild
+man.
+
+"I don't believe he is what one would call a wild man," said Ben
+Basswood, Dave's old chum from home, who had just come in from some
+experiments in the school laboratory. "He is simple-minded and very
+shy. He gets excited once in a while, like when he threw those
+mud-balls."
+
+"Well, you ought to know," remarked Buster. "Ben is the only fellow
+here who has talked to the man," he explained.
+
+"When was that, Ben?" questioned Dave.
+
+"That was when the man first appeared," answered the Crumville lad. "I
+didn't find out until yesterday that he was the wild man, and then it
+was because of that blue chalk he uses. I met him in the woods when I
+was out during that last snow, looking for rabbits with my shotgun. I
+came across him, sitting on a rock, looking at an old newspaper. He
+had some of the blue chalk in his hand and had marked a circle with a
+cross on the rock. He asked me where I was going, and told me to look
+out and not shoot a star, and then he asked me if I used chalk for
+powder, and said he could supply a superior brand of chalk cheap. I
+thought at first that he was merely joking, but I didn't like the look
+in his eyes, and then I made up my mind he was not right in his head,
+and I left him. When I came back that way, an hour later, he was gone,
+and I have never seen him since."
+
+"Where was this, Ben?"
+
+"Up in the woods, where the brook branches off by the two big rocks."
+
+"I know the spot!" cried Roger. "Say, maybe he hangs out around
+there."
+
+"No, we hunted around there yesterday, but he wasn't to be seen. I
+don't believe he has any settled place of abode, but just roams
+through the woods."
+
+"Poor fellow! Somebody ought to catch him and place him in a
+sanitarium," was Dave's comment.
+
+Various matters were talked over until the supper hour, and then the
+boys filed down to the dining-hall. Here our hero met more of his
+school chums, including Gus Plum, who had once been his enemy but who
+was now quite friendly, and little Chip Macklin, who in days gone by
+had been Plum's toady.
+
+"Very glad to see you back, Dave!" cried Gus. "And, say, you've
+certainly made a hero of yourself," he added, warmly.
+
+"It was great, what you and Roger and Phil did," added Chip, in deep
+admiration.
+
+Everybody was glad to see Dave back, and after supper it was all he
+could do to get away from many of his friends. But he managed it at
+last, and he, Roger, and Phil went upstairs, to put away their things
+and get out their schoolbooks.
+
+"We have got to study and that is all there is to it," said Dave,
+firmly. "Fun is one thing and getting ready to graduate is another. We
+have got to get down to the grind, boys."
+
+"That's right," answered the senator's son.
+
+"But don't forget what old Haskers said," grumbled Phil. "He'll make
+us sweat, just you wait and see!"
+
+"'Sufficient for the day is the evil thereof,'" quoted Dave. "I think
+we can get through if we buckle down hard."
+
+"Supposing Mr. Dale and the other teachers pin us down as old Haskers
+did?" demanded Phil.
+
+"They won't do it," declared our hero. "Take my word for it, Mr. Dale
+will give us a month, if we want it. I know him. And the others will
+do the same."
+
+"Well, maybe we can get through, if that's the case," said the
+shipowner's son, slowly. "Just the same, I think old Haskers the
+meanest man alive."
+
+The following morning, after a good night's rest, the boys went to
+their various classes. As Dave had predicted, Mr. Dale, the head
+teacher, treated them with all possible consideration, for he loved
+boys and understood them thoroughly. The other teachers were likewise
+very lenient.
+
+"Old Haskers is the one stumbling-block," said Roger. "Dave, maybe we
+had better see Doctor Clay about him."
+
+"Not much!" cried Phil. "We've got a club we can use on Haskers. Why
+not use it?"
+
+"You mean, go to him and tell him we know about that Mrs. Breen
+affair, and that we will expose him if he doesn't let up on us, Phil?"
+said Dave.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Do you think that is a--well, a gentlemanly thing to do?"
+
+"It's what old Haskers would do, if he was in our place."
+
+"Perhaps. But I'd rather not do it. Let my uncle's lawyer try to
+collect that money without our appearing in the case. We have had
+trouble enough in the past with Haskers. Let us buckle in and study
+up. I am sure we can get through," added Dave, earnestly.
+
+"All right," growled Phil; but his manner showed that he was not
+satisfied.
+
+Two days went by, and the boys settled down to the regular routine of
+the school. The lessons to be made up were exceedingly hard, and Dave
+found he had to study almost constantly to do what was required of
+him.
+
+"But I am going to make it!" he murmured, setting his teeth hard. "I
+am not going to disappoint the folks at home."
+
+One afternoon the three chums had a very hard lesson in Latin to do.
+It was a clear, sunshiny day and they had one of the windows wide open
+to let in the fresh air. Dave and Roger were bending over their books
+when they heard a sudden exclamation from Phil.
+
+"I'll be hanged if I'm going to do it!"
+
+And then of a sudden a Latin book was hurled across the room, to land
+on a bureau, just missing the glass.
+
+"Hello!" cried Dave, raising his head. "What's wrong now?"
+
+"I'm not going to do it!" cried Phil, stretching himself. "It's an
+outrage and I won't submit to it."
+
+"You mean this boning away for Haskers?" queried Roger.
+
+"Just that," answered the shipowner's son. "Why can't he treat us as
+fairly as the other teachers did? It wouldn't hurt him a bit to give
+us more time."
+
+"Phil, what's the use of talking it over again?" asked Dave. "I
+thought we had settled it once for all."
+
+"No, I won't stand it, I tell you," cried Phil, stubbornly. "He can't
+make a pack-mule of me."
+
+"Well, then, speak to the doctor about it," advised Roger.
+
+"I don't have to speak to the doctor," stormed Phil; and walking over
+to a rack, he caught up his cap and marched from the room.
+
+"He is certainly in a bad humor," was Dave's comment. "I am afraid
+he'll put his foot into it, Roger."
+
+"So am I. He's been aching to get back at old Haskers ever since he
+put all this studying up to us."
+
+"Do you know, Ben is just as angry at Haskers as Phil is?" went on our
+hero, after a pause, during which both had hoped that their close chum
+would return. But Phil had stalked down the stairs and out of the
+building.
+
+"Ben?"
+
+"Yes, so he told me this noon."
+
+"What about?"
+
+"Oh, Ben talked in class and old Haskers penalized him heavily--gave
+him a lot of extra Latin to do. It nearly broke Ben up."
+
+"You told Ben about that Breen affair, didn't you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Maybe he and Phil will both go to Haskers about it."
+
+"I hope not, Roger. I don't think it is just the right thing to do--to
+use that as a club over Haskers to get him to let us off. I don't like
+that kind of dealing."
+
+"Neither do I. But it's just what such a mean-spirited fellow as
+Haskers deserves. He has never treated us squarely since we came here.
+I think this school would be a good deal better off without him, even
+if he is well educated."
+
+Dave heaved a deep sigh. He was on the point of replying, but changed
+his mind. He took up his book again, and soon was trying his best to
+study. Roger followed his example.
+
+But both boys made slow progress. Each was thinking about Phil. What
+would be the outcome of their headstrong chum's actions?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+PHIL AND BEN MAKE A MOVE
+So far Dave and Nat Poole had not met face to face. Our hero had seen
+the money-lender's son a number of times, but Nat had always been with
+some of his cronies and had, apparently, not taken any notice.
+
+But on the morning following the conversation just recorded, the pair
+came face to face in one of the narrow hallways.
+
+"Good-morning, Nat," said Dave, pleasantly.
+
+"Morning," grumbled the other student. He was about to pass Dave, but
+suddenly changed his mind. "So you got back, eh?"
+
+"Yes, I've been back several days."
+
+"I heard that Link Merwell got away from you?"
+
+"That is true."
+
+"Humph! If I had the chance to nab him that you had, I'd not let him
+get away."
+
+"We held Jasniff."
+
+"Maybe you let Merwell go on purpose," continued the money-lender's
+son, shrewdly.
+
+"Not at all, Nat. He gave us the slip, clean and clear."
+
+"Humph!" Nat paused for a moment. "I got word from my dad that you
+almost smashed him up on the road with your auto."
+
+"Hardly as bad as that."
+
+"He is going to make your uncle pay for the damage done."
+
+"It wasn't much."
+
+"It was enough. You want to be more careful with your car after this.
+You auto fellows seem to think you own the whole road."
+
+"What about your motor-boat, Nat?" asked Dave. He remembered how the
+money-lender's son had played more than one mean trick while running
+the craft.
+
+"Oh, my boat is all right, Dave Porter!" sniffed Nat; and then he
+moved on, with a scowl on his face.
+
+"The same old Nat," soliloquized our hero. "Too bad that he can't make
+himself a bit more agreeable."
+
+That day was a particularly trying one in the classroom. The lessons
+were unusually hard, and Dave had all he could do to pass, especially
+in those studies presided over by Professor Haskers. Roger made one
+miss in his Latin and poor Phil made several, while Ben Basswood's
+recitation was a complete failure.
+
+As was usual with him, Job Haskers was exceedingly dictatorial, and
+said some cutting things that brought the blood to Dave's face.
+
+"You must do much better than this, Porter and Morr," said the
+professor. "Otherwise I shall have to place you in the next lower
+class. You, Lawrence and Basswood, have failed so utterly that I will
+have to take your cases under immediate consideration. The class is
+dismissed."
+
+"The old bear!" growled Ben, under his breath.
+
+He looked inquiringly at Phil, and the latter nodded knowingly.
+
+Dave did not know what to do. He did not wish Phil and Ben to get into
+further trouble, yet he did not know how to interfere. Besides, he was
+suffering himself and hardly knew what to do on his own account.
+
+"This is the worst yet," cried Roger, as he and our hero came out of
+the classroom side by side.
+
+"There go Phil and Ben," returned Dave. "Roger, they have got some
+plan up their sleeve."
+
+"I believe you, Dave. I wish I knew what to do. Shall we go to Doctor
+Clay?"
+
+"I've been thinking of that, Roger. But I hate to do it. I'd rather
+fight my own battles."
+
+"So would I."
+
+"Let us wait until to-morrow and see if things don't take a turn for
+the better."
+
+"All right, just as you say. But it's a shame, the way old Haskers
+treats us," grumbled the senator's son.
+
+In the meantime Phil and Ben had gone on ahead. Both were exceeding
+angry and consequently not in a frame of mind to use their best
+judgment.
+
+"It's an outrage!" burst out the shipowner's son. "An outrage, Ben! I
+am not going to stand for it!"
+
+"Well, I am with you, Phil," returned Ben. "But what can we do?"
+
+"You know what I spoke about last evening?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How about doing that?"
+
+"I am with you, if you are game."
+
+"Of course we may make old Haskers tearing mad."
+
+"We'll only face him with the truth, won't we?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then, let us do it. And the sooner the better."
+
+"Yes, but we must see him alone."
+
+"Of course. I think we can manage it just before supper--when he goes
+up to his room to fix up for the evening."
+
+The two chums talked the affair over for a long time.
+
+"I don't suppose Dave will like this," ventured Ben, presently. "What
+do you think?"
+
+"He isn't hit as hard as we are," answered Phil, lamely. "If he
+was--well, he might look at things in a different light."
+
+"That's so," answered Ben. But deep down in his heart he was afraid
+that our hero would not altogether approve of what he and Phil
+proposed to do.
+
+The boys took a walk, and purposely kept out of the way of Dave and
+Roger. They did not return to the Hall until fifteen minutes before
+the first bell for supper. Then they came in by a side entrance and
+passed swiftly up the stairs and along the hallway to the room
+occupied by Job Haskers.
+
+"Who is it?" asked the teacher, sharply, when Phil had knocked.
+
+"Mr. Haskers, it is Phil Lawrence," was the reply. "Ben Basswood is
+with me. We wish to see you."
+
+"Ah, indeed!" said the teacher, coldly. "You come to me at an unusual
+hour. You may see me to-morrow, before class."
+
+"Mr. Haskers, we wish very much to see you now," put in Ben.
+
+"We have got to see you," added Phil, warmly.
+
+There was no immediate reply to this. The boys heard Job Haskers
+moving around the room and heard him shut a bureau. Then the door was
+flung open.
+
+"You insist upon seeing me, eh?" demanded the professor, harshly.
+
+"We do, Mr. Haskers," returned Phil, boldly.
+
+"Very well, young gentlemen; step in." And Job Haskers glared at the
+boys as he stood aside for them to enter.
+
+"We came to see you, sir, about those Latin lessons," went on Phil,
+finding it just then difficult to speak. He realized that Job Haskers
+was in no humor for being lenient.
+
+"Well?" shot out the professor.
+
+"We feel that we are not being treated fairly," put in Ben, believing
+he should not make Phil do all the talking.
+
+"Not treated fairly? I believe I am the best judge of that,
+Basswood."
+
+"Mr. Haskers, I hate to say it, but you are a hard-hearted man!" cried
+out Phil, the door being closed, so that no outsider might hear. "You
+are not giving us a fair chance. The other teachers have given me and
+Dave Porter and Roger Morr several weeks in which to make up those
+lessons we missed while we were away. You wish to give us only a
+week."
+
+"And you didn't give me a fair chance to make up," added Ben.
+
+"See here, who is master here, you or I?" demanded Job Haskers,
+drawing himself up. "Boys, you are impudent! I will not stand it!"
+
+"Yes, you will stand it," cried Phil, throwing caution to the winds.
+"All we ask is a fair deal, and you have got to give it to us. We'll
+make up those lessons, if you'll give us a fair amount of time. I
+don't intend to be put in a lower class for nothing."
+
+"And I'm not going to stand it either," came from Ben.
+
+"Ha! this to me?" snarled Job Haskers. "Take care, or I'll have you
+dismissed from the Hall!"
+
+"If you try it, it will be the worst day's work you ever did, Mr.
+Haskers," warned the shipowner's son.
+
+"What, you threaten me?"
+
+"We are going to make you give us a fair chance, that is all. And if
+you'll do that, we'll give you a fair chance."
+
+"Why, why--you--you----" The irate instructor knew not for the moment
+how to proceed.
+
+"Mr. Haskers, I think you had better listen to me," pursued Phil.
+
+"I have listened to all I care to hear."
+
+"Oh, no, you haven't. There is much more--and you had better listen
+closely--if you care at all for your reputation here at Oak Hall."
+
+The professor stared at the boy and grew a trifle pale.
+
+"Wha--what do you--er--mean by that, Lawrence?"
+
+"I hate very much to bring this subject up, Mr. Haskers, but you
+practically compel me to do it. If you will only promise to give us a
+fair chance to make up our lessons, I won't say a word about it."
+
+"Just what do you mean?" faltered the teacher.
+
+"I know something about your doings in the past--doings which are of
+no credit to you. If you disgrace Ben and me by degrading us in
+classes, we'll disgrace you by telling all we know."
+
+"And what do you know?" demanded Job Haskers, hastily.
+
+"We know a good deal," put in Ben.
+
+"All about your dealing with the poor widow, Mrs. Breen," added the
+shipowner's son. "How you still owe her for board, and how you
+borrowed money to publish a book that was never issued."
+
+"Who told you that?" cried Job Haskers, stepping back in
+consternation. "Who told you that I had borrowed money from her, and
+that I owed her for board?"
+
+"Never mind who told us," said Ben. "We know it is true."
+
+"And you went to that lawyer, eh?" stormed Professor Haskers. "You
+got him to threaten a suit, didn't you? I got his letter only this
+afternoon."
+
+"We went to no lawyer," answered Phil.
+
+"I know better! I see it all now! You want to get me into trouble--to
+disgrace me here!" Job Haskers began to pace the floor. "It is--er--a
+mistake. I meant to pay that lady but it--er--slipped my mind. And the
+book has been issued, but the publishers have not--er--seen fit to
+push it, that is why you and the world at large have not heard of
+it."
+
+"Mr. Haskers, we haven't told anybody about this," went on Phil,
+pointedly. "You can settle with that lawyer, whoever he may be,--and
+we'll not say a word to anybody--that is, providing you'll give us a
+fair chance in our lessons."
+
+"Ha! maybe you wish me to pass you without an examination," cried the
+teacher, cunningly.
+
+"No, sir!" answered Phil, stoutly.
+
+"We simply ask for more time, that is all," added Ben. "We don't ask
+any favor. We can make up the lessons if you will give us as much time
+as the other teachers would give us."
+
+"You have not told anybody of this--this--er--affair of Mrs. Breen?"
+
+"No."
+
+"It is all a mistake, but I should not like it to get abroad. It would
+hurt my reputation a great deal. I shall settle the matter in the
+near future. I do not owe that lady as much as the lawyer says I
+do,--but that is not your affair." Job Haskers continued to pace the
+floor. "Now about your lessons," he continued, after a pause. "If
+I--er--thought that I had really been too hard on you----" He paused.
+
+"You certainly have been hard," said Phil.
+
+"And if you really need more time----"
+
+"Give us two weeks more and we'll be all right," put in Ben.
+
+"And if--er--if I should decide to do that, you will--er----"
+
+"We'll make good--and keep our mouths shut," finished Phil.
+
+"Very well. I will think it over, young gentlemen, and let you know
+to-morrow morning, before class. And in the meantime----"
+
+"We won't say a word to anybody," said Ben, with a little grin.
+
+"So be it;" and Job Haskers bowed. "There is the supper-bell. You may
+go now. Come to me just before class to-morrow," he added; and then
+the two students passed out of the room, and the teacher shut the door
+after them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+AN UNUSUAL COMPACT
+
+
+"He'll do it--he is bound to do it!" cried Ben, as he and Phil hurried
+down to the dining-room.
+
+"I think so myself, Ben," answered the shipowner's son. But, for some
+reason, he did not seem as joyful over the outcome of the interview as
+might have been expected.
+
+"He won't dare let this news become public property," went on the
+other student. "He is too afraid of public opinion."
+
+"Ben, he thinks we got that lawyer to take the case up."
+
+"You told him we hadn't."
+
+"But he didn't believe it--I could tell that by his manner. And, Ben,
+do you know, after all, this looks to me as if we had, somehow, bribed
+him to be easy on us," continued Phil, with added concern.
+
+"Oh, don't bother your head about that, Phil. We only asked for what
+is fair, didn't we?"
+
+"Yes, but----" And then the shipowner's son did not finish, because
+he did not know what to say. In some manner, Phil's conscience
+troubled him, and he wondered what Dave and Roger would say when they
+heard of what had occurred.
+
+During the meal that followed but little was said by any of the boys.
+Once or twice our hero looked at Phil, but the latter avoided his
+gaze. As soon as the repast was over, Phil rushed outside, followed by
+Ben; and that was the last seen of the pair until it was time to go to
+bed.
+
+"They have been up to something, that is certain," was the comment of
+the senator's son.
+
+"Well, we can only wait and see what turns up," answered Dave,
+thoughtfully. "I don't think I care to ask them."
+
+In the morning, when Dave got up he looked over to where Phil was in
+the habit of sleeping. The bed was empty, and the shipowner's son was
+gone.
+
+"Dressed half an hour ago," said another of the dormitory inmates.
+
+"Went off again with Ben, I'll wager," murmured Roger. Ben was in
+another room, across the hallway, that term.
+
+Dave and Roger had been hard at work the evening before, doing their
+best to make up the lessons they had missed while away from the
+school. They doubted if Phil and Ben had studied at all. With
+considerable curiosity they awaited the opening of the morning
+classes, to see what might happen. They felt that something was "in
+the air."
+
+Just before the last bell rang Phil and Ben appeared, their faces
+wreathed in smiles.
+
+"It's all right, fellows!" cried the shipowner's son, merrily. "It's
+all right!"
+
+"Now we can take our time making up those missed lessons," added Ben.
+
+"You went to old Haskers?" queried Roger.
+
+"We sure did," answered the shipowner's son.
+
+"And told him about----" began our hero.
+
+"Never mind what we told him, Dave," interrupted Phil. "We did tell
+him that we wanted to make up the lessons but couldn't do it in the
+time he had allotted. He argued it, at first, but now he has agreed to
+give us the same time Mr. Dale did, three weeks."
+
+"Good!" exclaimed Roger.
+
+"You, or all of us?" asked our hero.
+
+"All of us. I think he'll speak to you at recess--he said he would."
+
+"What did he say when you--when you mentioned Mrs. Breen?" asked
+Roger.
+
+"Hush, somebody might hear you!" returned Phil, in a whisper. "We have
+promised to keep that quiet."
+
+"But the poor woman----" began Dave.
+
+"Will get her money, never fear. A lawyer has already written about
+it, and old Haskers says he will pay up. He claims it is all a
+mistake. But he doesn't want anybody at Oak Hall to get wind of it."
+
+There was no time to say more, and evidently neither Phil nor Ben felt
+in the humor to discuss the affair. The early morning lesson proceeded
+as usual, but it was noticed that Professor Haskers was much subdued
+in his manner towards the students.
+
+"Porter and Morr, I wish to speak to you at recess," said he, coming
+down to where the two lads sat. "Kindly remain here."
+
+When the other students had left the classroom the instructor came to
+our hero and his chum and motioned for them to follow him to a private
+room close by.
+
+"I wish to speak to you about the lessons you are to make up," said
+Job Haskers, after clearing his throat several times. "I understand
+that you want more time."
+
+"We would like to have more time, yes," answered Dave, briefly, and
+looking the teacher full in the face.
+
+"Can you do the lessons in three weeks?"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Haskers," said Dave, and Roger nodded his head.
+
+"Then you can take that much time. But, remember, I shall expect you
+to--to--er--to make up the lessons."
+
+"Yes, sir," came from both students.
+
+"If you need more time--or any assistance--possibly I can arrange it,"
+went on Job Haskers, eagerly.
+
+"Thank you, if you give me three weeks I am sure I can make up the
+lessons to your satisfaction, Mr. Haskers," came from our hero.
+
+"And so can I," added the senator's son. "Anyway, I'll try my level
+best."
+
+"Very well, then, we will let it stand that way." There was a pause
+and the instructor bit his lip several times. "By the way,
+I--er--understand that there is a very unpleasant rumor going around
+concerning me," he proceeded. "It is all a mistake which I shall try
+to clear up without delay. I trust that you will not attempt
+to--er--to circulate that rumor any further."
+
+"Mr. Haskers, do you mean about that affair with Mrs. Breen?" demanded
+Dave, bluntly.
+
+"Yes. I have already explained to Lawrence and Basswood that it is a
+mistake, and that the widow will be paid all that is due her. But if
+this should--er--be mentioned here----" The teacher stopped short and
+looked sharply at Dave and Roger.
+
+"Mr. Haskers, let us understand each other," answered Dave, quickly.
+"I have no desire whatever to get you or anybody else into trouble.
+Nor do I want to ask you for any favors. I think we are justly
+entitled to more time in which to make up those lessons, and now that
+you have granted that time, I shall do my best to make good. As for
+that Mrs. Breen affair, I think that poor old lady ought to have her
+money. I understand some lawyer is going to try to collect it for her.
+Well, if you settle the matter I shall feel very glad; and you can
+rest assured that I will not say a word about the matter to anybody in
+this school, or anywhere else."
+
+"You--er--you give me your word on that, Porter?" demanded the
+instructor, eagerly.
+
+"I do."
+
+"And you, Morr?"
+
+"Yes, sir," answered the senator's son.
+
+"Who else is there who knows about this--er--unpleasant affair?"
+
+"Phil Lawrence and Ben Basswood," answered Roger.
+
+"No other students?"
+
+"Not that I know of."
+
+"Very well, then." Job Haskers drew a breath of relief. "See that you
+keep your word. And about the lessons--if three weeks are not long
+enough, I may--er--be able to give you a little more time."
+
+"That time will be enough," replied Dave.
+
+"We'll make it with ease," added Roger.
+
+"Then that is settled, and you may go," and so speaking, Job Haskers
+left the room. The two boys followed him, and went out on the campus.
+
+"How did you make out?" questioned Phil, as he ran up to them.
+
+"We got our time," answered Roger.
+
+"But let me tell you one thing," said Dave. "After this Haskers is
+going to hate us worse than ever."
+
+"I don't see why," declared the shipowner's son. "I think we are
+letting him off mighty easy."
+
+"He feels as if he had been forced into doing what we want," went on
+Dave. "I think he looks at it as if you had used that Mrs. Breen
+incident as a club over him."
+
+"Well, it was a club in one sense, Dave."
+
+"I know it, Phil, and, although I am glad we have won out and gotten
+that extra time, still I am sorry that you and Ben went to him as you
+did."
+
+"Humph! did you think I was going to sit still and be put back into a
+lower class?"
+
+"Maybe it might have been better if you had gone to Doctor Clay."
+
+"I don't think so," replied Phil, shortly; and then the school-bell
+rang again and all the boys had to go to their next classes.
+
+In spite of the cloud that thus hung over the affair, every one of
+the chums was glad of the extra time in which to make up the lost
+lessons. Not one of them had to grind away as hard as before, and Dave
+took a little time off, in which to send a letter to his father and
+another to Jessie.
+
+The next day was warm and pleasant and, after school-hours, Roger
+proposed to Dave that they take a walk up the woods road back of the
+school.
+
+"All right, a walk in the woods will do us good," was the answer.
+"Shall we ask some of the others?"
+
+"If you wish," and in the end Phil went along, and also Buster Beggs
+and Gus Plum.
+
+"My, but I had a run-in with old Haskers this afternoon," said the
+stout youth. "I came close to carrying the matter to the doctor."
+
+"What was it about?" questioned Dave.
+
+"Oh, nothing at all, to my way of thinking. I went to the library to
+get a book and he accused me of wasting my class time. He was very
+ugly. I won't stand for much more of it," grumbled Buster.
+
+Dave said no more, but he and Roger exchanged glances. Evidently the
+irate instructor was going to "take it out of somebody," as the saying
+goes.
+
+The boys walked on and on, along the road, until Oak Hall was left far
+behind. Soon Buster forgot his troubles, and the crowd were chatting
+gayly of many things.
+
+"Call for candidates for the baseball team next Saturday," announced
+Gus Plum. "I hope we get up a team this year that knocks the spots out
+of Rockville Military Academy and all the other institutions we cross
+bats with."
+
+"Are you going to try for the nine this term, Gus?" questioned Dave.
+
+"Sure! Why not? You'll try, won't you?" went on the big youth, in
+surprise.
+
+"No, I've decided not to go into athletics this term, Gus. I want to
+give all my time to my studies."
+
+"Yes, but the nine needs you, Dave!" put in Buster. "I heard some of
+the fellows talking about it only yesterday. They had you slated for
+your old position."
+
+"Well, if Gus wants to play, he can fill the box," answered Dave.
+
+"But we need more than one pitcher," insisted Buster.
+
+"There are plenty of new students coming along. I hear Thomas is a
+good one, and so is Ennis."
+
+"I'm not going to play, either," said Roger. "I want to graduate with
+all the honors possible."
+
+"How about you, Phil?"
+
+"I--I think I'll play," answered the shipowner's son, rather lamely.
+"I'll see about it later."
+
+"Well, I don't want to neglect my studies," said Gus Plum. "But I have
+done some hard work this winter and so I am pretty well ahead. I
+didn't lose time going to Cave Island, you know," he added, with a
+smile.
+
+"Well, it was worth it--losing that time," answered Dave. "It saved
+Mr. Wadsworth from ruin, and that's a good deal."
+
+"If the baseball nine----" commenced Buster, and then broke off short.
+"What was that?" he demanded, as a cry from a distance broke on the
+ears of all.
+
+"It's a woman's voice!" cried Dave, quickly. "She is calling for help!
+Come on and see what is the matter!" And he started off on a run, with
+his school chums at his heels.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE KING OF SUMATRA
+
+
+The boys had been traveling along a broad highway that ran to a town
+on the other side of the woods. The trees were thick and so were the
+bushes, with here and there a big rock, covered with the dead vines of
+the summer previous.
+
+At one point some distance ahead was an old stone house, standing
+where another road ran in the direction of the river. This house had
+not been inhabited for years, and the doors and windows were gone, and
+the falling of the chimney had smashed in a large portion of the
+sloping roof.
+
+It was from in front of the old house that the cries for assistance
+came, and now the boys heard two voices, both somewhat girlish in
+tones.
+
+"Oh, let me go! Please, let me go!" came, wildly.
+
+"You have no right to touch us!" was added, in another voice.
+
+"What's the matter?" called out Dave, as loudly as he could. But in
+his mind there had already flashed an inkling of what was going on.
+For some time past the wild man of that locality had not shown
+himself. Now, perhaps, he was again at his old tricks.
+
+"Oh, make him go away!" screamed a girlish voice, and then, as our
+hero made a turn of the road, he caught sight of two girls standing
+near the old stone house. Back of them was another figure, that of a
+tall, powerful man, but this figure disappeared as if by magic, behind
+the ancient building.
+
+"Why, Miss Rockwell!" exclaimed Dave, as he recognized a young lady
+from town whom he knew well. "And you, too, Miss Feversham! What is
+the matter?"
+
+"That man--the wild man!" panted Vera Rockwell. "He--he--stopped us!"
+
+"He wanted our purses!" added Mary Feversham, the other young lady.
+
+"Where is he?" asked Roger and Phil, in a breath.
+
+"He just ran behind the house--I saw him," answered Dave. "Did he hurt
+you any?" he went on, anxiously, for he and Vera and Mary were good
+friends.
+
+"No, but he--he scared us so!"
+
+"Let us go after him!" put in Phil, quickly. He had taken Mary
+Feversham out a number of times and the two were well acquainted.
+"Come on!" and he started around the house.
+
+All of the others were not slow to follow. Behind the building they
+came upon a mass of weeds and bushes and in their midst the remains of
+an old well, long since caved in. What had once been a path led to the
+side road before mentioned.
+
+"That's the way he must have gone--down the side road!" cried the
+shipowner's son.
+
+"Supposing we see if we can catch him?" suggested Dave. "But somebody
+ought to go back, and stay with the girls," he added thoughtfully.
+
+"I'll go back," answered Phil. He was only too glad of a chance to
+talk to Mary, not having seen her for a long time.
+
+"If that fellow comes back, whistle for us," advised Roger.
+
+Dave was already on the side road with Buster and Gus beside him, and
+the senator's son quickly followed.
+
+"Don't go too fast or I--I can't ke--keep up with you!" panted
+Buster.
+
+"Do you see anything of him, Dave?" queried Roger.
+
+"Not yet, but there is a turn just ahead. When we make that we'll be
+able to see almost to the river."
+
+All of the students sped on, the stout lad doing his best to keep up
+with the others. They reached the turn with Dave a step or two in
+advance.
+
+"There he is!"
+
+"I see him! Say, he's wild-looking enough!"
+
+"He is making for the river!"
+
+"We ought to be able to catch him. We are four to one."
+
+Dave and Roger pressed forward with increased speed and poor Buster
+fell somewhat behind.
+
+"I'm coming as fa--fast as I ca--can!" blurted out the fat youth. "Go
+on--I'll get there sooner or later!"
+
+"Pick up a stick, if you see one," cried Dave, to Roger and Gus. "We
+may have a hot fight on our hands. That man ought to be in jail, or in
+an asylum."
+
+As they sped along, the three kept their eyes open and each presently
+armed himself with a fair-sized club. The wild man was running like a
+deer, pausing occasionally to turn and brandish his long arms at them
+savagely. They could see that his clothing was in tatters and that his
+hair and beard were long and unkempt.
+
+"Hi! stop!" called out Dave, although he had but little hope of
+causing the man to halt. "We want to talk to you."
+
+"Go back! Beware! Go back, or it will be the worse for you!" called
+the wild man. "Leave the King of Sumatra alone!"
+
+"The King of Sumatra?" repeated Roger. "Say, he's crazy sure enough,
+to imagine himself that!"
+
+The boys continued after the wild man and urged him to stop. But
+instead of heeding them, he ran on the faster.
+
+"He's an athlete, when it comes to running," remarked Dave, as he
+tried in vain to get closer to the man.
+
+"They say crazy people are always strong," answered the senator's
+son.
+
+"I've go--got to gi--give up!" panted Gus, and came to a halt.
+"Go--got a pa--pain in my side!" And he put his hand over his hip.
+
+"All right, we'll manage alone!" cried Roger. "I don't think we can
+catch that fellow anyway," he added, half under his breath.
+
+Another turn of the woodland road brought the Leming River into plain
+view, at a point where the stream was both wide and deep. The wild man
+kept sprinting along and it was impossible for the boys to draw any
+closer to him.
+
+"Shall we threaten to shoot him if he won't stop?" asked Roger.
+Neither of the lads carried firearms.
+
+[Illustration: "STOP!" CRIED DAVE.--_Page 87._]
+
+"No, he might do some shooting on his own account,--if he is armed.
+Come on, he may fall, or something like that."
+
+Inside of three minutes more the wild man gained the shore of the
+river and disappeared around a point of rocks and brushwood.
+
+"Be careful, Dave," warned Roger. "He may spring out at you with a
+club."
+
+"I've got my eyes open," was the ready reply.
+
+Both advanced with caution, and soon came up to the nearest of the
+rocks. With clubs ready for use, the two youths continued to move
+forward. Then they came to a sudden halt. The wild man was no longer
+in sight. What had become of him?
+
+"Maybe he ran into the woods," suggested Roger.
+
+"Perhaps, but--hark!" And our hero held up his hand. From a distance
+came a scraping sound, like something sliding over a rock.
+
+"Look!" called out the senator's son. "He's got a boat! There he
+goes!"
+
+Dave turned in the direction pointed out by his chum. Both saw a small
+rowboat sweep out from under some brushwood. In it stood the wild man,
+using an oar as a pole on the rocks.
+
+"Stop!" cried Dave. "Stop, or you may be sorry for it."
+
+"You can't catch the King of Sumatra!" yelled the wild man, and
+flourished his arms and made a hideous face at them. Then he sat down
+on the middle seat of the craft, placed the oars in the rowlocks, and
+commenced to row rapidly down the stream.
+
+"Well, that's the end of the chase," remarked Dave, in some disgust.
+
+"That's right, since we haven't any boat," returned Roger. "Wonder
+where he got that craft? I don't think he bought it."
+
+"It isn't likely. Probably he saw it somewhere along the river and
+simply appropriated it." And this proved to be true.
+
+The boys watched the wild man until a bend of the stream hid rower and
+craft from view. Then they turned back in the direction of the old
+stone house.
+
+"Did you get him?" demanded Buster, who was waiting with Gus at the
+point where he had dropped out of the race.
+
+"No," answered Roger, and told why.
+
+"He sure is a cute one," went on the stout youth. "Say, if they don't
+catch him soon, he'll have this whole neighborhood scared to death."
+
+The students soon reached the old house. Here they found the two girls
+and Phil, the latter with a heavy stick in his hand, ready for any
+emergency. The girls had calmed down a little, but were still much
+agitated.
+
+"We were to come home in my uncle's carriage," said Mary Feversham.
+"But the horse got a lame foot and so we decided to walk. We had heard
+of the wild man, but did not think we would meet him. Oh, it was
+dreadful!"
+
+"He didn't hurt you, did he?" asked Dave.
+
+"Oh, no, but he frightened us so! He danced around us and caught us by
+the arms, and he wanted us to give him money! Oh, it was dreadful!"
+
+"He ought to be in an asylum," said Dave. And then he and Roger
+related how the wild man had escaped.
+
+"I sha'n't go out alone again," said Vera Rockwell. "That is, not
+until that man is captured."
+
+"We'll take you both home," said Phil, promptly, looking at Mary.
+
+"But we don't want to keep you from what you were going to do," said
+Vera.
+
+"Oh, we were only out for a walk," replied Dave. "We'll walk to town
+with you. Maybe we'll hear something more of this strange fellow."
+
+All turned back on the road that led close to Oak Hall, and after
+discussing the wild man from various points of view, the conversation
+turned to other matters. The girls told of what they had been doing
+during the past holidays and asked the boys about themselves.
+
+"I heard that that horrid Jasniff is under arrest," said Vera to
+Dave. "I am glad of it. It is a pity that Merwell got away."
+
+"Perhaps," answered our hero. "But, somehow, I sometimes think that
+Link Merwell will turn over a new leaf."
+
+Vera looked back, to make sure that none of the others were near.
+
+"Just like Mr. Plum, I suppose you mean," she whispered. "Oh, it was
+splendid, what you did for him, Dave!"
+
+"Oh, I didn't do much for Gus."
+
+"My brother thinks you did. He heard the whole story. It was brave and
+noble of you, it was indeed!" And Vera's face showed her earnestness.
+
+"Well, Gus has turned out a nice fellow. I wish Merwell would turn out
+as good."
+
+"But he helped to take those jewels."
+
+"That is true--and that will always be a black mark against him," said
+Dave, soberly.
+
+Soon all reached the outskirts of Oakdale and there, at one of the
+corners, the boys left the girls.
+
+"Pretty late!" cried Gus Plum, consulting the watch he carried. "We'll
+have to hike back lively, if we don't want to be marked up for
+tardiness."
+
+"We can get an excuse, if we tell about the wild man," said Buster.
+"I've hurried all I'm going to."
+
+"We'll certainly have a yarn to spin when we get back to the school,"
+was Phil's comment.
+
+At the entrance to the campus the boys, who were a little late, met
+the first assistant to Doctor Clay. As my old readers know Mr. Dale
+was as pleasant as Job Haskers was disagreeable.
+
+"Had a fine walk, boys?" he asked, with a smile.
+
+"We had an adventure," answered Dave, and then he and his chums told
+what it was.
+
+"Well! well! that wild man again," mused the instructor. "This is
+getting truly serious. I was hoping he would leave this neighborhood.
+And so he calls himself the King of Sumatra? That is strange."
+
+"It certainly is strange," answered Dave.
+
+But how strange, our hero was still to find out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+NAT POOLE WANTS TO KNOW
+
+
+That evening Dave was on his way to the school library, to consult a
+certain work of reference, when he ran into another student who
+suddenly grasped him by the shoulder. It was rather dark where the
+pair confronted each other, and for the instant our hero did not
+recognize the fellow.
+
+"What do you want?"
+
+"I want to speak to you for a minute, Dave Porter," said the other, in
+a voice that trembled a trifle.
+
+"Oh, it's you, Nat," answered Dave, as he recognized the son of the
+Crumville money-lender. "What do you want?" He rather imagined that
+the youth wished to pick another quarrel with him.
+
+"I--I want to talk in private with you," returned Nat, and looked
+around, to see if anybody else was near.
+
+"What about?"
+
+"You were out walking this afternoon and met that wild man, so I
+heard."
+
+"That is true."
+
+"You tried to catch him, didn't you?"
+
+"Yes, Roger Morr, Buster Beggs, Gus Plum, and I did our best to collar
+him, but he was too fast for us. He ran down to the river, got into a
+rowboat, and rowed away."
+
+"So I heard. And I heard something else," continued the boy from
+Crumville. "When you called to the man to stop he answered back,
+didn't he?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Will you please tell me what he said?" And Nat's voice had an eager
+ring in it.
+
+"He told us to beware and go back, or we'd get into trouble."
+
+"Didn't he say something more than that?"
+
+"Oh, yes, a great deal more."
+
+"He called himself something, didn't he?"
+
+"Yes. Look here, Nat, what is this to you? Why are you so interested?"
+queried Dave, for he could easily perceive that the other youth was
+more than ordinarily anxious to know the particulars of what had
+occurred.
+
+"I--I--want to--er--know, that's all. Did he call himself anything?"
+
+"Yes; he thinks he is the King of Sumatra."
+
+"He called himself that?" asked Nat, with increased excitement.
+
+"Yes, two or three times. But see here, Nat----"
+
+"Will you please tell me how he looked? Was he tall and rather thin?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And what kind of hair did he have?"
+
+"Brownish-red, as near as I could make out, and very long. And he had
+rather a long beard and a large nose," went on our hero.
+
+At this brief but accurate description of the wild man, Nat Poole
+paled a trifle and uttered something of a gasp.
+
+"Whe--where did he go?" he faltered.
+
+"He rowed down the river just as fast as he could. I don't know how
+far he went, for the bend hid him from view," answered our hero. "Say,
+Nat, do you think you know that man?"
+
+"Why--er--know him? Of course I don't know him," was the stammered-out
+reply. "But I--I think--maybe--I've met him." And then, to avoid
+further questioning, Nat Poole hurried away. Our hero could do nothing
+but stare after him.
+
+"That is mighty queer," mused Dave, as he turned into the library to
+consult the reference book. "If Nat doesn't know the man, why was he
+so anxious? He acted scared to death when I said the fellow called
+himself the King of Sumatra."
+
+Dave remained in the school library for a half an hour and then joined
+Phil, Roger, and the others in Dormitory Number Twelve. He found the
+students discussing a talk Roger had had with Nat Poole only a few
+minutes before.
+
+"Nat called me out in the hallway," said the senator's son. "He wanted
+to know all about that wild man, and he wanted to make dead certain
+that he had called himself the King of Sumatra."
+
+"That is certainly queer--on top of what happened to me," said Dave,
+and told of the interview he had had.
+
+"Well, this is a puzzle," declared Phil, slowly. "What do you make of
+it, Dave?"
+
+"I think Nat imagines he knows the wild man."
+
+"That's the way it looks to me," added the senator's son.
+
+"Say, you don't suppose that wild man has anything to do with the
+fellows Nat used to train with--Jasniff, Merwell, and that crowd?"
+questioned Buster.
+
+"It's possible, but I don't think so," returned our hero. "He is
+surely a crazy individual, and as nobody around here seems to know
+him, he must be a stranger to these parts."
+
+"But what would make Nat so interested?" asked little Chip Macklin.
+
+"Give it up," answered Roger.
+
+"Maybe he has something to tell, but won't tell it to us," ventured
+Phil. "He may go right to the doctor."
+
+But if Nat Poole went to the master of Oak Hall, or to anybody else at
+that institution, the boys did not hear of it. He asked no more
+questions about the wild man, and when any of our friends came near
+him he immediately walked away, thus avoiding an interview.
+
+The proposed meeting of the athletic committee of Oak Hall was held on
+Saturday afternoon in the gymnasium and was well attended. An even
+twenty names had been put up for the regular baseball nine of the
+institution. Of these names, fifteen belonged to old students and five
+were those of newcomers to Oak Hall. As he had said he would do, Gus
+Plum had handed in his name, and so had Sam Day and some of our other
+friends. But Dave, Phil, and Roger were conspicuous by their absence.
+
+"See here, Porter, you're going to play, aren't you?" asked the former
+manager.
+
+"No," answered Dave, quietly but firmly.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Well, in the first place, I have too many back lessons to make up,
+and in the second place, I hope to graduate this coming June, and I
+want to make a record for myself, if possible."
+
+"But you can do that and play on the nine, too," urged the manager.
+
+"I don't think so. I'd like to play," continued our hero, wistfully,
+"but I don't see how I can."
+
+"This isn't fair, Porter. We really need you."
+
+"Oh, it isn't as bad as that," returned Dave, with a faint smile.
+"You've got Gus Plum to pitch, and some of the others. There are
+plenty of good ball-players here this term."
+
+"I don't know about that," answered the manager, with a grave shake of
+his head. "I wish you'd come in."
+
+"Not this year," said Dave; and then the two separated.
+
+Phil and Roger were likewise urged to try for the nine, but they
+followed Dave's example. Then a tentative nine was formed, with Gus
+Plum as pitcher, and also a "scrub" nine, with one of the newcomers to
+Oak Hall in the box. Practice was to start on Wednesday afternoon of
+the following week.
+
+"Too bad we couldn't take part," sighed the shipowner's son. "I'd like
+to wallop the Rockville Military Academy fellows just once more!"
+
+"Well, we can't have everything," answered Dave. "I want to graduate
+with the highest possible honors, and that means plenty of hard
+boning."
+
+"And a fellow can't bone and play ball, too," added Roger.
+
+"We might--if old Haskers would be easy on us," murmured the
+shipowner's son.
+
+"Now, see here, Phil," said Dave, almost sternly. "Don't ask Haskers
+for any more favors. He has done all that can reasonably be expected
+of him."
+
+"All right, just as you say," grumbled Phil. But his manner showed
+that he was not altogether satisfied.
+
+A week went by, and Dave and his chums applied themselves diligently
+to their studies. During that time nothing more was heard of the wild
+man, and the excitement concerning that strange individual again died
+down. But the folks living in the vicinity of the woods back of Oak
+Hall were on their guard, and it was seldom that women and children
+went out alone.
+
+The boys were doing very well in their studies, and Dave received warm
+words of encouragement from Andrew Dale. He had made up nearly all the
+back lessons imposed upon him by Job Haskers, and that dictatorial
+teacher could not help but be satisfied over the showing made. Roger
+was also doing well, and poor Phil was the only one who was backward,
+although not enough to cause alarm.
+
+"I'll get there, but it comes hard," said the shipowner's son. "I
+should have asked old Haskers for more time."
+
+"Don't you do it," answered Dave. "Come, I'll help you all I can."
+Which he did.
+
+One day there came a letter to our hero which gave him great
+satisfaction. He read it carefully, and then hastened off to
+communicate the news to Phil, Roger, and Ben.
+
+"It's a letter from my Uncle Dunston," he explained to his chums. "If
+you will remember, he said he would hire a lawyer to take up that Mrs.
+Breen case against Professor Haskers."
+
+"What does he say?" asked Roger, quickly.
+
+"I will read it to you," answered Dave, and read the following:
+
+ "You will be glad to learn that Mr. Loveland, one of our lawyers,
+ has gotten a settlement for Mrs. Breen out of your teacher, Mr.
+ Haskers. He had quite a time of it, Haskers declaring that he did
+ not owe as much as the widow said he did. The lawyer said he would
+ sue for the full amount, and then Haskers came to see him. Mr.
+ Loveland says the teacher wanted to learn who had hired him to
+ stir the matter up, and mentioned some students' names. But the
+ lawyer gave him no satisfaction at all, and at last Haskers paid
+ up in full, took his receipt, and got out. I instructed Mr.
+ Loveland to put his charges for services on our bill, so Mrs.
+ Breen will get the entire amount collected. I am going to take it
+ to her in person, and see to it that it is wisely invested for her
+ benefit."
+
+"Good!" cried the senator's son. "That will help the old lady a great
+deal."
+
+"Say, I'll bet old Haskers was sore when he forked over that money,"
+was Ben's comment. "No wonder he's been looking like a thundercloud
+lately."
+
+"Yes, and he'd let out on us--if he dared," said Phil. "But he doesn't
+dare."
+
+"Don't be too sure of that, Phil," said Dave, seriously. "There is no
+telling what he will do--later on, when he thinks this affair has
+blown over."
+
+"Humph! I am not afraid of him," declared Phil, recklessly.
+
+"If he tries any of his games we'll expose him," added Ben.
+
+"Better go slow," advised Roger. He, too, felt that Job Haskers might
+become very vindictive.
+
+Spring was now at hand, and a week later came the first baseball game
+of the season. It was a contest with Esmore Academy from Daytonville
+and held on the Oak Hall grounds. Quite a crowd was present, including
+some of the town folks. Gus Plum was in the pitcher's box for the
+Hall, and Sam Day was on first base, and Chip Macklin on third.
+
+"I hope we win!" cried Dave.
+
+"I hope you do," answered Vera Rockwell, who was present with some
+other girls. "But why are you not playing?" she went on.
+
+"Not this term," said our hero, with a smile, and then he spoke of his
+studies.
+
+"I suppose it is noble of you to give up this way," she said.
+"But--I'd like to see you play."
+
+The contest proved a well-fought one, and was won by Oak Hall by a
+score of eight runs to five. At the conclusion there was a great
+cheering for the victors.
+
+"This means bonfires to-night!" cried Roger, as the gathering broke
+up.
+
+"Yes, and a grand good time!" added Buster Beggs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+BONFIRE NIGHT AT THE HALL
+
+
+It was certainly a night long to be remembered in the annals of Oak
+Hall,--and for more reasons than one.
+
+At the start, several bonfires were lit along the bank of the river,
+and around these the students congregated, to dance and sing songs,
+and "cut up" generally. None of the teachers were present, and it was
+given out that the lads might enjoy themselves within reasonable
+bounds until ten o'clock.
+
+"Let's form a grand march!" cried Gus Plum. "Every man with a torch!"
+
+"Yes, but don't set anything on fire," cautioned Roger.
+
+"Say, that puts me in mind of a story," came from Shadow. "A fellow
+went into a powder shop to buy some ammunition. He was smoking a pipe,
+and the proprietor----"
+
+"Whoop! Hurrah for Shadow!" yelled somebody from the rear, and the
+next instant the story-teller of the Hall found himself up on a pile
+of barrels which had not yet been set on fire.
+
+"Now then, tell your yarns to everybody!" came the cry.
+
+"Speak loud, Shadow!"
+
+"Give us all the details."
+
+"Tell us the story about the old man and the elephant."
+
+"No, give us that about the old maid and the mouse."
+
+"Let us hear about the fellow who was shipwrecked on the Rocky
+Mountains."
+
+"Or about how the fellow who couldn't swim fell into a flour barrel."
+
+"Say, what do you take me for?" roared Shadow. "I don't know any story
+about the Rocky Mountains, or a flour barrel either. If you want to
+hear----"
+
+"Sure we do!"
+
+"That's the very yarn we've been waiting for!"
+
+"Say, Shadow, won't you please tell it into a phonograph, so I can
+grind it out to my grandfather when I get home?"
+
+"Is that the story that starts on a foggy night, at noon?"
+
+"No, this one starts on a dusty day in the middle of the Atlantic."
+
+"Say, if you fellows want me to tell a story, say so!" grumbled
+Shadow. "Otherwise I'm going to get down."
+
+"No! no! Tell your best yarn, Shadow."
+
+"All right, then. Once two men went into a shoe store----"
+
+"Wow! That's fifty years old!"
+
+"I heard that when a child, at my grandson's knee."
+
+"Tell us something about smoke, Shadow!"
+
+"And fire. I love to hear about a fire. It's so warm and----"
+
+"Hi! let me get down! Do you want to burn me up?" yelled the
+story-teller of the school, suddenly, as, chancing to glance down, he
+saw that the barrels were on fire. "Let me down, I say!" And he made a
+leap from the barrels into the midst of the crowd.
+
+Shadow landed on the shoulders of Nat Poole, and both went down and
+rolled over. In a spirit of play some of the students near by covered
+the rolling pair with shavings and straw. Shadow took this in good
+part and merely laughed as he arose, but the money-lender's son was
+angry.
+
+"Hi, who threw those dirty shavings all over me?" he bawled. "I don't
+like it."
+
+"Don't mind a little bath like that, Nat!" called one of the
+students.
+
+"But I do mind it. The shavings are full of dirt, and so is the straw.
+The dirt is all over me."
+
+"Never mind, you can have a free bath, Nat," said another.
+
+"I'll lend you a cake of soap," added a third.
+
+"I don't want any of your soap!" growled the money-lender's son. "Say,
+the whole crowd of you make me sick!" he added, and walked off, in
+great disgust.
+
+"Phew! but he's touchy," was the comment of one of the students. "I
+guess he thinks he's better than the rest of us."
+
+"Let's give him another dose," came the suggestion, from the rear of
+the crowd.
+
+"Shavings?"
+
+"Yes, and straw, too. Put some down his neck!"
+
+"Right you are!"
+
+Fully a dozen students quickly provided themselves with shavings and
+straw, both far from clean, and made after Nat, who was walking up the
+river-front in the direction of the boathouse.
+
+Before the money-lender's son could do anything to defend himself, he
+found himself seized from behind and hurled to the ground.
+
+"Now then, give it to him good!" cried a voice, and in a twinkling a
+shower of shavings, straw, and dirt descended upon poor Nat, covering
+him from head to foot.
+
+"Hi! let up!" spluttered the victim, trying to dodge the avalanche.
+But instead of heeding his pleadings the other students proceeded to
+ram a quantity of the stuff into his ears and down his collar. Nat
+squirmed and yelled, but it did little good.
+
+"Now then, you are initiated into the Order of Straw and Shavings!"
+cried one merry student.
+
+"Just you wait, I'll get square, see if I don't," howled Nat, as he
+arose. Then he commenced to twist his neck, to free himself from the
+ticklish straw and shavings.
+
+"Come on and have a good time, old sport!" howled one of his
+tormentors; and then off the crowd ran in the direction of the
+bonfires, leaving Nat more disgusted than ever.
+
+"I'll fix them, just wait and see if I don't!" stormed the
+money-lender's son to himself, and then hurried to the Hall, to clean
+up and make himself comfortable.
+
+In the meantime the march around the campus had begun, each student
+carrying a torch of some kind. There was a great singing.
+
+"Be careful of the fire," warned Mr. Dale, as he came out. "Doctor
+Clay says you must be careful."
+
+"We'll take care!" was the cry.
+
+The marching at an end, some of the boys ran for the stables and
+presently returned with Jackson Lemond, the driver of the school
+carryall, commonly called Horsehair, because of the hairs which clung
+to his clothing.
+
+"Come on, Horsehair, join us in having a good time."
+
+"Give us a speech, Horsehair!"
+
+"Tell us all you know about the Wars of the Roses."
+
+"Or how Hannibal crossed the Delaware and defeated the Turks at the
+Alamo."
+
+"I can't make no speech," pleaded the carryall driver. "Just you let
+me go, please!"
+
+"If you can't make a speech, sing," suggested another. "Give us Yankee
+Doodle in the key of J minor."
+
+"Or that beautiful lullaby entitled, 'You Never Miss Your Purse Until
+You Have to Walk Home.' Give us that in nine flats, will you?"
+
+"I tell you I can't make a speech and I can't sing!" shouted out the
+driver for the school, desperately.
+
+"How sad! Can't speechify and can't sing! All right, then, let it go,
+and give us a dance."
+
+"That's the talk! A real Japanese jig in five-quarter time."
+
+There was a rush, and in a twinkling poor Horsehair was boosted to the
+top of a big packing-case, that had been hauled to the spot as fuel
+for one of the bonfires.
+
+"The stage!" announced one of the students, with a wave of his hand.
+"The World-Renowned Horsehairsky will perform his celebrated Dance of
+the Hop Scotch. Get your opera glasses ready."
+
+"What's the admission fee?"
+
+"Two pins and a big green apple."
+
+"I can't dance--I ain't never danced in my life!" pleaded the victim.
+"You let me go. I've got to take care o' my hosses."
+
+While he was speaking Buster Beggs had come up behind Horsehair and
+placed something attached to a dark string on the box, between the
+driver's feet. It was an imitation snake, made of rubber and colored
+up to look very natural.
+
+"Oh my, look at the snake!" yelled several, in pretended alarm.
+
+"Where? where?" yelled Horsehair.
+
+"There, right between your feet! He's going to bite you on the leg!"
+
+"Take care, that's a rattler sure!"
+
+"If he bites you, Horsehair, you'll be a dead man!"
+
+"Take him off! Take him off!" bawled the carryall driver, and in
+terror he made a wild leap from the packing-box and landed directly on
+the shoulders of two of the students. Then he dropped to the ground,
+rolled over, got up, and ran as fast as his legs could carry him in
+the direction of the stables. A wild laugh followed him, but to this
+he paid no attention.
+
+"Well, we are certainly having a night of it," remarked Dave, after
+the fun had quieted down for a moment. He spoke to Roger.
+
+"Where is Phil?" asked the senator's son.
+
+"Went off with Ben, I think."
+
+"Where to?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"It's queer how much they keep together lately; isn't it?" continued
+Roger.
+
+"Oh, I don't know. Of course that affair with Haskers may have
+something to do with it," answered our hero, slowly.
+
+"I wish Haskers would leave this school, Dave."
+
+"Oh, it won't make much difference to us, if we graduate, whether he
+stays or not."
+
+"I know that. But, somehow, I don't think he is a good man to have
+here, even if he is a learned instructor. He never enters into the
+school spirit, as Mr. Dale does."
+
+"Well, we can't all be alike."
+
+"Would you keep him, if you were in Doctor Clay's shoes?"
+
+"I hardly think so. Certainly not if I could find another teacher
+equally good."
+
+The boys walked on until they found themselves at the last bonfire of
+the line, close to where the school grounds came to an end. Here was
+a hedge, and beyond were the woods reaching up from the river.
+
+"Nobody down by this bonfire," remarked Dave. "Say, this is careless
+work," he added. "The wind might shift and set the woods on fire."
+
+"I didn't think they'd start a fire so far from the others," answered
+his chum.
+
+"Let us kick it into the water," suggested our hero, and this they
+started to do, when, unexpectedly, a voice hailed them, and they saw a
+student sitting in a tree that grew in the hedge which separated the
+campus from the woods.
+
+"Let that fire alone!" the youth called, angrily.
+
+"Why, it's Nat Poole!" exclaimed Roger, in a low voice. "Whatever is
+he doing in that tree?"
+
+"I am sure I don't know," returned Dave.
+
+"Is he alone?"
+
+"He seems to be."
+
+"Do you hear what I say?" went on the money-lender's son. "Leave that
+fire alone."
+
+"Did you build it?" asked Dave.
+
+"I did, and I want you to leave it alone."
+
+"All right, Nat, if you say so," answered Roger. "We thought it had
+been abandoned and that it might set fire to the woods."
+
+To this Nat Poole did not reply. Plainly he was annoyed at being
+discovered in his present position. Dave and Roger looked around, to
+see if anybody else was in the vicinity, and then, turning, walked in
+the direction of the other bonfires.
+
+"What do you make of that, Dave?" asked the senator's son, presently.
+
+"It looked to me as if Nat was waiting or watching for somebody,
+Roger."
+
+"So it did. The question is, Who was it?"
+
+"I don't know. But I've got something of an idea."
+
+"Some of the students?"
+
+"No. That wild man."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+PLANS FOR A SPREAD
+
+
+"That wild man?" exclaimed the senator's son, stopping short to stare
+at Dave.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How do you make that out?"
+
+"Because I think Nat is interested in the fellow, although just how I
+won't pretend to say. But you'll remember how excited he got when he
+found out that the wild man called himself the King of Sumatra."
+
+"Oh, I see. You think he knows the fellow and thought that the bonfire
+might attract him to the place."
+
+"Yes. I've heard it said that crazy folks were sometimes attracted by
+the sight of fire. Maybe Nat has heard the same and wants to see if it
+will work in the case of this man."
+
+"Shall we go back and see what happens?" suggested Roger.
+
+Dave mused for a moment.
+
+"Would it be just right to play the spy, Roger?"
+
+"Well, this isn't playing the spy in the ordinary sense of the term,
+Dave. That wild man ought to be locked up."
+
+"But it may not be the wild man he is looking for."
+
+"Oh, let us go back a little while, anyway," urged the senator's son.
+
+They retraced their steps until within fifty feet of the bonfire and
+then walked to the shelter of the hedge. They thought they had not
+been seen, but they were mistaken.
+
+"Humph! so you think you are going to spy on me, after all!" cried a
+voice, and Nat Poole came towards them, with a deep frown on his
+face.
+
+"It's rather queer you are in the tree," answered Roger, somewhat
+sharply.
+
+"It's my affair, not yours, Roger Morr!" roared the money-lender's
+son. Then, without another word, he walked to the bonfire, kicked the
+blazing sticks into the river, and strode off in the direction of the
+Hall.
+
+"He's good and mad," was Roger's comment.
+
+"And we didn't learn anything, after all," added our hero.
+
+Dave and his chum rejoined the merry throng at the other bonfires. But
+the celebration in honor of the baseball victory was practically at an
+end, and a little later the students retired, to skylark a little in
+the dormitories, and then settle down for the night.
+
+A week passed, and Dave stuck to his studies as persistently as ever.
+During that time he sent off several letters, and received a number in
+return, including one from Jessie, which he treasured very highly and
+which he did not show to his chums.
+
+"Here is news of Link Merwell," said Luke Watson, one day, as he came
+along with a letter. "It's from a friend of mine who knows Merwell. He
+says he saw Link in Quebec, Canada, at one of the little French hotels
+in the lower town."
+
+"What was Merwell doing?" questioned Dave, with interest.
+
+"Nothing much, so my friend writes. He says Link was dressed in a blue
+suit and wore blue glasses, and he thought his hair was dyed."
+
+"Evidently doing what he could to disguise himself," was Phil's
+comment.
+
+"My friend writes that he saw Merwell only one evening. The next day
+he was missing. He made inquiries and says he was at the hotel under
+the name of V. A. Smith, of Albany, New York."
+
+"He does not dare to travel around under his own name," remarked
+Shadow. "Say, that puts me in mind of a story," he went on,
+brightening up. "Once a chap changed his name, because----"
+
+"Say, cut it out," interrupted Phil. "We want to hear about Merwell."
+
+"There isn't any more to tell," said Luke. "My friend tried to find
+out where he had gone but couldn't."
+
+"He must be having a lonely time of it--trying to keep out of the
+hands of the law," murmured Dave.
+
+"And maybe he hasn't much money," said Buster. "His father may have
+shut down on him."
+
+Gus Plum listened to all this conversation without saying a word. But
+down in his heart the former bully of Oak Hall was glad that he had
+cut away from Merwell and Jasniff, and turned over a new leaf, and he
+resolved then and there that, come what might, he would never again
+turn aside from the path of right and honor.
+
+"Say, why don't you listen to my story?" pleaded Shadow, and then
+related a somewhat rambling tale of a man who had changed his name
+and, later on, lost some property because of it.
+
+Another day slipped by and it was one of particular interest to Dave
+and Roger, for in the morning they made up the last of the back
+lessons imposed upon them by Job Haskers. They had done exceedingly
+well, but the harsh teacher gave them little credit. Phil and Ben had
+still three days' work, but Professor Haskers said nothing of this.
+
+"He doesn't dare," declared the shipowner's son.
+
+"That's right," chuckled Ben. "We could give him a good black eye
+before this whole school if we wanted to."
+
+Dave had already finished up the back lessons for the other teachers,
+so he was now free to spend his time on what was ahead of him. He was
+as enthusiastic as ever to make a record for himself, and pitched in
+with a will, and his enthusiasm was caught by Roger, who also resolved
+to do his best.
+
+"Whoop! hurrah! What do you think of this?" came from Phil, late one
+afternoon, after the mail had been distributed. "Somebody hold me
+down! I guess I'm going to fly! Or maybe I'm only dreaming!" And he
+began to caper around gayly.
+
+"What is it all about, Phil?" asked Dave. "Hit your funny-bone?"
+
+"Money, boys, money! That's what it is about," replied the shipowner's
+son. "I've got five thousand dollars, all my own!"
+
+"Five thousand dollars!" gasped Buster.
+
+"All your own?" queried Gus Plum.
+
+"Where did you get it?" asked another.
+
+"Why, it's this way," answered Phil, when he could calm down a
+little. "About two years ago a great-uncle of mine died, leaving
+considerable money. He was interested in various enterprises and his
+death brought on legal complications and some litigation. He left his
+money to a lot of heirs, including myself. My father and I never
+thought we'd get anything--thought the lawyers and courts would
+swallow it all. But now it seems that it has been settled, and yours
+truly gets five thousand dollars in cash."
+
+"When do you get it, Phil, right away?" asked Buster.
+
+"Well,--er--I, of course, don't get it until I am of age. It's to go
+in the bank."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"Won't you get any of it until then?" asked Shadow. "Your dad might
+let you have a little, just to celebrate----"
+
+"That's just it--just what he has done!" cried Phil. "I've got---- But
+wait," cried the shipowner's son, interrupting himself. "I'll plan
+this thing out. You shall all be my guests later on," he added,
+mysteriously.
+
+"Will you give a spread?" asked Chip Macklin.
+
+"Don't ask questions, only wait," returned Phil. And that was all he
+would say on the point, although he talked freely about his
+inheritance.
+
+The next morning Phil and Ben were seen in earnest conversation, and
+that afternoon the two boys left the school as soon as they could get
+away, bound on an errand to Oakdale.
+
+"We ought to get a dandy spread for a dollar or a dollar and a half a
+head," said Phil, as they hurried along. "And twelve at a dollar and a
+half will be only eighteen dollars."
+
+"The music will cost something," said Ben.
+
+"Yes, I'm counting on two pieces, a harp and a violin, for ten
+dollars. That's the price Professor Smuller charges."
+
+The boys were bound for the Oakdale Union House, a new hotel which had
+just been opened by a man named Jason Sparr. It was a nice resort,
+without a bar, and catered to the better class of people, including
+the students at Oak Hall and at the Military Academy.
+
+The boys found the hotel proprietor glad to see them, and willing to
+set any kind of a spread that they were able to pay for. Trade was not
+yet brisk, and Jason Sparr said he would do his best to serve them. He
+was a smooth, oily man, and a fellow who wanted all that was coming to
+him.
+
+"I can set you an elegant table for eighteen dollars for twelve," said
+he. "I'll give you oysters, fish, two kinds of meat, several
+vegetables, salad, ice-cream, coffee, and also nuts, cake, olives,
+celery, and other fixings."
+
+"That's the talk!" cried Phil, enthusiastically. "Just make a nice
+spread of it, and you can have all our trade in the future."
+
+"You'll be well pleased," answered Jason Sparr.
+
+"Can we have a private dining-room?"
+
+"To be sure--the blue room over yonder," and the hotel man showed the
+boys the apartment.
+
+"I want some flowers, too," said Phil. "You can put two dollars' worth
+of roses on the table."
+
+"Very well--that will make an even twenty dollars."
+
+"When do you want me to pay?"
+
+"Such spreads are usually paid for in advance," answered Jason Sparr,
+shrewdly. He did not intend to take any chances with schoolboys.
+
+"All right, here is your money," answered the shipowner's son, and
+brought forth one of the two crisp twenty-dollar bills his father had
+mailed to him, with the good news of his fortune.
+
+"Tell him about the music," suggested Ben.
+
+"Oh, yes, I thought I'd have Professor Smuller furnish some
+music--harp and violin."
+
+"Fine! They can sit in the alcove, and we'll put some of our palms
+around them," returned Jason Sparr.
+
+"Remember, this is for next Saturday night, seven o'clock sharp," said
+Phil.
+
+"I've got it down," returned the hotel proprietor, as he wrote in his
+book.
+
+"And don't say anything to anybody about it. I want to surprise my
+friends."
+
+"Very well, mum's the word," and the hotel man looked very wise and
+knowing.
+
+Leaving the place, Phil and Ben sought out the home of Professor
+Smuller, a violinist, who, with a friend who played the harp, often
+furnished music for dances and other occasions.
+
+"Yes, yes, I can furnish music," said the violinist. "Just tell me
+what you want." Business was slow and he was glad to get any sort of
+an engagement.
+
+The matter was explained, and the professor promised to be on hand and
+bring the harpist with him. He said he could play anything the
+students desired, including the well-known school songs. He would fill
+the engagement for the boys for eight dollars, although his regular
+price was ten. But he would have to have cash in advance.
+
+Again Phil paid out his money, and then, the business concluded, he
+and Ben left the professor's home and hurried along the road leading
+to Oak Hall.
+
+"Have you made up your list yet?" asked Ben, when nearing the school.
+
+"Not quite. I'll have Dave and Roger and Shadow and Buster, of course.
+I'll have to leave out some fellows, but that can't be helped. I
+can't afford a spread for the whole school."
+
+"Of course you can't."
+
+"I think I'll have Luke and Sam, and maybe Gus and Chip."
+
+As the boys drew closer to the school Ben had to stop to fix his shoe.
+Both sat down on some rocks, at a turn in the road. They were about to
+go on again when somebody made the turn of the road, coming from the
+town. It was Nat Poole.
+
+"Hello! you been to town?" cried Ben, good-naturedly.
+
+"Yes," answered the money-lender's son. "Haven't I a right to go if I
+want to?" he added, and then hurried on ahead of them.
+
+"Rather peppery," mused Ben. "Say, Phil, there is one fellow you won't
+invite, and I know it."
+
+"Right you are, Ben," was the ready answer. "All I ask of Nat Poole
+is, that he leave me alone."
+
+But Nat was not to leave Phil alone, as events were quickly to prove.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE CABIN ON THE ISLAND
+
+
+"Dave, come on out for a row. You haven't been on the river this
+year."
+
+It was Gus Plum who spoke. He was out in one of the craft belonging to
+Oak Hall, and hailed our hero as the latter was strolling along the
+river-bank.
+
+"All right, Gus!" Dave cried, cheerily. "I don't know but that a try
+at the oars will do me good, after the hard studying I've been
+doing."
+
+"You are bound to get a high-water mark this term, aren't you?" went
+on Gus Plum, as he brought the rowboat up to the dock, so that Dave
+might get in.
+
+"I'd like to graduate with honor, yes."
+
+"What are you going to do after you leave here, Dave?" went on the big
+youth, as the two rowed up the river.
+
+"I don't know yet. Have you made up your mind?"
+
+"Oh, I think I'll go into business, but I am not sure."
+
+"You won't try for college?"
+
+"No. You see, I don't make much of a fist at learning, so what's the
+use? But I love business--buying and selling things."
+
+The two boys continued at the oars until the vicinity of Oak Hall was
+left far behind.
+
+"If we only had a power-boat we might run up to Squirrel Island,"
+remarked Gus.
+
+"Perhaps Nat Poole will lend you his motor-boat," suggested our hero,
+with a little grin.
+
+"Humph! I'd not ask him," returned the big youth, promptly. "I am done
+with Nat Poole. I want to stick to my new friends." And the former
+bully of the school fairly beamed on Dave, who had done so much to
+make him reform.
+
+"Have you seen the motor-boat this season, Gus?"
+
+"Yes, Nat got it out two days ago. I think he is on the river now."
+
+The boys rowed on, until they came to a bend where there was something
+of a cove. As they rounded the point they heard the steady put-put! of
+a gasoline engine not far off.
+
+"There is Nat's craft now!" cried our hero, and pointed ahead.
+
+"He's all alone," was Plum's comment. "He can't have many friends
+these days, or he'd have some of them along."
+
+"I'd hate to be without friends, Gus, shouldn't you?"
+
+"Yes, indeed! But it's Nat's own fault. If he'd only drop his
+important airs and be more sociable, he'd get along all right."
+
+On and on rowed the two students. It was a clear, balmy day, and they
+hated to return to the school until it was absolutely necessary.
+
+"Let us row around Smith Island," suggested our hero, mentioning a
+small place in the middle of the stream, so named after a farmer who
+owned it. It was a rocky and somewhat barren spot, and seldom visited
+by anybody but fishermen.
+
+"All right, but we want to beware of the rocks," cautioned the big
+youth.
+
+The rowboat was headed up the stream, and soon they came in sight of
+the island. On one side were a number of bushes, overhanging the
+river.
+
+"Hello! look there!" cried Dave, a few minutes later, and pointed to
+the bushes.
+
+"What do you see?"
+
+"A motor-boat. I think it is Nat Poole's."
+
+"Is that so? What brought him here?" questioned Gus, with interest.
+
+"I am sure I don't know. But it's his boat, I am sure of that," went
+on Dave, after another look at the craft.
+
+"See anything of Nat?"
+
+"No, the boat is empty."
+
+"Let us row in a little closer and see what he is doing," suggested
+Gus.
+
+"He'll say we were spying on him."
+
+"Humph! Haven't we as much right as he has to visit the island?"
+
+"Of course."
+
+"Then what is the use of keeping away? He may be waiting to play some
+trick, or something like that."
+
+"Oh, I think not, Gus. Probably he just visited the island out of
+curiosity. But I'll go in if you say so."
+
+Slowly, so as to avoid the many rocks in that vicinity, the two
+students brought the rowboat close up to the motor-craft. They looked
+into the bushes and along the rocks beyond, but saw nothing of Nat.
+
+"Shall we call to him?" asked Gus.
+
+"What for? I don't want to see him."
+
+"Neither do I. His boat is tied good and fast. He must expect to stay
+on the island quite a while."
+
+The two boys rowed on, past the motor-boat. Then, as they turned a
+point of rocks, Dave gave a start.
+
+"Well, of all things!"
+
+"What is it, Dave?"
+
+"Look yonder--in between those bushes!"
+
+"Why, it's a rowboat."
+
+"Exactly, Gus, and do you see how it is painted, drab with blue
+stripes?"
+
+"Of course--a pretty ugly boat, I think."
+
+"Gus, that is the very rowboat used by that wild man--the one he was
+in when he got away from us that day!"
+
+"Do you really mean it?" gasped the big boy, staring hard at the
+craft.
+
+"I certainly do--I'd know that boat in a hundred. I never saw another
+just like it."
+
+"If that's the case, maybe the wild man is on the island!"
+
+"Just what I was thinking," answered Dave. "And I was thinking, too,
+that----" He stopped short.
+
+"What?"
+
+"Don't you remember how Nat was so anxious to know all about the wild
+man? And how upset he seemed to be when he heard that the fellow
+called himself the King of Sumatra?"
+
+"Yes, I remember that. Do you think he came here to find the man?"
+demanded Gus, quickly.
+
+"It looks so to me."
+
+"My gracious, Dave, I think you are right! Say, there is something
+mysterious about all this!" cried Gus.
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"Let us go ashore by all means and see what Nat is up to," urged the
+big youth.
+
+Dave was more than willing, now that he had discovered the rowboat
+used by the wild man. Perhaps this island was the home of that
+mysterious individual. If so, what was the money-lender's son doing
+there? Had he business with the strange creature?
+
+"Maybe we'd better not make any noise," suggested Gus, as the boat was
+turned in to a convenient landing-place. To this Dave did not reply,
+but they landed as silently as possible. Then the rowboat was hauled
+up out of sight between the bushes.
+
+From the craft used by the wild man a rude path ran up from the shore
+to the rocks beyond. A short distance from the shore the boys saw the
+marks of a wet foot, coming from the direction where lay the
+motor-boat.
+
+"That was made by Nat--he got his left foot wet," said Gus.
+
+"I think so myself," answered our hero.
+
+They followed the marks left by the wet foot over the rocks. They
+headed for the upper end of the island, where there was a small grove
+of straggly cedar trees. Here the marks faded away completely.
+
+"Well, we know he came this way, anyhow," remarked Gus. "He can't be
+very far off, for the island isn't very big."
+
+"I see a rude log cabin!" exclaimed Dave, and pointed through the
+cedars. "Maybe that is where the wild man lives."
+
+"If it is, we want to go slow, Dave. He may attack us."
+
+"But what of Nat, if he is there?"
+
+"He may know the man and have some influence over him."
+
+"I hardly think anybody could have any influence over that man. He is
+as crazy as can be, and not to be trusted."
+
+The two youths approached the old log cabin slowly, keeping as much as
+possible in the shelter of the trees. Nobody was in sight, nor did any
+sound reach their ears.
+
+Presently the students found themselves within fifty feet of the
+cabin, the door of which stood half open. Each looked at the other.
+
+"I'm going ahead," said Dave, resolutely. He and his companion had
+provided themselves with sticks, and Gus had also picked up two
+stones.
+
+"Oh! oh! oh!" came of a sudden, to their startled ears. "Oh dear me!"
+
+"It's Nat!" ejaculated Dave. "Something has happened to him!"
+
+"Maybe the wild man attacked him," added Gus.
+
+"We'll soon see," cried Dave, and started forward on a run.
+
+Soon our hero was at the door of the cabin, which he pushed wide open.
+Inside all was dark, for it was growing late, and the rude structure
+boasted of but one small window, stuffed with cedar boughs to keep out
+the wind.
+
+"Nat, where are you?" cried Dave, as his eyes sought to pierce the
+semi-darkness.
+
+"Who--who is that calling me?" came, in surprise, from the center of
+the cabin.
+
+"It is I--Dave Porter! Where are you, and what happened? Where is the
+wild man?"
+
+"Oh, I'm caught fast--in a trap!" groaned the money-lender's son. "Oh,
+help me out! My ankle is almost broken!"
+
+"But the wild man--?" queried Gus, who was close behind our hero.
+
+"I--I don't know where he is," gasped Nat. "Oh, say, won't you please
+help me? My ankle is fast in a trap! Oh, how it hurts!"
+
+"Wasn't the wild man here?" asked Dave, as he got out his match-box to
+strike a light.
+
+"No--at least, I haven't seen him."
+
+Dave soon had a match lit, and with it set fire to a cedar bough
+placed in the rude fireplace of the cabin. By the glare of this light
+he and Gus looked around them and at their fellow-student.
+
+The cabin was unfurnished excepting for a rude bench and a board
+placed on some piles of stones for a table. In the fireplace were a
+kettle and a frying-pan, and on the table the remains of a scanty meal
+of crackers, eggs, and apples. A tin pail, half filled with water, was
+also handy.
+
+When Dave and Gus turned their attention to Nat Poole they had to
+stare in wonder. Nat sat on the floor, nursing a bruised ankle that
+was caught fast between the jaws of an old-fashioned steel
+animal-trap. The trap was chained to the floor, and the release chain
+ran to a corner of the fireplace, several feet beyond the sufferer's
+reach.
+
+"However did this happen?" asked Gus, although he and our hero could
+easily guess the answer to the question.
+
+"Help me get loose first," groaned poor Nat. "This thing is sawing
+down to the bone."
+
+Dave saw the release chain, which was held firm by a hook. Stepping
+over, he unhooked it, and then it was an easy matter to pry the jaws
+of the steel-trap apart. As soon as this was done, Nat rose slowly to
+his feet, making a wry face as he did so.
+
+"I'll be lame for life--I know I will!" he groaned. "Oh dear, how it
+hurts!"
+
+"You take care that you don't get blood-poisoning from it," warned
+Gus. "When you get home wash it well, and put some peroxide of
+hydrogen, or something like that on it."
+
+"Blood-poisoning! Oh dear!" and Nat gave another groan.
+
+"Shall we help you back to your boat?" asked Dave.
+
+"If you will."
+
+"Where is the wild man?" questioned Gus, looking around.
+
+"I don't know, and I don't care--just now," answered Nat Poole.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE BANDANNA HANDKERCHIEF
+
+
+Nat Poole could hardly walk on the injured leg, so Dave and Gus
+supported him as the three left the rude cabin and headed for the
+shore of the island.
+
+"Do you know where the wild man is?" repeated Gus, who had not been
+satisfied by the reply given to the question before.
+
+"I do not," snapped the money-lender's son, with a touch of his former
+tartness. "I haven't seen him."
+
+"But you know that cabin is where he lives," put in our hero.
+
+"I thought so--but I wasn't sure of it."
+
+"Did you see him come ashore, Nat?"
+
+"No--that is, not to-day. I saw him land here yesterday."
+
+"And that is what brought you here to-day?" remarked Gus.
+
+"Yes, if you must know," was the somewhat cold answer.
+
+"See here, Nat, do you know this wild man?" asked Dave, abruptly.
+
+"Me? Know him? How should I know him?" demanded the money-lender's
+son, but his apparent astonishment did not, somehow, ring nor look
+true.
+
+"That is what I wanted to find out."
+
+"I don't know him--at least, I don't think I do. I've never seen him
+close enough to make sure. Maybe he's some fellow who belongs around
+here. I wanted to find out about him--just as everybody else wants to
+find out, that's all."
+
+"Want to have him caught and placed in an asylum?" asked Gus.
+
+"It's not my business to place him anywhere," cried Nat, hastily. "For
+all we know, he may be harmless."
+
+"Not when he stops young ladies on the road and catches folks in
+steel-traps," answered our hero, with a faint smile.
+
+"Well, that's right, too," grumbled the money-lender's son. "Maybe he
+ought to be in an asylum."
+
+"I think he is on this island now," went on Dave. "His rowboat is
+here, anyway."
+
+"Say, I'll tell you what we can do!" cried Gus. "Take his boat with
+us! Then he can't get away, and we can send the authorities over here
+to get him."
+
+"That's an idea, Gus!" cried Dave. "We'll do it."
+
+"Would that be fair to the man?" asked Nat. "He--er--he might starve
+to death--or try to swim to shore and get drowned."
+
+"He can't starve to death in one night, and I don't think he'll drown
+himself. The authorities can come over here early in the morning and
+round him up, if he is here."
+
+"I--er--I don't think much of your plan," murmured Nat, and seemed
+much disturbed.
+
+In about a quarter of an hour the boys reached the island shore, at
+the spot where Nat's motor-boat was tied up. They helped him get in
+and start up the engine. He had been told how they had come to the
+island.
+
+"If you want to, you can tie your boat fast to the stern and ride back
+with me," he said.
+
+"All right, Nat, we'll do it," answered Dave. "It is getting rather
+late and it's a pretty stiff row to the school."
+
+The motor-craft was started up and sent along in the direction where
+the boys had left the Oak Hall rowboat. Their course took them past
+the spot where the wild man's boat had been tied up.
+
+"Why, look, it's gone!" cried Gus, standing up and pointing to the
+place.
+
+"True enough," answered our hero. "He must have gone off in it while
+we were up to the cabin."
+
+"He can't be very far away, Dave."
+
+The boys looked up and down the river, but could catch no trace of the
+missing rowboat or the wild man. In the meantime, the motor-craft was
+moving forward, where the other boat had been beached among the
+bushes.
+
+"That is gone, too!" ejaculated Dave. "He has taken our boat!"
+
+"Oh, do you really think so?" asked Gus. He felt that he was
+responsible for the craft, as he had taken it from the school
+boathouse.
+
+"I certainly do think so," said Dave. "It was a neat trick to play."
+
+"It's a wonder he didn't take the motor-boat, too."
+
+"Maybe he didn't know how to run the boat and it was too heavy to
+start without the engine."
+
+"I guess you are right!" came suddenly from Nat. "Look here!"
+
+He had stooped down to pick something up from the grating on the
+motor-boat's bottom. If was a torn and dirty bandanna handkerchief.
+
+"The wild man's!" cried Dave. "I remember it."
+
+"I am glad he didn't get away with my boat," returned the
+money-lender's son, drawing a deep breath. "I'll keep this
+handkerchief to remember him by."
+
+"Is it marked in any way?" questioned our hero. "Perhaps it has his
+name or initials on it."
+
+"Oh, I don't think so," returned Nat. "Let us hurry up and get back to
+the school. If we are late, old Haskers will be after us."
+
+"Go on and run the boat as fast as you please, Nat," answered Dave.
+"But I want to look at that handkerchief."
+
+Rather unwillingly, the money-lender's son passed the bandanna over.
+It was now growing so dark that Dave could see but little.
+
+"Wait, I'll light a match," suggested Gus, and did so, and by the
+protected but flickering flare our hero looked the handkerchief over.
+In one corner there was a faint stamping.
+
+"Looks like 'Rossmore Sanitarium' to me," said Dave, slowly. "Or it
+may be 'Bossmore' or 'Crossmore.' The beginning is too faded to be
+sure."
+
+"Bossmore Sanitarium?" queried Nat, and then he became silent and
+thoughtful. A little later he asked for the bandanna and placed it in
+his pocket.
+
+The run in the motor-boat to the school dock did not take long. As
+soon as Nat's craft was properly housed, Dave and Gus assisted the
+money-lender's son up the walk and across the campus.
+
+"I suppose I've got to report the loss of the rowboat," said Gus,
+ruefully.
+
+"It wasn't your fault, Gus," answered Dave. "I'll go with you to
+Doctor Clay."
+
+"I can't go with my lame foot," put in Nat, and he hobbled up to his
+dormitory, eyed by several curious students, who wanted to know how he
+had gotten hurt.
+
+The boys found the master of Oak Hall getting ready for supper. He
+looked at them inquiringly as they entered his study, in answer to his
+invitation.
+
+"Well! well!" he exclaimed, after listening to their story. "This is
+certainly odd! I trust Poole was not seriously hurt."
+
+"I think he was more scared than hurt," answered Dave. "The trap
+scratched his ankle, that's all. I am sure it is not sprained or
+broken."
+
+"But the rowboat----" put in Gus. "I didn't mean----"
+
+"Do not worry about that, Plum. It was not your fault. I am glad the
+wild man did not harm you. I think you got off well. After this you
+must be careful about how you go out after this remarkable creature."
+
+The master of the school then asked for more particulars of the
+occurrence, and said he would notify the town authorities about the
+loss of the rowboat, and ask that a general hunt take place for the
+wild man.
+
+"They ought to be able to round him up sooner or later," he added.
+
+There was considerable excitement in the school when it was learned
+that the wild man had been heard of again. The boys looked for the
+strange individual and so did the town authorities and many farmers,
+but nothing came of the search. Nat was called on to exhibit the
+bandanna handkerchief and did so. Nobody could make out the first part
+of the name on it, for the handkerchief showed a small hole where the
+letters should be.
+
+"That is queer," said Dave, to Roger and Phil, when he heard of this.
+"That handkerchief did not have a hole there when I looked at it."
+
+"Maybe Nat put the hole there," returned the senator's son.
+
+"Why would he do that?" questioned Phil.
+
+"So that nobody would know what the name of the sanitarium really was.
+I believe with Dave that Nat knows the man, or knows about him, and is
+trying to keep something a secret."
+
+"Hum! Maybe you are right," mused the shipowner's son.
+
+Phil had perfected all his arrangements for his spread at the hotel,
+and his guests for that occasion had been duly invited and all had
+accepted the invitation. It had been arranged with Mr. Dale that the
+boys should drive to the hotel in the school carryall, and Horsehair
+was to have his supper in town and, later on, bring them home. No
+secret was made of the affair, for this was not necessary.
+
+"I am only sorry for one thing," said Phil to Dave. "That is that I
+can't have the whole school there. But that would go beyond my
+purse."
+
+"Well, you'll have enough, Phil, to insure a good time," answered our
+hero.
+
+The night was clear, with numberless stars glittering in the heavens,
+when the carryall drove around to the Hall door and the boys piled in.
+All were in the best of humor, and they left the campus in a burst of
+song.
+
+"I've been saving up for this!" cried Ben. "Haven't eaten a mouthful
+for two days!"
+
+"Say, that puts me in mind of a story," cried Shadow. "Once a poor
+street-boy was invited to a Sunday-school picnic. The ladies fed him
+all he could hold and then some. At last, when he couldn't eat another
+mouthful, and saw some cake and pie and ice-cream going to waste, what
+do you suppose he said?"
+
+"Give it up, Shadow."
+
+"He said, 'Say, missus, please save it fer me, won't yer? I won't eat
+fer a week, honest, an' then I'll come an' finish it all up fer
+yer!'"
+
+"Good for the street-boy!"
+
+"Say, Phil, you won't have to save anything for me! I'll eat my share
+right now!"
+
+"I've been in training for this feed!"
+
+"Shove the horses along, Horsehair; we don't want the soup to get
+cold."
+
+"I'm a-shovin' 'em along," answered the carryall driver. "We'll git
+there in plenty o' time."
+
+"Say, Phil, as far as I am concerned, you can have this affair pulled
+off once a month," remarked Buster.
+
+"Make it once a week," piped in Chip Macklin. And then Luke Watson
+commenced to sing a popular negro ditty and all joined lustily in the
+chorus.
+
+On and on rattled the carryall until the lights of Oakdale shone in
+the distance. The boys continued to sing, while one or two blew freely
+on the tin horns they carried. Here and there somebody would come
+rushing to a window, or door, to learn what was doing.
+
+"It's them Oak Hall boys!" cried one old farmer. "My, but they do have
+high times!"
+
+"So they do," returned his wife. "But they are good boys," she added,
+for some of them had once aided her in capturing a runaway bull.
+
+With a grand flourish the carryall swept around the last corner and
+came to a halt in front of the hotel. Phil had hoped to see some extra
+lights lit and was somewhat disappointed to see only the regular
+lantern burning.
+
+"I told him to light up freely and he said he would," he whispered to
+Dave.
+
+"Maybe he thought you meant the dining-room, Phil."
+
+The students piled out of the carryall and waited for Phil, as host,
+to lead the way into the hotel. All marched up the steps and into the
+broad hallway. There they were confronted by the hotel proprietor, who
+came to meet them in his shirtsleeves. He looked completely
+bewildered.
+
+"Well, we are here for that supper, Mr. Sparr!" cried Phil. "I hope
+you are all ready for us!"
+
+The hotel man looked at the boys in amazement. His jaw dropped. Then
+he gasped out the words:
+
+"Well, I'll be jiggered!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+AT THE HOTEL
+
+
+At once Dave and all the other students who had come to the hotel with
+Phil, expecting a fine spread, saw that something was wrong. They
+looked questioningly at the shipowner's son and at the hotel
+proprietor.
+
+"What's the matter?" demanded Phil, quickly.
+
+"Matter?" repeated Jason Sparr. "That's just exactly what I'd like to
+know."
+
+"You--you are ready for us, aren't you?" went on Phil, with a sudden
+catch in his voice.
+
+"Why should I be ready, when you called the whole thing off?" growled
+the hotel man. "Fine way to do, I must say," he continued, with strong
+anger in his voice.
+
+"Called the whole thing off?" repeated Phil. "Me?"
+
+"Yes, you!" shouted Jason Sparr. "And after we had everything in fine
+shape, too! Say, don't you think my stuff is too good to send to the
+Old Ladies' Home?" he demanded.
+
+"There must be some mistake here, Mr. Sparr," put in our hero. "Phil
+didn't call this spread off. We are here for it, as you can see."
+
+"But he did call it off--this noon," returned the hotel proprietor.
+"And he wasn't a bit nice about it, either. When I asked him what I
+should do with the extras I had ordered he told me to do as I
+pleased--send 'em to the Old Ladies' Home, or throw 'em away! He
+didn't act a bit nice."
+
+"Say, you chump, you!" shouted Phil, growing suddenly angry. "I didn't
+send you any word at all about calling it off. I----"
+
+"Don't you call me a chump, you young rascal!" shouted the hotel man,
+in equal heat. "I got your message over the telephone----"
+
+"I never sent any," interrupted Phil.
+
+"It must be a trick," cried Roger.
+
+"Who played it?" queried another student.
+
+"Maybe this is the work of some of the Military Academy fellows."
+
+"Like as not."
+
+"But how did they learn that Phil was going to give the spread?"
+
+"Give it up."
+
+"Maybe some of our own fellows did it--some who didn't get an
+invitation to attend," suggested Chip.
+
+"Would any one be so mean?" asked Buster.
+
+"Some of them might be," murmured Gus.
+
+"I didn't send you any word," went on Phil, in greater anger than
+ever.
+
+"Well, I got word, and so did Professor Smuller. He was mad, too,
+because he lost another job taking yours."
+
+"Why didn't you make sure the word was sent by Mr. Lawrence?" demanded
+Ben. "You could have done that easily enough."
+
+"I didn't think that was necessary. This fellow said----"
+
+"I tell you I didn't send word!" shouted Phil, growing more angry
+every instant. "You might have known it was a trick."
+
+"Of course, he might have known," added Ben. He lowered his voice.
+"Say, Phil, if he doesn't give us the supper make him give your money
+back."
+
+"Sure he's got to give me the money back," cried the shipowner's son.
+
+"See here, you can't bulldoze me!" cried the hotel proprietor. "I've
+had trouble enough as it is. I got ready for this spread and then you
+called it off, and you were mighty sassy about it, too. I've lost a
+lot of money."
+
+A wordy war followed, lasting the best part of a half an hour. Through
+this it was learned that the hotel man had prepared for the spread,
+and so had the professor of music. Just after noon telephone messages
+had come in, calling the whole affair off. Some hot words had passed
+over the wire, and the hotel man was considerably ruffled. The party
+talking to Jason Sparr had said that when the spread did come off it
+would be held elsewhere--intimating that a better place than his hotel
+could be found.
+
+"It's all some trick, to get my business away from me!" stormed the
+hotel man. "I won't stand for it!"
+
+"I didn't send the messages, and I either want the spread or I want my
+money back," declared Phil, stubbornly. And then more words followed,
+until it looked as if there might be a fight. Finally, in a rage,
+Jason Sparr ordered the students from his place.
+
+"All right, we'll go, but you haven't heard the end of this!" cried
+Phil.
+
+"You'll catch it, for treating us so meanly," added Ben.
+
+"Don't you threaten me, or I'll have the law on you!" roared Jason
+Sparr.
+
+"Perhaps I'll call on the law myself," answered Phil, and then, unable
+to control himself, he shook his fist at the hotel man. Then all the
+boys filed out of the place, some bystanders looking on in wonder.
+
+"Well, what do you think of this!" cried Gus, when outside.
+
+"Phil, I wouldn't say anything more just now--you are too excited,"
+said Dave, catching his chum by the arm.
+
+"Yes, but that fellow is as mean as--as dirt!" answered the
+shipowner's son.
+
+"He hasn't any right to keep Phil's money," said one student.
+
+"Then the feast is called off, is it?" said Buster, with something
+like a groan in his voice.
+
+"And somebody is going to have the laugh on us!" added Shadow. "Say,
+this puts me in mind of a story," he added, brightening. "Once some
+boys were going----"
+
+"Oh, stow it, Shadow!"
+
+"This is no time for stories!"
+
+"I'd rather go down to the cemetery and weep."
+
+"Nobody is going to have the laugh on me," cried Phil. "We'll get
+something somewhere."
+
+"Right you are!" cried Dave. "I've got it!" he added. "Let us drive
+over to Rockville and get something at the hotel there. I know the
+proprietor and he's a nice man."
+
+"Better telephone to him first and make sure," suggested Roger.
+
+"I'll do it," said Phil.
+
+The carryall was brought around again and all piled in and drove down
+to a drug store where there was a telephone booth. Into the booth
+went Phil, to communicate with the hotel in Rockville. He came out
+smiling.
+
+"It's all fixed up and I guess we'll have something this time," he
+said. "But just wait; I'll fix that mean Jason Sparr, see if I
+don't!"
+
+"It's quite a drive to Rockville," protested Horsehair, when they told
+the driver what was wanted.
+
+"Never mind, it will do the horses good," cried Roger. "They are
+getting too fat standing still."
+
+"Say, Phil," whispered Dave. "If you haven't got money enough along, I
+can let you have some."
+
+"Good," was the whispered return. "I was going to speak of that, as
+soon as I got a chance."
+
+The affair at the Oakdale hotel had put something of a damper on the
+crowd, and all the talk was of how Jason Sparr had acted and who had
+been mean enough to play such a trick.
+
+"Maybe it was Nat Poole," said Chip.
+
+"What makes you think that?" asked Phil.
+
+"Oh, he is mean enough for anything."
+
+"If Nat did this I'll--I'll mash him!" cried Phil, with energy.
+
+"Can't you find out?" asked Roger.
+
+"I'll try--but most likely the fellow who did it took care to cover up
+his tracks. Sparr didn't know where the messages came from."
+
+On and on rolled the carryall, until the lights of Rockville appeared
+in the distance. By this time all of the students were decidedly
+hungry. They rolled up to the little hotel and those with horns gave a
+couple of shrill blasts.
+
+This time there was a warm welcome by the host. He came out, bowing
+and smiling.
+
+"Did the best I could for you, on such short notice," he said, as they
+entered. "Next time, if you'll only give me a little more time----"
+
+"That's all right, let's have what you've got," cried Buster. He was
+hungry enough to eat anything.
+
+They were ushered into what was usually the private dining-room of the
+little hostelry. The table had been spread out and was tastefully
+decorated with paper chrysanthemums, made by the hotel man's daughter.
+A parlor-lamp and several others shed light on the scene.
+
+"This looks good!" murmured Roger.
+
+"Wait till you see what we get to eat," answered Sam. "It may be
+slim--on such short notice."
+
+But he was agreeably mistaken, the spread was all that could be
+desired. There were oysters on the half-shell, tomato soup, fried
+chicken, mashed potatoes, lettuce salad, olives, and also coffee, pie,
+and various cookies. It was served in home style, by the hotel man's
+daughter and a hired girl.
+
+"Say, this is fine!" cried Buster, smacking his lips.
+
+"Better, maybe, than if we had stayed at the other place," added
+Dave.
+
+"Only we haven't got the music," said Phil. He was glad that matters
+had taken such a nice turn, but still angry over what had gone
+before.
+
+As they had already lost so much time, the boys did not dare linger
+too long over the spread. Horsehair was given something to eat in
+another room, and then they set out on the return. Songs were sung and
+jokes cracked, and Shadow was permitted to tell half a dozen of his
+best stories. Yet, with it all, the edge had been taken off the
+celebration, and Phil knew this as well as anybody, and was
+correspondingly chagrined.
+
+"I'll make that man square up with me, see if I don't," he said to
+Dave, as they arrived at the school. "I'm not going to lose all that
+money."
+
+"Well, be careful of what you do, Phil," warned our hero. "Don't get
+into a fight."
+
+The next day the shipowner's son sent out two sharp letters, one to
+Jason Sparr and the other to Professor Smuller. He stated that he was
+not responsible for the trip-up that had taken place, and demanded his
+money be returned to him, otherwise he would put the matter in the
+hands of the law.
+
+To these letters came speedy replies. The musical professor said he
+was sorry a mistake had been made, and he returned the amount paid to
+him, and he further stated that if he could discover who had played
+the trick he would make that party settle up.
+
+"That's decent of him," said Phil. "I am going to send him back five
+dollars for his trouble." And this he did, much to Professor Smuller's
+satisfaction.
+
+The letter from Jason Sparr was entirely different. He berated Phil
+for the stand taken, and stated that he would pay back nothing. He
+added that he had learned how the crowd had gone to Rockville to dine,
+and said he was satisfied that it was all a trick to get patronage
+away from his hotel. He added that he had had trouble enough with
+people from Oak Hall school and he wanted no more of it.
+
+"I guess I'll have to sue him," growled Phil, on showing the letter to
+Dave and Roger.
+
+"I don't think I'd bother," answered Dave. "Put it down to Experience,
+and let it go at that."
+
+"If you sued him it would cost as much as you'd get, and more," added
+the senator's son.
+
+"Humph! I don't feel like swallowing it," growled Phil. "I'll get it
+out of him somehow."
+
+"He must have lost something--if he got ready for the spread," said
+Dave.
+
+"Oh, I don't think he lost much. He's a close one--to my way of
+thinking," responded the shipowner's son.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE BLOWING UP OF THE BRIDGE
+
+
+"Say, this is something fierce, Dave!"
+
+"I agree with you, Roger. I don't see how we are going to do such a
+long lesson."
+
+"Old Haskers is getting worse and worse," growled Phil. "I think we
+ought to report it to Doctor Clay."
+
+"Just what I think," came from Ben. "He keeps piling it on harder and
+harder. I think he is trying to break us."
+
+"Break us?" queried our hero, looking up from his book.
+
+"Yes, make us miss entirely, you know."
+
+"Why should he want us to do that?" asked Roger.
+
+"Then we wouldn't be able to graduate this coming June."
+
+"Would he be mean enough to do that?" asked Dave.
+
+"I think he would be mean enough for anything," responded Phil. "Oh, I
+am not going to stand it!" he cried.
+
+The boys had just come upstairs, after an extra hard session in their
+Latin class. All were aroused over the treatment received at the hands
+of Job Haskers. He had been harsh and dictatorial to the last degree,
+and several times it had looked as if there might be an outbreak.
+
+The next day the outbreak came. Phil sprang up in class and denounced
+the unreasonable teacher, and Ben followed. Then Dave and Roger took a
+hand, and so did Buster and several others.
+
+"Sit down! Sit down!" cried Job Haskers, growing white in the face.
+"Sit down, and keep quiet."
+
+"I won't keep quiet," answered the shipowner's son. "You are treating
+us unfairly, Mr. Haskers, and I won't stand for it."
+
+"Neither will I," added Ben.
+
+"Sit down, I tell you!" stormed the instructor.
+
+But none of the students obeyed him, and in a minute more the room was
+in an uproar. One of the under-teachers heard it, and quickly sent for
+Doctor Clay.
+
+As the master of Oak Hall strode into the classroom there was a pause.
+He mounted the platform and put up his hand, and soon all became
+quiet.
+
+"Young gentlemen, be seated," he said, in his strict but kindly
+fashion, and instantly every student sat down. Then he turned to the
+teacher. "Mr. Haskers, what is the trouble?" he asked.
+
+"The trouble is that certain students will not learn their lessons,"
+answered Job Haskers, sourly. "I had to take them to task for it."
+
+"Who are those students?"
+
+"Lawrence, Basswood, Porter, Morr, Beggs----"
+
+"That will do for the present. Lawrence, stand up," ordered Doctor
+Clay.
+
+Phil did as requested, and the eyes of the entire class were fastened
+on the shipowner's son.
+
+"Now, Lawrence, what have you to say for yourself?" went on the
+doctor.
+
+In a plain, straightforward manner, Phil told his side of the story.
+Several times Job Haskers wanted to interrupt him, but Doctor Clay
+would not permit this. Then Ben was questioned, and after that the
+master of the school turned to Dave.
+
+"Is your complaint the same, Porter?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"And yours, Morr?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"What have you to say, Beggs?"
+
+"The same. The lessons lately have been altogether too hard--we simply
+can't get through them. We never had such long lessons before."
+
+"I have given them only the regular lessons," put in Job Haskers.
+
+"Ahem! Let us go over them and see what can be done," responded the
+doctor. "If the students are willing to work we do not want to
+overburden them, Mr. Haskers."
+
+A discussion lasting over a quarter of an hour followed, and in the
+end the lessons were cut down, much to the satisfaction of the whole
+class, who felt like cheering the head of the school. The only person
+who was not satisfied was Job Haskers. He was invited to go out with
+the doctor to his private office, and came back some time later,
+looking anything but happy.
+
+"I'll wager he got a calling down!" whispered Phil to Dave. "I hope he
+did."
+
+He was right about the "calling down," as he expressed it. The master
+of Oak Hall had spoken very plainly to the instructor, and given Job
+Haskers to understand that he must get along better with the boys in
+the future, and treat them with more consideration, or he would be
+asked to resign from the staff of the school.
+
+Several days slipped by and during that time Dave paid close attention
+to his lessons. He had also a theme to write on "The Future of Our
+Country," and he devoted considerable time to this, hoping it would
+receive at least honorable mention, even if it did not win the prize
+offered for the best production.
+
+"Come on down to town!" cried Roger, one afternoon, as he rushed in,
+"Big excitement on! Going to blow the railroad up!"
+
+"Blow the railroad up?" queried our hero. "What sort of a joke is
+this, Roger?"
+
+"No joke, at all. You know the old stone bridge over the creek?"
+
+"Sure."
+
+"Well, the railroad wants to get rid of it and do it quickly, so they
+can build another, so the contractors are going to blow the old bridge
+up with dynamite at half-past four o'clock."
+
+"Let's go!" burst out Phil. "It will be a great sight--to see that old
+bridge go up."
+
+"Right you are!" cried Ben.
+
+All the boys were enthusiastic, and in the end fully fifty students
+got permission to go down to Oakdale to see the old stone bridge
+destroyed.
+
+"None of you must go very close," warned Doctor Clay, "for dynamite is
+powerful stuff--eight times more powerful than gunpowder."
+
+"We'll keep away, don't fear about that," answered several.
+
+"Dynamite isn't to be fooled with," added Dave.
+
+"Say, that puts me in mind of a story!" cried Shadow. "A Dutch laborer
+working on the railroad was much annoyed by the other laborers coming
+along and knocking his stiff old derby hat over his eyes. At last he
+got good and mad and when he saw a chance, he stole a stick of
+dynamite from the shanty where it was kept. He stuck the dynamite in
+his hat and then went around to the other laborers. 'Now, chust hit
+dot hat vonce again of you dare!' he said."
+
+"And nobody dared," added Roger, as a general laugh went up.
+
+"I once saw a fellow take a stick of dynamite and burn it like a
+torch," remarked Ben. "It gave me a cold chill to see him do it."
+
+"And it didn't explode?" queried Roger.
+
+"No. But I heard afterwards that if he had struck it ever so lightly,
+it might have blown us all as high as a kite."
+
+"It sure is great stuff," remarked Phil. "Say," he went on suddenly,
+"I wish they were going to blow up old Sparr's hotel instead of the
+bridge."
+
+"So do I," added Ben. "He's about as mean as they make 'em."
+
+"That man ought certainly to have something done to him," was Roger's
+comment.
+
+"Well, he won't make a success of his hotel if he treats everybody as
+he treated Phil," said Dave.
+
+"He doesn't deserve any success," growled the shipowner's son.
+
+When the students arrived in the vicinity of the old bridge they found
+a large crowd assembled, including many acquaintances from Rockville
+Military Academy, and people from the town. Red flags had been placed
+around, and nobody was allowed to get very close to the old
+structure.
+
+"There is where they have the dynamite stored," said Phil, pointing to
+a shanty not far away. "See the sign?"
+
+"That's a good spot to steer clear of," returned Dave, with a grin.
+
+"Oh, I'm not afraid of the stuff," answered the shipowner's son.
+
+In the crowd of men and boys the students became more or less
+separated. There was a great thrill when the word was passed that
+everything was in readiness for the blowing up of the old bridge.
+
+"She's going!" cried Roger to Dave.
+
+Boom! came the dull, heavy roar, and the boys saw the stones of the
+old bridge flying upward in all directions. The ground shook all
+around them, and the water from the creek was splashed on high. A
+great cloud of smoke and dust filled the air. Then came silence,
+followed by a wild cheering from the younger element.
+
+"Certainly a great sight," was Dave's comment.
+
+"Too bad it didn't last longer," sighed Buster.
+
+"It wasn't quite as big as I thought it would be," said Luke. "I
+thought some of the stones would fly about a mile high."
+
+"Good enough for a free exhibition," put in Gus. "Beats fireworks all
+hollow."
+
+The boys walked down to the ruins of the old bridge and hung around
+for the best part of a half an hour. Then, in groups of five or six,
+they walked to town, to look around there before returning to Oak
+Hall. Dave and his chums passed Jason Sparr's hotel. He was on the
+veranda and scowled at them, and Phil and some of the others scowled
+in return.
+
+"Have you done anything about that Sparr matter yet, Phil?" asked one
+of the lads.
+
+"No; but I will soon, you wait and see," was the growled-out reply.
+
+On the main street of the town some of the boys separated, to do a
+little shopping, and then some walked to the school, while others got
+in the carryall that happened to be at hand. As a consequence some of
+the students did not get back to Oak Hall until some time after the
+supper hour.
+
+Dave was alone when he entered the dining-hall and he was surprised to
+see that neither Phil nor Roger was present. Ben was also absent and
+likewise Shadow.
+
+"Didn't some of them come in with you?" he asked of Buster.
+
+"Gus and Luke did," was the reply. "I don't know where the others
+are."
+
+The meal was almost at an end when Phil, Ben, and Roger made their
+appearance. They had but little to say, but Dave could see that
+something was wrong.
+
+"Had another wrangle with Jason Sparr," explained Phil, after the
+meal. "He followed me to one of the stores, and I told him just what I
+thought of him."
+
+"And he threatened to have Phil arrested for defamation of character,"
+added Ben.
+
+"But he didn't dare to do it," declared the shipowner's son.
+
+"Better let him alone," advised Dave. "You'll gain nothing by keeping
+in hot water over it, Phil."
+
+That night all of the boys had to study hard, and consequently they
+retired to their dormitories early. The only exception was Polly Vane,
+who had to go to Oakdale to meet a relative who would stop off but who
+was going away again on the midnight train.
+
+The boys studied until ten o'clock and then retired. Dave was
+completely tired out and his head had hardly touched the pillow when
+he was sound asleep.
+
+He was awakened about two hours later by the sounds of excited
+talking. He opened his eyes to behold Polly Vane standing in the
+dormitory fully dressed, while Phil was sitting on the edge of the
+bed, and Ben and Roger and some others were just rousing up.
+
+"What's going on?" Dave asked, sleepily.
+
+"A whole lot, if what Polly says is true," answered the shipowner's
+son.
+
+"But it is true, upon my word!" cried the girlish student. "I heard
+the explosion myself."
+
+"What explosion?" asked several.
+
+"An explosion in Oakdale, to-night," answered Polly. "Somebody tried
+to dynamite Jason Sparr's hotel!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+A SERIOUS ACCUSATION
+
+
+Instantly there was great excitement in the dormitory, and all of the
+students crowded around Polly, to learn what he might have to say.
+
+"It was this way, don't you know," said the scholarly youth. "I went
+to Oakdale to see my uncle, who stopped off on his trip from Portland
+to St. Louis. He wanted to ask me about some family matters, and he
+didn't have time to come to the Hall. I went down in the buggy----"
+
+"Oh, never mind that, Polly, tell about the explosion," interrupted
+Roger.
+
+"Well, I had just seen my uncle to the midnight train and was getting
+into the buggy to come back when I heard a low boom! coming from the
+direction of Sparr's hotel. The station-master and I were the only
+people around, and I asked him what the noise meant, but he said he
+didn't know. Then he jumped into the buggy with me to find out. We
+drove to the hotel, and there was excitement enough, I can tell you.
+The girls and women folks were screaming wildly and Mr. Sparr and some
+men were running around, not knowing what to do. Soon a crowd began to
+collect, and then we found out that a wing of the building--where the
+dining-room is--had been blown up. Some men from the railroad said it
+had been done by dynamite--the kind used for blowing up that old
+bridge."
+
+"Was anybody hurt?" asked Dave.
+
+"Nobody but an old man who was sleeping in the house next to the
+addition. He got so scared he jumped from an upper window and sprained
+his ankle. Oh, that dining-room is a sight, I can tell you! One end is
+completely gone--the wall away from the main house--and all the tables
+and chairs and ornaments smashed! And the roof is full of holes!"
+
+"How was it done?" questioned Gus.
+
+"The dynamite was placed at the side of the dining-room foundation,
+according to the railroad men, and it was set off by some sort of
+clockwork," answered Polly.
+
+"And who did it?" asked Shadow.
+
+"They don't know, yet. But Sparr suspects Phil. That is why I woke him
+up as soon as I came in," continued the girlish student.
+
+"Suspects me!" exclaimed the shipowner's son.
+
+"Yes. He says you are the only one who would do such a thing--you and
+the crowd who have been backing you up."
+
+"Well, I never!"
+
+"Maybe he means me, too," murmured Ben.
+
+"He does, and all the others in the crowd, too. He thinks it's a plot
+to get square because he wouldn't give Phil his dinner money back."
+
+"I had nothing to do with it," declared Phil, stoutly.
+
+"Nor I," added Ben.
+
+"Well, I am sure I wasn't in it," said Dave. "I didn't dream of such a
+thing."
+
+"Nor did I," added Roger and some others.
+
+The news soon spread through several dormitories, and the boys
+discussed the startling happening in whispers. Phil was greatly
+disturbed.
+
+"I didn't do it, but I know he'll try to fasten it on me," he told
+Dave. He did not add that he had written to his father about the
+affair of the feast and his parent had sent a warning letter back,
+ordering his son to have nothing more to do with Jason Sparr.
+
+The next morning the news was all over the school. Nat Poole heard of
+it, and he and some of his cronies declared it as their opinion that
+Phil and some others were to blame. This brought on a fistic encounter
+between Ben and the money-lender's son, and the latter got a black eye
+in consequence.
+
+"You sha'n't say I did it--or had anything to do with it," said Ben,
+when Nat backed away, having had enough of the battle.
+
+"Humph! just wait till the law has its say!" retorted Nat. "Then maybe
+you'll get what is coming to you!"
+
+Some of the boys wanted to go to town--to see the damaged hotel--but
+Doctor Clay would not permit this. In the meantime the wreckage was
+being cleared away, and the authorities and Jason Sparr were doing
+their best to locate the author or authors of the crime.
+
+Then came a great surprise, in the shape of a letter delivered in a
+mysterious way to the hotel-keeper. He was seated in the hotel office
+in the evening, talking to one of the town constables, when a missive
+was hurled at him through an open window. He dodged at first, fearing
+more dynamite, but when he saw it was only a letter, he picked it up
+and turned it over. It was addressed to him and marked "Private and
+Personal."
+
+"Wonder what this is?" he mused, and walked over to the light to read
+the letter. It was written on a single sheet of paper, in lead pencil,
+and evidently in a disguised hand. It contained but a few lines, as
+follows:
+
+ "If you want to catch the fellows who blew up your hotel have
+ these boys of Oak Hall school arrested at once, Philip Lawrence,
+ Benj. Basswood, David Porter, Roger Morr, and Joseph Beggs. They
+ were together when it was done, and one or more of them surely did
+ it.
+
+ "One Who Knows."
+The hotel-keeper read this letter several times and then stuffed it
+into his pocket. Then he went into the next room and drew from a
+drawer several things wrapped up in a newspaper.
+
+"I am going down to see the squire," he said, to the constable. "You
+can come along, if you want to."
+
+"What was in the letter?"
+
+"The names of the rascals who blew up my hotel."
+
+"What! You don't mean it, Jason!"
+
+"Yes, I do."
+
+"Who sent the letter?"
+
+"That's a secret. But come on, we'll talk it over with Squire
+Thompson. Ain't no time to waste." And then the hotel man went off to
+interview the leading legal light of the town.
+
+The conference at the squire's office lasted the best part of two
+hours. At this Jason Sparr produced the contents of the package,
+several things picked up near the hotel at the time of the
+explosion--a tan glove, somewhat worn, two iron rings, an empty paper
+box marked, "L." in one corner, a whip handle, and a clock-like
+contrivance which had been used to set off the dynamite. He told of
+his trouble with Phil and his chums, of the threats made, and produced
+the letter received so mysteriously.
+
+"Looks kind of plain to me, Squire," he said. "Don't you think so?"
+
+"It isn't for me to say," replied the squire, cautiously. "But if you
+want to swear out warrants for those boys' arrest----"
+
+"Ain't I justified?"
+
+"Sure you are," put in the constable, who happened to be the squire's
+brother-in-law. "I wouldn't waste no time on it." He thought he saw in
+this a job for himself, with some fat fees.
+
+"If you have them arrested, you've got to prove your case," said
+Squire Thompson, slowly. "It's a serious business, Sparr."
+
+"But this letter says they are guilty."
+
+"Lock 'em up and make 'em confess!" broke in the constable. "Give 'em
+the third degree!" he added. He had read something of how city
+criminals were occasionally treated and he wished to air his
+knowledge.
+
+"I'll do it!" cried Jason Spar. "I'll show 'em they can't insult me
+and take away my trade and then try to blow up my hotel! I'll have 'em
+all locked up! Then we can examine 'em one by one, and get 'em
+tangled up and make 'em confess."
+
+After much trouble, the warrants for the arrest of Phil, Ben, Dave,
+Roger, and Buster were made out. The constable wanted to serve them at
+once, but it was decided at the last moment to wait until the next
+morning, to see if any new evidence regarding the crime might be
+forthcoming.
+
+The constable went home, sworn to secrecy, but he had to tell his wife
+and her sister of the affair, and the news got to the ears of a man
+who boarded with them. This fellow, who was named Andy Prime, chanced
+to know Dave quite well, our hero having once done him a favor. Early
+in the morning Prime drove past the school, and seeing Dave on the
+campus, hailed him.
+
+"Come over here, I want to tell you something, Porter," said Prime,
+mysteriously.
+
+"What do you want?" asked Dave, good-naturedly.
+
+"Ride a bit with me, will you? I don't want nobody to hear us," went
+on the man, lowering his voice.
+
+Wondering what was coming, Dave got up on the seat of the man's wagon
+and they drove to the far end of the Oak Hall grounds. There Andy
+Prime told of all he had learned.
+
+"Please don't say I told ye!" he pleaded. "It might git me in
+trouble. But you did me a good turn onct an' I ain't forgot it."
+
+"Thank you, Prime, I won't tell who told me," answered Dave.
+
+"Thet old skinflint o' a Sparr deserved to have his buildin' blown
+up."
+
+"Perhaps. But we didn't do it, I can assure you of that. If Mr. Sparr
+has us arrested, he'll get in hot water," answered our hero; and then
+he got out of the wagon and Andy Prime drove on.
+
+Dave at once carried the news to those immediately concerned. All were
+very indignant, and some were scared.
+
+"Say, I won't stand for being arrested!" cried Phil, in horror. "It's
+too much of a disgrace!"
+
+"My folks would never get over it," added Ben.
+
+"It would just about kill my mother, if I was locked up," came from
+Buster.
+
+"Well, I'll stand it if I have to," said Roger. "But I'll make that
+fellow suffer for it later!" he added, bitterly.
+
+All thoughts of going to school that morning were abandoned by the
+five boys. They talked the situation over, and determined to go down
+the road and await the arrival of the constable, Andy Prime having
+said that Hickson would come by ten o'clock.
+
+"This is awful!" gasped Phil, shaking his head dolefully. "Say, Dave,
+I can't stand it!"
+
+"Wait until we hear what the constable has to say."
+
+"He won't say anything--he'll just drag us to the Oakdale lockup!" put
+in Ben.
+
+"I wonder what my dad will say to that, when he hears of it?" murmured
+Roger. "The newspapers are bound to make a spread of it. 'Son of a U.
+S. Senator Jailed for Blowing Up a Hotel!' or something like that. Oh,
+it makes me sick!"
+
+Plainly the majority of the students were very nervous. The only one
+who kept calm was Dave, and even he was much disturbed. All walked
+along the road, keeping a sharp eye out for the appearance of Paul
+Hickson.
+
+"Here he comes!" cried Phil, as a covered wagon came along the road,
+driven by the keeper of the Oakdale jail. On the front seat beside the
+driver were the constable and Jason Sparr.
+
+"Hi, you boys!" shouted the constable, as the wagon came closer. "I
+want to see you!"
+
+"What do you want?" demanded Dave, stepping to the front.
+
+"We want you, for one!" cried the hotel-keeper. "Be careful, Hickson,
+that none of 'em get away!" he added.
+
+"I don't know one from tudder," said the constable, doubtfully.
+
+"This is just the bunch we are after, unless I am mistaken," went on
+the hotel man. "That is Lawrence there, and Basswood, and this is
+Porter, and I think that is Morr," and he pointed to the various
+students.
+
+"Good enough. Boys, in the name of the law, I call on you to halt,"
+declared the constable, pompously.
+
+"Mr. Sparr, what does this mean?" demanded Dave.
+
+"It means that I am going to have the whole bunch of you arrested!"
+shouted the hotel man, harshly. "You blew up my hotel, and I can prove
+it! I've got the evidence against every one of you! I am going to have
+you arrested right now and sent to prison!" And he shook his fist at
+the boys.
+
+"The evidence against us?" faltered Phil.
+
+"Yes, sir, the plain, clear evidence," went on the hotel-keeper,
+dramatically. "I've got you just where I want you. I am going to send
+every one of you to prison for five or ten years!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE MEETING ON THE ROAD
+
+
+There was an intense silence, following the announcement of Jason
+Sparr that he intended to send Dave and his chums to prison for
+attempting to blow up the hotel. In the meantime the hotel man and the
+constable got down from the seat of the covered wagon.
+
+"I've got the warrants fer the arrest, boys," said Constable Hickson,
+somewhat importantly.
+
+"Mr. Sparr, I'd like a word with you," said Dave, as calmly as he
+could speak under the circumstances.
+
+"I ain't got no more to say than I've said," returned Jason Sparr,
+stubbornly. "You done it, and I can prove it! The constable is going
+to do his duty and arrest you!"
+
+"Dave, I--I won't stand for it!" whispered Phil, hoarsely. "It's
+terrible! I--I can't stand it!" And he began to back away.
+
+"Hi, there! stop!" yelled the hotel man. "Stop him, Hickson! Don't let
+him get away!"
+
+"You sha'n't arrest me for nothing!" cried the shipowner's son, and
+like a flash he turned around and started off on a run.
+
+"Come back here, Phil!" called out Dave. "Come back! You are making a
+mistake by running away!"
+
+But Phil did not hear, nor did Ben and Buster, who had also taken to
+their heels. Roger ran a few steps, then halted, and came back to our
+hero's side.
+
+"You are right, Dave," he said. "It's best to face the music."
+
+Phil, Ben, and Buster had turned towards Oak Hall. Phil was in the
+lead, but the others soon caught up to him.
+
+"Wha--what are you go--going to d--do?" panted Ben.
+
+"I'm not going to let them arrest me!" answered Phil. "I didn't do it,
+and I'm not going to jail."
+
+"Let us hide until we can get our folks to help us," suggested Buster.
+The thought of going to a lockup filled him with dread.
+
+"I'm going to notify my folks, too," said Ben.
+
+"The trouble is, I don't know where my folks are just now," came from
+the shipowner's son. "My father went on a trip on one of his vessels
+and mother is visiting relatives."
+
+The boys had kept on running on the road. But now, as they saw the
+constable after them, they turned and dashed into a side-path leading
+to the river.
+
+"A motor-boat!" cried Ben, a few seconds later.
+
+"It's the Kingsley boat," added Buster. "I know Tom will let us use
+it--he said I could do it once. Let us go across in it."
+
+All leaped on board, and Ben started up the engine while Buster took
+the wheel. There came a put! put! as the fly-wheel was turned over,
+and the little craft, which belonged to a boy living on the
+river-bank, headed out into the Leming River.
+
+In the meantime, while Constable Hickson was running after the
+fugitives, Jason Sparr and the driver of the covered wagon confronted
+Dave and Roger.
+
+"Don't you try to run!" bawled the hotel-keeper.
+
+"I'm armed," added the keeper of the town lockup, suggestively.
+
+"I don't intend to run, Mr. Sparr," answered Dave.
+
+"Why should we run, since we have done nothing wrong?" added the
+senator's son. He tried to follow Dave's example and remain calm, but
+he was tremendously disturbed.
+
+"Did those three fellows do it alone?" queried the hotel man,
+eagerly. "If they did, you had better confess to it, and clear
+yourselves."
+
+"None of us are guilty," answered Dave.
+
+"I know better."
+
+"You do not. Since we didn't do it, Mr. Sparr, I don't see how you can
+prove that we did,--unless you have manufactured some evidence against
+us," went on our hero, pointedly, a new idea coming into his head.
+
+"I ain't manufactured no evidence!" bawled Jason Sparr. "Didn't that
+young rascal of a Lawrence say he'd get square with me, and didn't all
+of you say the same? Wasn't you down to the blowing up of the bridge,
+right where they had all that dynamite stored? Wasn't some of the
+dynamite sticks stolen? Didn't you fellows come right by the hotel
+afterwards? Wasn't the blowing up done by clockwork, made to go off
+hours after it was set? You can't tell me! You are guilty. Besides, I
+got other evidence--I got a letter," added the hotel-keeper,
+shrewdly.
+
+"A letter? About us?"
+
+Jason Sparr nodded.
+
+"Saying we were guilty?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Who wrote it?"
+
+"Never mind that. You're guilty, and you know it. Just wait till
+Hickson comes back with them others and I'll show you a thing or
+two," continued the hotel man, harshly.
+
+"Mr. Sparr, I said I wanted to talk to you, and I do want to," said
+Dave, after a pause. "You will find it to your advantage to listen to
+me. You have got this whole thing settled in your own mind, but you
+are dead wrong. You intend to have us locked up for something we
+didn't do. To have us locked up will blacken our characters and
+blacken the reputation of Oak Hall. My folks are respectable people,
+and so are the folks of the other boys. Do you think they will stand
+for this sort of thing? And do you think Doctor Clay will stand for
+it? If you do, you are greatly mistaken. If you have us arrested on
+this charge, which is absolutely false, I'll get my folks to sue you
+for false imprisonment and defamation of character, and I know the
+other fellows will do the same. And you can rest assured that the
+charges against you will be pushed to the limits of the law."
+
+At this plain talk Jason Sparr's jaw dropped. Several times he was on
+the point of interrupting, but thought better of it.
+
+"Well, now--er----" he stammered when Dave had finished.
+
+"My father is a United States senator," said Roger. "You don't suppose
+he will let a matter like this pass unnoticed? If you do anything to
+besmirch our family name, you'll take the consequences."
+
+"Your father is a United States senator?" faltered Jason Sparr.
+
+"He is, and Dave's father is a rich man, and so is Phil Lawrence's
+father. Of course, our money has nothing to do with it, excepting that
+it will enable us to stand up for our rights in the courts, and get
+able lawyers to defend us. We are innocent of all wrongdoing. If
+anybody is in the wrong it is you, for you cheated Phil Lawrence out
+of the money he advanced to you for that spread we were to have at
+your hotel."
+
+"Cheated him!" cried the hotel-keeper.
+
+"That is what it amounted to, for you took his money and gave him
+nothing in return."
+
+"He called the spread off----"
+
+"He did not, and we can prove it," said Dave, following up what he
+thought looked like an advantage. "Why, if he wanted to do it, Phil
+could have you locked up for swindling."
+
+"What, me? Locked up?" cried the hotel man.
+
+"Certainly. Why not? It's as reasonable as your charge against
+us--more reasonable, in fact, for you kept his money and gave him
+nothing in return," went on our hero, warmly.
+
+"Well, now what do you know about that?" grumbled Jason Sparr, turning
+to the driver of the covered wagon. But the lockup man merely
+shrugged his shoulders. Privately he was of the opinion that the boys
+were not such rascals as had been pictured.
+
+"If those fellows wasn't guilty, why did they run away?" continued
+Jason Sparr, after an awkward pause.
+
+"Because you scared them," responded Roger. "I would have run away
+myself if it hadn't been for Dave."
+
+"Humph!"
+
+All looked along the road. Constable Hickson had disappeared, having
+followed the runaways down to the river. Presently he came back, out
+of breath from his exertions.
+
+"Did you get 'em?" queried the hotel-keeper, eagerly.
+
+"No, they got away in a motor-boat."
+
+"A motor-boat!" repeated Dave and Roger, and looked at each other in
+astonishment.
+
+"Yes, went up the river out of sight," said Paul Hickson. "Too bad!
+But we've got two of 'em, anyway," he added, looking at our hero and
+the senator's son.
+
+"I wanted Lawrence more than I did the others," grumbled Jason Sparr.
+He was doing some deep thinking and his face showed that he was much
+disturbed.
+
+"Mr. Sparr, just remember what I said," remarked Dave, pointedly. "If
+you go ahead, take my word for it, it will cost you dear."
+
+"Say, Hickson, we'll drop this matter for the present," said the
+hotel-keeper, in a low tone.
+
+"Drop it?" ejaculated the constable. "Ain't you goin' to have these
+two took up?"
+
+"Not just now. I--er--I want to get more evidence first, if I can. We
+can get them any time we want them."
+
+"But who is going to pay me for my trouble? I've got them warrants to
+serve right in my pocket, and----"
+
+"I'll fix that up with you," answered the hotel man, in a whisper.
+"Come on. We can come back later." And then the hotel man said
+something to the driver of the wagon. The latter merely nodded and got
+back to his seat. Jason Sparr climbed up beside him, and the constable
+slowly followed.
+
+"I don't understand----" went on the constable; but Jason Sparr merely
+pinched his arm, and he stopped short.
+
+"Just remember, this ain't settled yet!" cried the hotel-keeper, to
+Dave and Roger. "I'm going to look into it a bit deeper before I make
+a move, that's all. I know some of you done it, and I'll have you in
+prison for it yet, see if I don't!" And he shook his head grimly; and
+then the covered wagon was turned around, and the three men drove off
+in the direction of Oakdale.
+
+"Oh, Dave, do you think they'll come back?" cried Roger, when the men
+were out of hearing.
+
+"There is no telling what they will do, Roger. But you can make up
+your mind to one thing--Sparr won't come back until he has more
+evidence than he has at present."
+
+"But how can he get evidence? Surely you don't think Phil and the
+others guilty, even if they did run away."
+
+"No, I think Phil and the others are as innocent as we are. But I
+can't understand some things. Somebody used that dynamite and somebody
+wrote a letter to Sparr about us. The question is, Who was it?"
+
+"Could it be Nat Poole?"
+
+"I don't think Nat would be bad enough to try to blow up a hotel."
+
+"It certainly was an awful thing to do." Roger drew a long breath.
+"What shall we do now, go back to school?"
+
+"We might as well. If we don't, old Haskers will be after us again."
+
+"Do you think Phil and the others will come back?"
+
+"Why not? As soon as they have time to think it over they'll realize
+it is best to face the music," answered Dave.
+
+He and Roger returned to Oak Hall. They had missed one class, but
+fortunately that was one presided over by Mr. Dale, and he readily
+excused them when they said they had had some personal matters of
+importance to attend to, and would explain later.
+
+"It is bound to come out, sooner or later," said Dave to his chum. "So
+we might as well take Doctor Clay and Mr. Dale into our confidence."
+
+"I suppose you are right," answered the senator's son. Nevertheless,
+he heaved a deep sigh, as he thought of what might be the outcome of
+the trouble. What if, after all, Jason Sparr should concoct some sort
+of evidence against them and send them all to prison?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+LOOKING FOR THE RUNAWAYS
+
+
+When Dave and Roger went to the midday meal in the dining-room they
+looked all over for Phil, Ben, and Buster, but the three were not in
+sight.
+
+"Dave, they haven't come back yet."
+
+"So I see," returned our hero, and he was much disturbed. He ate
+sparingly, and the senator's son also had but little appetite for the
+meal.
+
+"Say, what's become of those chaps?" questioned Shadow.
+
+"I'll tell you later," answered Dave. "Don't say anything now--and
+tell the others to keep quiet, too."
+
+But such a happening could not be kept quiet, and soon it was
+whispered around that Phil, Ben, and Buster were missing. This
+presently got to the ears of Andrew Dale, and the head assistant
+teacher sought out Dave for an explanation.
+
+"I understand you went out with Lawrence, Basswood, and Beggs this
+morning, Porter," said the teacher. "They are not yet back. Do you
+know where they went?"
+
+"They went off in a motor-boat, that is all I know about that part of
+it, Mr. Dale. Roger Morr and I would like to speak to you and Doctor
+Clay in private. It is very important," went on our hero.
+
+"Very well. Come at once to the office and I will call the doctor."
+
+A little later found the two youths in the office with Doctor Clay and
+his head assistant. There, as briefly as he could, Dave told his
+story, and Roger corroborated what was said. The head of the school
+was deeply interested and not a little alarmed.
+
+"This is certainly serious," he declared, with a grave shake of his
+head. "It reflects not only on you but on this school. I must look
+into this at once." And then he asked many questions, and Andrew Dale
+did the same.
+
+"Running away makes it look bad for Lawrence, Beggs, and Basswood,"
+remarked Mr. Dale. "They should have stood their ground, as Morr and
+Porter did."
+
+"That hotel man and the constable probably scared them so they did not
+know what they were doing," returned Doctor Clay. He turned to the
+boys. "You have no idea where they went?"
+
+"No, sir, excepting that they went up the river in the Kingsley
+motor-boat. They know Tom Kingsley quite well and he lets them use the
+boat once in a while."
+
+"Do you think you could find them, if I let you off to do so?"
+
+"We could try, sir."
+
+"Then you may go at once. Tell them it was very foolish to run away,
+and urge them to come back at once," added Doctor Clay.
+
+A little more conversation followed, and then Dave and Roger left the
+office and started on the search for the runaways.
+
+"We ought to have a motor-boat ourselves, to follow them up the
+river--that is, if they went any distance," said the senator's son.
+
+"We might try to borrow one, Roger."
+
+"Not Nat Poole's--he wouldn't lend it to us."
+
+"I know that."
+
+The two students walked to the river and looked up and down the
+stream. A rowboat and a sailboat were in sight, but that was all.
+
+"There is Jack Laplow in his sloop," cried Dave, mentioning a riverman
+they knew. "The wind is blowing up the stream. Maybe he'll take us
+along."
+
+They hailed the riverman, who made a living by doing all sorts of jobs
+on the stream. He did not have much to do just then and readily
+agreed, for a small amount, to take them up the river and bring them
+back.
+
+"We want to find some fellows who are in the Kingsley motor-boat,"
+explained Dave. "Have you seen anything of them?"
+
+The riverman had not, but said he would help to watch out for the
+lads. Dave and Roger hopped aboard the sloop, and soon the little
+craft was standing up the Leming River, with Jack Laplow at the
+tiller.
+
+It was a warm, clear day, and had the boys not been distressed in
+mind, they would have enjoyed the sail immensely. But as it was, they
+were very sober, so much so in fact that the old riverman at length
+remarked:
+
+"What's wrong--somebody hurt, or are ye going to a funeral?"
+
+"No funeral," answered Dave, with a forced laugh. "But we are in a
+hurry to find those three fellows."
+
+"Well, I don't see no motor-boat yet," answered Jack Laplow.
+
+"One thing is certain: if it went up the river it's got to come down,"
+said Roger.
+
+"They may get out and send it back," answered our hero.
+
+"But, Dave, surely you don't think----" But Dave put up his hand for
+silence and nodded in the direction of the boatman; and the senator's
+son said no more.
+
+A mile and a half were covered, and they were just passing one of the
+many islands in the river, when Jack Laplow gave a shout.
+
+"There is the motor-boat now!"
+
+"Boat ahoy!" shouted Dave, and then, as they drew closer, he saw that
+it was really the Kingsley craft. He was chagrined to see that only a
+man was on board, a fellow who was running the boat very slowly.
+
+"Where are those boys who were aboard?" demanded our hero, as the
+motor-boat came closer.
+
+"Is this your boat?" asked the man on board, in return.
+
+"No, but my friends were on that boat. Where are they?"
+
+"Left the boat at Snog's Point, and hired me to bring her back. I
+don't know much about motor-boats, so I'm running kind o' slow,"
+explained the man.
+
+"Snog's Point?" repeated Roger. "Where were they going?"
+
+"Don't ask me, for I don't know. They was in a tremenjous hurry, I
+know that. It's all right, ain't it?" went on the man, quickly.
+
+"Oh, yes, it was all right," answered Dave. And then they allowed the
+man to go on his way.
+
+[Illustration: "THERE IS THE MOTOR-BOAT NOW!"--_Page 186_.]
+
+"Want to go up to Snog's Point?" asked the man of the sloop.
+
+"Yes,--and as quickly as you can get there," replied Dave.
+
+As the wind was in the right direction, it did not take long. The
+Point was a rocky cliff with a stretch of sand at its base. Here the
+boys jumped ashore.
+
+"Want me to wait for you?" asked the riverman.
+
+"Wait for half an hour," said Dave. "Then, if we are not back, you can
+go back;" and so it was arranged.
+
+In the sand our hero and Roger could plainly see the marks of the
+motor-boat and many footprints. They followed the footprints to a road
+leading through a stretch of woods, and then came out on a highway
+leading to Barrelton.
+
+"The town is about half a mile from here. Wonder if they went there?"
+mused Roger.
+
+"Maybe we can learn something at the nearest farmhouse," suggested
+Dave.
+
+They hurried on, and presently reached a farmhouse set close to the
+road, with a barn on the other side. At a grindstone a tall, thin boy
+was sharpening a sickle.
+
+"Yes, I saw them fellers," he drawled, when asked about the runaways.
+"They was walking to town to beat the cars. I thought they must be in
+one o' them cross-country races, or something like that."
+
+"Come on!" cried Dave to his chum. Then he turned back suddenly. "Do
+you know anything about the trains from Barrelton?"
+
+"Ain't many trains from there," answered the youth at the grindstone.
+
+"But do you know what there are?"
+
+"There's a train north jest about due now."
+
+"And what is next?"
+
+"A train south a leetle after four o'clock. An' the freight goes
+through at seven."
+
+"Hurry, Roger!" cried Dave.
+
+"Do you think they'd take a train, Dave?"
+
+"I don't know--I hope not."
+
+The two boys set off on a run, taking it easy at first, so as not to
+get winded. They passed a number of farms and presently came in sight
+of Barrelton, so called because of the barrel factory located there.
+From a distance they had heard the whistle of a locomotive, and knew
+that the north-bound train had stopped at the station and gone on.
+
+"There is the station!" cried Dave, pointing up the railroad tracks.
+They continued to run and did not stop until they gained the platform.
+Here they met the ticket agent.
+
+"The train just went, didn't it?" asked Dave, and as the agent
+nodded, he went on: "Did three young fellows like ourselves get on?"
+
+"If they did, I didn't see 'em," answered the man.
+
+"Oh!" cried Roger, "maybe they didn't take the train, after all."
+
+"Let us hope so."
+
+Somewhat out of breath, the two boys tramped around Barrelton, looking
+for Phil and the others, and asking about them. But nobody appeared to
+have seen the runaways, and not a trace of them was to be found
+anywhere.
+
+"All we can do is to get something to eat and take the other train for
+Oakdale," said Roger, after they had satisfied themselves that the
+runaways were nowhere in that vicinity. The walking around had made
+him hungry.
+
+They procured some pie and milk at a little stand near the station,
+and shortly after four o'clock took the way train for Oakdale and
+walked to the school. They went directly to the doctor's office. The
+master of Oak Hall listened patiently to what they had to tell.
+
+"I am sorry you did not find them," he said, gravely. "It was very
+foolish of them to run away, very. I trust they will come back of
+their own accord soon."
+
+"Will you see Mr. Sparr about the matter?" asked Dave.
+
+"Yes, Porter. And I wish you and Morr to go with me."
+
+The interview took place that evening, the boys and the doctor driving
+down to the hotel after supper. Jason Sparr treated the master of the
+Hall politely but said very little.
+
+"When I make my next move I'll have a lawyer," he said. "I know
+somebody tried to blow up my hotel, and I think it was some of your
+boys--that Lawrence boy especially. But I ain't going to have 'em
+arrested until I can prove it."
+
+"Very well," answered Doctor Clay. "And in the meantime, you had
+better keep quiet, or you may have a suit for damages on hand."
+
+On the day following there was something of a sensation. The weekly
+newspaper issued in a nearby town came out with a thrilling account of
+the dynamiting of the dining-room of the hotel. In the account
+appeared the following:
+
+ "There is strong evidence pointing to the fact that the outrageous
+ deed was perpetrated by some schoolboys who held a grudge against
+ Mr. Sparr. They are known to have been present at the blowing up
+ of the old stone bridge, and were seen near the shanty where the
+ sticks of dynamite were kept, and one boy of the town says he saw
+ a young man coming from the shanty with something in his hand. Mr.
+ Sparr has the authorities at work and is piling up his evidence,
+ and the arrest of the rascally schoolboys may be hourly expected.
+ It is said that some of the boys have run away, but the
+ authorities have an idea where they can be located. The town
+ committee is thinking of offering a reward for the capture and
+ conviction of the rascals. For the safety of our citizens, the
+ Weekly Globe-Leader hopes the evil-doers will soon be
+ apprehended."
+
+No names were mentioned in this account, but everybody in Oakdale and
+vicinity knew that the boys of Oak Hall were alluded to, and there was
+much talk over what might be done. Doctor Clay felt the disgrace
+keenly, and Dave and Roger were equally affected.
+
+"What are we going to do, Dave?" asked the senator's son.
+
+"I don't know," returned our hero. "But we've got to do something,
+that's certain."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+THE WILD MAN AGAIN
+
+
+"Roger, I have an idea!"
+
+"What is it, Dave?"
+
+"I may be mistaken, but I've been thinking that perhaps that wild man
+did the blowing up at the hotel."
+
+"What makes you think that?" questioned the senator's son, putting
+down the book he had been trying to study.
+
+A day had passed after the events recorded in the last chapter, and so
+far no word had come in concerning Phil and the other runaways. Doctor
+Clay had sent for a private detective to assist in locating them and
+also to try, if possible, to clear up the mystery concerning the hotel
+affair.
+
+"Well, in the first place, it would be just like a crazy man to do
+such a thing, wouldn't it?"
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+"In the second place, I have heard that the wild man was seen around
+when the bridge was blown up."
+
+"Is that so? Who saw him?"
+
+"Mr. Tyson, the farmer who lives near the bridge."
+
+"Why didn't he try to capture the fellow?"
+
+"He did, but in the excitement of the blowing up the wild man slipped
+him. And that isn't all. Mr. Tyson saw him coming from the vicinity of
+that shanty where the dynamite was kept."
+
+"Say, that is certainly interesting!" cried the senator's son. "When
+did you learn all this?"
+
+"Less than an hour ago. Mr. Tyson brought some vegetables to the
+school and I had a talk with him."
+
+"Did he think the wild man blew up the hotel?"
+
+"No, he didn't connect the two."
+
+"Hum! What do you think of doing about it?"
+
+"I hardly know. I wish we could round up the wild man."
+
+"Plenty of folks wish that."
+
+"I think he hangs out somewhere along the river, or on one of the
+islands."
+
+"Maybe Nat Poole knows."
+
+"I hardly think so--although I am sure Nat wants to find the
+fellow--why, I can't imagine."
+
+During those trying days, Job Haskers was as harsh and dictatorial to
+Dave and Roger as ever, and several times he passed sneering remarks
+about those who were missing.
+
+"You may think as you please, Doctor Clay," said he to the master of
+the Hall. "I feel sure in my mind that Lawrence and those other boys
+are guilty. I do not think Mr. Sparr would accuse them if he was not
+pretty sure of his ground."
+
+"Well, he has not dared to have those warrants served," replied the
+doctor, dryly.
+
+"Because he is afraid there will be a great deal of money used in the
+case to fight him."
+
+"Mr. Haskers, do you stand up for Mr. Sparr? I thought you had had
+some difficulty yourself with him once?"
+
+"That was but a small affair. I think he is perfectly honest and that
+he wants to do what is right."
+
+"Possibly. But he did not treat Lawrence very fairly in the matter of
+that dinner that was ordered."
+
+"That was a mistake, and Mr. Sparr lost as much as he got. Yes, I
+think those boys guilty, and in the end you will find out that I am
+right," added Job Haskers as he went off, smiling grimly to himself,
+as if it was a pleasure to him to have the boys thus accused.
+
+The next morning came another surprise. On getting up Dave noticed
+that something was missing from the dormitory. Phil's suit-case was
+gone, likewise a portion of his clothing, and also the valises of Ben
+and Buster, and part of their outfits.
+
+"Well, this beats the Dutch!" exclaimed Roger, on learning the news.
+"Who took them, do you suppose?"
+
+"Don't ask me, Roger."
+
+"Maybe they came themselves and got them," suggested Sam.
+
+"If they did, wouldn't we hear them?" asked Gus.
+
+"Talk about a mysterious disappearance," cried Shadow. "Say, this puts
+me in mind of a story. Once some fellows----"
+
+"Oh, stow it, Shadow!" cried the senator's son. "Let's get busy and
+try to find out what this means. Maybe they are back at the school."
+
+All of the boys dressed hastily and took a look around. But they could
+find no trace of the runaways. Yet the traveling-bags and the clothing
+were certainly gone.
+
+"If I didn't know better, I'd say the place was haunted!" cried Luke.
+
+"Oh, don't say that!" exclaimed Polly Vane, looking scared. "I don't
+wish to see any ghosts."
+
+Doctor Clay was informed of what had occurred, and he had another
+search conducted. But it was all to no purpose--the things were
+missing, and that was all there was to it.
+
+It may well be imagined that with so much going on it was next to
+impossible for Dave and Roger to study. Yet they did their best, not
+wishing to drop behind again as they had during the trip to Cave
+Island. Job Haskers did not let up on them, and many a time they
+wished he would leave Oak Hall and that they might never see him
+again.
+
+One afternoon Roger came to Dave in great haste and beckoned for him
+to come outside.
+
+"I think we had better follow Nat Poole," said the senator's son. "I
+think there is something in the wind."
+
+"What makes you think that?"
+
+"Nat has been packing a valise and he has put in the strangest
+things--some clothing, some bottles of medicine, some rope, and a
+thing that looks like a crown made of brass."
+
+"A crown made of brass? Oh, Roger, maybe that wild man--who calls
+himself the King of Sumatra----"
+
+"That's the idea, Dave, I see you've caught on. Come on, before Nat
+gets away from us."
+
+Our hero needed no further urging, and soon he and Roger were on their
+way to the gymnasium, where the senator's son had, by pure accident,
+seen Nat Poole packing the things mentioned in his handbag.
+
+As they approached, they saw the money-lender's son trundle out a
+bicycle he owned and mount it, swinging his valise over his shoulder
+by a strap. He looked back to see if he was being observed, but Dave
+and Roger were on guard and quickly dove out of sight behind some
+bushes.
+
+"We'll have to follow on our own wheels," said Dave.
+
+Their old bicycles were still in the gymnasium. They were not in very
+good condition, but the tires were air-tight and that was enough.
+Without delay, they trundled the machines out, and leaping into the
+saddles, pedaled after Nat.
+
+The course of the money-lender's son was along the river road, and he
+followed this for the best part of a mile. Then he branched off on a
+side-road leading to what were known as the Chester Hills. It was hard
+work pushing the machine up the hills, but Nat kept at it steadily,
+and Dave and Roger followed. Strange to say, the money-lender's son
+did not once look back after leaving the school. Evidently he was of
+the opinion that nobody had observed his departure, or, if so, had
+taken no particular notice of it.
+
+From the top of one of the hills, Nat struck off on another side-road,
+leading to a little valley. Here was a brook, and at a point where it
+widened out, a small and really beautiful island. In the center of the
+island a cabin had been built by some sportsman, and a rustic bridge
+connected the resort with the shore.
+
+Reaching the rustic bridge, Nat dismounted, and with his valise still
+over his shoulder, walked towards the cabin. As he did this Dave and
+Roger came quite close and they, too, dismounted, keeping in the
+shelter of some trees near by.
+
+"Stop! I command you, in the name of the King of Sumatra, to stop!"
+
+The call came from the cabin, and a second later the wild man
+appeared. He was clad in a blue pair of trousers and over his shoulder
+was thrown a big red blanket. On his head rested a crown made of a tin
+pail cut into sharp points.
+
+"I salute you, King of Sumatra!" called out Nat, making a low bow.
+
+"Ha! it is my servant that speaks," said the wild man. "Bow low, bow,
+I tell you!" and he flourished a wooden sword that he held in one
+hand.
+
+"It is the wild man, sure enough!" whispered Roger, in great
+excitement.
+
+"And evidently he has been expecting Nat," returned Dave. "Let us get
+closer and see what is up."
+
+They advanced with care until they were behind a tree at the very foot
+of the rustic bridge. In the meantime Nat had gone forward, bowing low
+at every step.
+
+"I have brought you something, my king!" cried the money-lender's
+son. "Something of great importance to you."
+
+"What is it?" demanded the wild man, his curiosity excited.
+
+"A new crown. It is of gold, a beautiful crown."
+
+"Ha! ha! that is well! The King of Sumatra needs a new crown!" cried
+the wild man, strutting up and down in front of the cabin. "Give it to
+me, that I may see if it fits." And he held out his empty hand.
+
+"Let us go into the cabin, and you can sit in your chair of state
+while I place it on your head," said Nat, in a soothing, persuasive
+voice. "You will like it, I know."
+
+"Did you bring your army with you?" demanded the wild man,
+suspiciously.
+
+"No, I am all alone--the army is at Oakdale," answered Nat.
+
+"Again 'tis well. Come in, and I will sit on the throne," and with a
+sweeping gesture of welcome, the wild man stepped back into the cabin,
+and Nat Poole followed.
+
+"Now, what do you make of this?" whispered Roger, looking at Dave in
+wonder.
+
+"I have an idea, Roger," answered our hero. "Nat knows that man; in
+fact, he is well acquainted with him. I think he is going to try to
+make him a prisoner."
+
+"A prisoner? Oh, I see; for the glory of it, eh?"
+
+"No, to get him back to some sanitarium as quietly as possible. I
+think Nat would like to do it without anybody around here being the
+wiser."
+
+"Oh! Then maybe the fellow is some relative of the Pooles."
+
+"Possibly, or a close friend. But come on, let us see what happens. We
+ought to try to capture the man ourselves."
+
+"To be sure. But I don't see how we are going to do it. We are
+unarmed, and they say crazy folks are fearfully strong."
+
+"We'll have to watch our chances."
+
+The cabin had a window as well as a door, and to the former the two
+boys crawled. Peering through a vine that grew over the opening, they
+saw that the wild man had seated himself on a rude bench which he
+called his throne. It was covered with a tattered carpet and some
+cabalistic signs in blue chalk. Nat had placed his valise on the
+ground and was opening it. He brought out the crown and also the rope,
+but took care to conceal the latter under his coat.
+
+"Now you must close your eyes and sit perfectly still while I place
+the crown on your head," said the money-lender's son. "I will have to
+do it from behind, for that is the way they do it in England and
+Germany."
+
+"Do they do it in Russia that way, too?" demanded the wild man, and
+his eyes took on a glowing look as he gazed at the brass crown.
+
+"Of course."
+
+"Then let it be so." And the wild man sat back on the bench and closed
+his eyes, and stroked his straggly beard.
+
+Quickly Nat stepped behind the man, and while he fumbled with the
+crown with one hand, he brought out the rope with the other. He was
+greatly excited and his hands trembled.
+
+"Now sit perfectly still while I count fifty," said the money-lender's
+son. "Then when I----"
+
+He did not finish, for at that instant the wild man let out a sudden
+yell and leaped to his feet. He ran to the doorway; and the next
+moment came face to face with Dave and Roger.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+SOMETHING OF A CLEW
+
+
+"Ha! ha! you are the army sent to capture me, are you? But I am not to
+be captured! Take the cannons away! Bring up the artillery! Forward
+the light brigade! Victory for the King of Sumatra! Oh, if only I had
+a company of trained monkeys I would show you how to fight!"
+
+Thus speaking, the wild man danced around before Dave and Roger,
+swinging his wooden sword close to their heads. Indeed, our hero had
+to dodge back, to keep from being hit.
+
+"Hello, you here?" cried Nat, coming from the cabin. "You followed me,
+did you?" He scowled deeply. "It's just like you, Dave Porter!"
+
+"Nobody shall follow the King of Sumatra!" went on the wild man, with
+a cunning look at the three students. "Away! Out of my sight!" he
+yelled.
+
+He dashed past Dave and Roger, moving towards the rustic bridge. Our
+hero caught him by the arm, but received a blow in the face that
+staggered him. Roger also tried to catch the man, but he was too
+quick, and a second later was on the bridge.
+
+"Come back!" bawled Nat. "Come back, Uncle Wilbur! Don't you know me?
+Come back, please! We won't hurt you!" And then he set off after the
+wild man, who was running along the road beyond the bridge.
+
+"Dave, did you hear that?" gasped the senator's son. "He called the
+wild man Uncle Wilbur!"
+
+"Yes, I heard him," returned our hero. "No wonder he has been after
+him, Roger. Come on, let us see if we can't catch him."
+
+The chums started after the wild man and the money-lender's son. The
+way was along the road, but presently the wild man turned into a
+stretch of woods. He could run like a trained athlete, and easily
+outdistanced Nat, who kept calling after him.
+
+When Dave and Roger came up they found the money-lender's son leaning
+against a tree, out of breath and much disgusted.
+
+"Couldn't get him, eh?" queried Roger.
+
+"No, you fellows scared him off," growled the money-lender's son.
+
+"I am sorry if we did that," said Dave.
+
+"You had no right to butt in," grumbled Nat. "What did you follow me
+for, anyway?"
+
+"Because we thought you were after the wild man, that's why," answered
+Roger.
+
+"Humph!"
+
+"So he is your Uncle Wilbur," went on our hero, after a pause, and he
+turned a look of sympathy at Nat as he spoke.
+
+"Who told you that?"
+
+"You called him Uncle Wilbur."
+
+"I--I guess you are mistaken," stammered Nat, growing red in the
+face.
+
+"No, we heard you as plain as day," put in the senator's son.
+
+"You haven't any right to pry into my affairs, Roger Morr! You nor
+Dave Porter either!"
+
+"Perhaps not," answered Roger.
+
+"Look here, Nat, if we can help you we'll do it," came from Dave. "I
+suppose, if that man is your uncle, you wish to get him back to
+the--er--the sanitarium as quickly and as quietly as possible; is that
+so?"
+
+"Wouldn't you want to do that, if he was your uncle?" asked the
+money-lender's son, flushing deeply.
+
+"Certainly. But it looks, now, as if you couldn't do it alone."
+
+"I might have done it, if you hadn't come up and queered my game."
+
+"He didn't see us until he ran out of the cabin," said Roger. "He just
+got a wild streak on, that's all. I don't think you could have
+managed him alone. He wouldn't let you tie him up with that rope."
+
+"Well, he's gone, that's sure," grumbled Nat. "I'm going back to the
+cabin for my valise."
+
+"He may come back," suggested Dave.
+
+"I don't think so. But I'll wait and see. I hung around once for
+him--on that island--but he never came back. It isn't often he visits
+the same spot twice. That's the reason the authorities around here
+haven't caught him."
+
+"What is his name, Nat?"
+
+"Wilbur Poole, if you must know. He is my father's half-brother."
+
+"Where did he come from?"
+
+"From the Blossmore Sanitarium, in New York state. It's a private
+place, near Lake Erie. He lost a lot of money several years ago in a
+speculation in Sumatra tobacco and that made him crazy, and that is
+why, I suppose, he calls himself the King of Sumatra."
+
+"Did you know he was missing when you heard of the wild man?"
+questioned Dave, with interest.
+
+"No, I did not, for the sanitarium people did not notify us that he
+had gotten away. I suppose they thought he would stay near the
+institution and that they would be able to get him again. I can't
+imagine what brought him away out here, excepting that I went to see
+him once, when he was somewhat better, and I told him about Oakdale
+and our school. I knew he called himself the King of Sumatra, and that
+is why I got interested in the wild man as soon as I heard you mention
+that name. Then, when the handkerchief was found, I was sure the man
+was my uncle."
+
+"And you put the hole in the handkerchief," said our hero.
+
+"Yes, because--well, I didn't want folks to find out from the
+Blossmore authorities that the man was my uncle," answered Nat,
+casting down his eyes. "I thought I might be able to catch him and
+send him back on the quiet. I didn't want the whole school talking
+about it."
+
+"I can understand your feelings, Nat," said our hero, kindly. "And if
+I can help you in the matter, I'll do it."
+
+"I suppose you'll tell everybody he's my uncle," came bitterly from
+the money-lender's son.
+
+"No, I won't. But I think Doctor Clay ought to know it."
+
+"And what of your folks?" asked Roger. "Do they know?"
+
+"I sent my dad a letter about it last week. But he is away on
+business, so I don't know when he'll get it or what he'll do. I didn't
+let the Blossmore folks know because I don't think my uncle ought to
+go back to that place. He ought to be put in an institution where they
+are more strict, so he can't get away again."
+
+"You are right there," said Dave.
+
+"Nat, don't you know it is highly dangerous to allow that man at
+large?" asked the senator's son, after a pause, during which the three
+boys turned their footsteps towards the island cabin.
+
+"Oh, I don't think he is as dangerous as some folks imagine," was the
+reply. "He has never actually harmed anybody yet. But he scares 'em."
+
+"He may have committed some deeds of which you know nothing."
+
+At these suggestive words from the senator's son Nat turned pale.
+
+"What do you mean? Have you heard anything, Roger?"
+
+"I hate to hurt your feelings any further, Nat, but I must be honest
+with you. Dave and I have an idea that he was the one who blew up the
+dining-room of Sparr's hotel."
+
+"Oh, impossible!"
+
+"What Roger says is true," said Dave, gravely. "I am sorry for you,
+Nat, but that is the way it looks to us. He was seen around the old
+stone bridge when it was blown up, and around the shanty where the
+dynamite was kept, and he has been in Oakdale several times, so we
+have heard."
+
+"Oh, he wouldn't do such a thing! He couldn't!" cried the
+money-lender's son, in genuine distress.
+
+"An insane man is liable to do anything, Nat," said Roger. "Why, he
+might have set off that dynamite without realizing the consequences.
+The best thing we can do is to organize a regular search for him, and
+round him up as quickly as possible."
+
+"I suppose that is so," groaned Nat. "But, oh, how I do hate the
+exposure!"
+
+"You mustn't take it too hard, Nat," said Dave. "Remember, neither you
+nor your family are responsible for his condition of mind."
+
+It did not take the three students long to reach the little cabin.
+While Nat was packing up the things he had brought along, Dave and
+Roger looked over the place. The wild man had had but few things, none
+of them worth mentioning. There was a newspaper and an old magazine,
+showing that Wilbur Poole occasionally indulged in reading.
+
+"Hello, look here!" cried Roger, as he turned the magazine over.
+"Well, I declare!"
+
+"What is it?" asked Dave and Nat, in a breath.
+
+"Here's a picture, drawn in blue pencil. It is marked Fort, but it
+looks like Sparr's hotel."
+
+"And look what it says!" cried Dave, eying the crude drawing. "'Powder
+House to be blown up'! That's the dining-room, as plain as day!"
+
+"And down here it says, 'Dynamite will do it easily,' and signed,
+'King of Sumatra.' Dave, he did it, and this proves it."
+
+"It certainly looks that way, Roger."
+
+"Let me see that drawing!" burst out Nat, and would have snatched it
+from Roger's hand had not Dave stopped him.
+
+"You can look at it, Nat, but you must give it back," said our hero.
+
+"What for? My uncle drew that and I have a right to it."
+
+"No, I am going to hand this over to Doctor Clay and then to the
+Oakdale authorities. It may be needed to clear Phil, Ben, and
+Buster."
+
+"Hurrah, Dave, that's the talk!" cried Roger, with sudden enthusiasm.
+"I didn't think of it, but that is just what is needed to clear 'em!
+We'll knock Jason Sparr's accusations into a cocked hat!"
+
+"You let me see that drawing!" shouted Nat, making another grab for
+it. "I've got a right to it--if my uncle made it."
+
+"You can look at it, but you can't handle it," said Dave, and he gave
+Roger a look that the senator's son well understood. Both knew that
+the money-lender's son could not be trusted with such an important bit
+of evidence.
+
+The drawing was held up, but Nat was not permitted to get too close to
+it. He looked it over carelessly and then his lip curled.
+
+"Huh! I don't think my uncle drew it," he said.
+
+"And we think he did," returned Dave.
+
+There was a sudden silence after this. Each boy was busy with his
+thoughts. Dave felt particularly light-hearted.
+
+"This ought to clear Phil and the others," he reasoned. "And they can
+come back to school without delay and finish the term and graduate."
+
+Having packed up his things, Nat got out his bicycle and prepared to
+ride back to Oak Hall, and the others did the same.
+
+"Going to give me that drawing?" asked the money-lender's son, just as
+he was ready to start off.
+
+"No, we are going to turn it over to Doctor Clay," said Roger.
+
+"All right, have your own way," growled Nat.
+
+As in coming to the cabin, the money-lender's son took the lead in the
+return to Oak Hall. Dave and Roger kept close behind and occasionally
+spoke of the happenings in guarded tones. When the school was reached
+all left their bicycles in the gymnasium.
+
+"Going to Doctor Clay now?" demanded Nat.
+
+"We might as well," said Dave. "The sooner he knows of this, the
+better for everybody."
+
+"All right."
+
+Doctor Clay was somewhat surprised to see the three boys, dusty and
+tired-looking, enter his private office. He listened with close
+attention to their tale of visiting the cabin and encountering the
+wild man, and looked completely astonished on learning that the man
+was Nat's uncle.
+
+"I am sorry for you, Poole," said he, kindly. "But such things will
+happen and you must make the best of it. It is not your fault."
+
+Then Dave and Roger told of the finding of the old magazine with the
+drawing and writing, and Doctor Clay shook his head sorrowfully.
+
+"Too bad! Too bad!" he murmured.
+
+"But this clears Lawrence, Basswood, and Beggs," cried Dave. "And it
+clears Roger and myself."
+
+"Yes! yes! so it does, Porter!"
+
+"Don't you believe it, Doctor Clay!" cried Nat, leaping to his feet.
+"It does nothing of the sort! That paper is no kind of evidence at
+all!" And thus speaking, the money-lender's son glared defiantly at
+Dave and Roger.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+AFTER THE RUNAWAYS
+
+
+"Why, Nat, what do you mean?" demanded Dave.
+
+"I mean just what I say!" declared the money-lender's son. "This is a
+frame-up, nothing more! I understand it all now, although I didn't at
+first."
+
+"What do you mean by 'a frame-up,' Poole?" demanded Doctor Clay.
+
+"I mean that they took this magazine and the drawing to the cabin,
+that is what I mean, Doctor Clay. They found out somehow that
+my--er--that the wild man was there, and they got up this scheme to
+make it look as if he had blown up the hotel,--and they did it just to
+clear their cronies and themselves."
+
+"Nat, you know that is not true!" exclaimed Roger. "I found the
+magazine with the drawing on a shelf in the cabin."
+
+"Yes, that is what you said, but I don't believe it, Roger Morr. I
+think you put the magazine there yourself--you or Dave Porter."
+
+"We did nothing of the kind," cried our hero.
+
+"I think you did--and I think Jason Sparr will think so, too, when he
+hears the story. It's a frame-up, just to clear yourselves and your
+cronies," added Nat, with a sneer.
+
+"Nat, you ought to be----" began Roger, in high anger, when Dave
+stopped him. Our hero looked at Doctor Clay.
+
+"What Roger says is the absolute truth, Doctor Clay," said our hero.
+"He found that magazine on a shelf in the cabin where the wild man was
+staying, and that drawing and the wording were on it, just as you see.
+More than that, we can prove that the wild man was around the old
+shanty where the dynamite was kept, and that he was seen in Oakdale
+several times."
+
+Dave was interrupted here by Nat, and a wordy war lasting several
+minutes followed. Finally Doctor Clay said he would take the magazine
+and keep it, and that he would notify the authorities in what locality
+the wild man might be found, provided he had not gone away further
+than expected.
+
+"I am inclined to believe the story told by Morr and Porter," said he
+somewhat sternly to Nat Poole. "But this matter cannot be cleared up
+until we find your uncle. When captured, the unfortunate man will most
+likely speak of the blowing up in some way or another, if he is
+guilty."
+
+"I don't think so," answered Nat; but his manner showed that he was
+much disturbed. Then Dave and Roger were dismissed, and the master of
+the school took Nat with him to Oakdale, to see what could be done
+towards rounding up Wilbur Poole in the near future.
+
+"Well, Dave, what is the next move?" asked the senator's son, as the
+two were alone in the lavatory, washing up after the long bicycle
+ride.
+
+"I wish I could find Phil and the others and get them to come back
+here," responded our hero. "It is a great mistake for them to stay
+away."
+
+"I believe you--it looks just as if they were guilty. I wonder that
+they don't come back on their own account, now they have had a chance
+to think it over."
+
+"I think they saw that article in the newspaper, Roger, and it scared
+them worse than ever. Maybe they imagine the officers of the law are
+waiting to gobble them up."
+
+"If we only had some trace of them!"
+
+"I've got an idea I am going to follow up."
+
+"What sort of an idea?"
+
+"I was thinking of that baggage that left here. Maybe it was shipped
+to some point."
+
+"You'll have a job tracing it up."
+
+"I can try it, anyway," answered our hero.
+
+A day slipped by and nothing more was said about the affair by Doctor
+Clay or Nat Poole. Then Nat left the school, telling some friends he
+was going home for a week's rest.
+
+"Most likely he is after his uncle," was Roger's comment, and Dave
+agreed with him.
+
+As soon as he could get the time Dave went to Oakdale to see if he
+could find any trace of the baggage belonging to Phil and the others
+who had run away. He made many inquiries but without success, and was
+on the point of returning to the school when he happened to think of
+an old man named Dowling, who did some trucking and who knew Buster
+Beggs very well.
+
+"We'll go around to Dowling's place," said he to his chum.
+
+They found the old man in a little shanty behind his house which he
+called his office. It had an old easy-chair and a desk, and on the
+wall was a telephone.
+
+"How do you do, boys," he said, politely. "What can I do for you? Want
+some baggage shipped?"
+
+"No, I came for some information, Mr. Dowling," said Dave. "Have you
+shipped any baggage for Buster Beggs lately?"
+
+At the mention of the fat student's name the old expressman started.
+
+"What do you want to know that for?" he demanded.
+
+"I've a very good reason, Mr. Dowling. I want to do Beggs a favor."
+
+"Reckon you want to find him, eh?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"So do some other folks;" and the old man chuckled.
+
+"Well, we are his friends, and we want to find him for his own good."
+
+"Who be you, if I may ask?"
+
+"I am Dave Porter, and this is Roger Morr. Buster Beggs is our friend,
+and so are Phil Lawrence and Ben Basswood. They ran away and it was
+foolish for them to do it. Now we want to find them and get them to
+come back here."
+
+"It was foolish for 'em to run away--I said thet all along," murmured
+the old expressman.
+
+"Then you know where they are?" put in Roger quickly.
+
+"No, I don't."
+
+"But you took their baggage away, didn't you?" questioned Dave, for he
+could see that the old man was holding something back.
+
+"I allow as how I moved some things for 'em, yes," was the cautious
+reply.
+
+"When they ran away?" pursued Dave.
+
+The old expressman nodded.
+
+"Who got those bags from Oak Hall?" asked Roger.
+
+"Thet's a secret," and now the old man really chuckled, as if he
+thought it was a good joke.
+
+"You did!" declared Dave, bound to get at the truth.
+
+"No, I didn't. Buster did--carried 'em down on his back, one at a
+time, in the middle o' the night, an' nobuddy knew it! Say, they could
+walk off with yer hull school if they wanted to!" And the old
+expressman chuckled again.
+
+"You were waiting for him?" continued Dave.
+
+"Might be as I was."
+
+"And you took the baggage to the depot?"
+
+"Maybe I did."
+
+"And had them checked on railroad tickets?"
+
+"No, Buster went one way, and the bags went tudder--leas'wise so I was
+given to understand. Maybe he done it to put me off the track,"
+continued Isaac Dowling.
+
+"But where did the bags go to?" demanded Dave. "Come, out with it, Mr.
+Dowling. I give you my word that I am acting for Buster's good. I
+wouldn't get him into trouble for the world. He is my chum, and so are
+those other boys my friends."
+
+"Well, you look honest, boy, so I'll tell ye. The baggage was sent by
+express to a place called Camptown Falls, in Maine."
+
+"Camptown Falls!" cried Roger. Then he looked at Dave, who nodded, to
+show that he understood.
+
+"Did Buster say he was going elsewhere?" queried Dave.
+
+"He didn't say so, exactly. But he mentioned Boston, an' I thought he
+was goin' there."
+
+"He left on the train?"
+
+"No, he didn't! He went off in the darkness, an' that's the last I see
+o' him," concluded Isaac Dowling, as a hail came for him to come into
+the house.
+
+"Camptown Falls," said Dave, when he and Roger were alone. "Can they
+have gone to that out-of-the-way spot?"
+
+"It would be the place Buster would pick out, Dave. He has often
+spoken of going camping up there."
+
+"He must have mentioned Boston just to throw old Dowling off the
+track."
+
+"More than likely. And to think he took those bags away while we
+slept!"
+
+"I wonder where Phil and Ben were at the time?"
+
+"I don't know. Maybe they were at that camp."
+
+Much excited over what they had learned, Dave and the senator's son
+returned to Oak Hall. They had expected to interview Doctor Clay and
+were chagrined to learn that he had gone to New York on important
+business and would not return for two days. Mr. Dale had been left in
+charge of the school.
+
+"Roger, do you know what I think of doing?" said our hero. "I've a
+good notion to get permission to leave the Hall and go after Phil and
+the others. I think I can get them to come back."
+
+"Want me to go along?"
+
+"That will hardly be necessary. Besides, I'd like somebody to stay
+here and watch Nat Poole, if he comes back. Do you know, I've a notion
+that Nat knows more about this affair than he would like to tell."
+
+"He certainly acts that way."
+
+"I am going to see Mr. Dale."
+
+Our hero had a long talk with the head assistant, and the upshot of
+this was that he got permission to go to Maine, to look for the
+runaways. He was to be gone no longer than was absolutely necessary.
+
+It did not take our hero long to prepare for the trip. He packed a few
+things in a suit-case and then he was ready. He consulted a map and
+some timetables, and found he could leave Oakdale on the first train
+in the morning, and by making two changes, reach Camptown Falls about
+two o'clock in the afternoon. Nobody but Roger and Mr. Dale knew that
+he was going away.
+
+"Got money enough, have you, Dave?" questioned the senator's son.
+
+"Yes, Roger."
+
+"It's a wild kind of a spot, so Buster told me."
+
+"I am not afraid of that--if only I can locate the boys," answered our
+hero.
+
+"How are you going to look for them?"
+
+"I don't know yet--I'll find out after I get there."
+
+It must be confessed that Dave slept but little that night. His mind
+was filled with what was before him. He felt that he had quite a
+mission to perform, first in locating the runaways and then in
+persuading them to return to Oak Hall to face the music.
+
+He had an early breakfast, Roger eating with him, and then the buggy,
+driven by Horsehair, was brought around and he got in, and a minute
+later he was off, the senator's son waving him an adieu from the porch
+of the school.
+
+Dave found the first train he rode on but half filled with passengers,
+and he had a double seat to himself. He changed at the Junction, and
+about noon reached Lumberport, where he was to take the train on the
+little side-line for Camptown Falls. At Lumberport he got dinner, at a
+hotel frequented by lumbermen. He sat at a long table with half a
+dozen men and listened to their talk with interest when he heard
+Camptown Falls mentioned.
+
+"Yes, they tell me there is great danger of the dam giving way just
+above Camptown Falls," one of the men said. "Doxey reported it hasn't
+been safe for a week."
+
+"Say, if that dam gave way it would do a lot of damage below the
+Falls," said another.
+
+"It certainly would," replied a tall lumberman. "It would wipe out
+some of those camps on Moosetail Island. I rather guess the water
+would cover the whole island."
+
+"Somebody ought to warn the campers," said another.
+
+"Oh, I guess they know it already," was the answer.
+
+Dave arose from the table feeling very uneasy. He remembered the name,
+Moosetail Island, now. Buster had once mentioned it, stating he had
+camped there and would like to go again. Were the runaways there now,
+and in danger of the dam, should it break?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+AT THE CAMP
+
+
+At last the train came that was to take our hero to the railroad
+station of Camptown Falls. It was merely a flag station, but the
+conductor said he would stop there for any passenger who might wish to
+get off. The railroad was a single-track affair, running through the
+woods and across the country stretches, and the train consisted of one
+passenger car and several freights.
+
+Dave looked at the passengers and counted them. There were just an
+even dozen, and of these, ten were men, farmers and those in the
+lumber business. One, a bright young fellow, sat near our hero, and
+Dave resolved to ask him if he knew anything about Camptown Falls and
+the summer camps in that vicinity.
+
+"Yes, I know all about the Falls," said the young lumberman. "I work
+not over three miles from there--at Cropley's--the station this side
+of Camptown. There ain't any town, not since the Jewell Lumber Company
+busted up. Some folks camp out there, down along the river and on
+Moosetail Island, but there aren't near as many as there used to be."
+
+"Somebody said the dam above Camptown Falls was dangerous?" said
+Dave.
+
+"I think it is myself, and I can't understand how they allow folks to
+camp along the river and on that island. If that dam ever broke it
+would be good-by to anybody on the island, I'm thinking."
+
+"Have you been up to the island lately?"
+
+"I was there about a week ago."
+
+"Who were there then, do you know?"
+
+"A couple of men from Portland and half a dozen young fellers from
+Springfield. There was another camp, with some women in it, but I
+didn't get around to that, I only heard of it. There are half a dozen
+camps along the right bank of the river, but they are on high ground,
+and if the dam broke it isn't likely the water would reach 'em,"
+continued the young lumberman.
+
+The train rolled along at a rate of twenty miles an hour, making stops
+at stations and crossroads. Here and there a person got on or off, and
+by the time Camptown Falls was reached Dave had the passenger car
+almost to himself.
+
+The train halted for but a minute and our hero alighted, suit-case in
+hand. Much to his surprise, not a soul was about the little depot,
+which looked old and dilapidated. There was a stretch of fields
+beyond the track, and farther on he made out the glistening waters of
+the river, and in the center the woodland stretch known as Moosetail
+Island.
+
+"Well, this surely is Lonesome Land!" Dave murmured to himself, as the
+train rumbled out of sight and he was left utterly alone. "And not
+another train until eight o'clock to-morrow morning! I'll have a fine
+time of it to-night if I don't meet those fellows, or run across some
+camp where they will take me in."
+
+Dave looked at the sky and this did not tend to increase his good
+spirits. When he had left Oakdale it had been warm and clear; now dark
+clouds were forming overhead and it looked as if it might rain before
+long.
+
+"Well, I've got my raincoat and a waterproof cap, and that is one
+comfort," he told himself. "But I had better hurry up and see if I
+can't find Phil and the others before it gets too dark. I wish there
+was somebody here who could tell me where to go."
+
+He looked around for a sign of some habitation. Far across the river
+he saw a column of smoke, coming up from among the trees, but that was
+all. The only building in sight was the deserted depot.
+
+There was something of a path leading from the depot to the river, and
+Dave followed this. But soon the path seemed to divide, and the
+various branches became more indistinct at every step, especially as
+it was rapidly growing darker and darker.
+
+"I'll strike a straight course for Moosetail Island," Dave said to
+himself. "I'll surely find some people camping out there, and they may
+be able to tell me about the boys, if they are here."
+
+As he approached the river, going down a small hill, the way became
+stony, and he had to walk with care, for fear of going into some hole,
+or twisting an ankle. It was hard work, especially with the suit-case,
+and he half wished he had hidden the baggage somewhere near the
+depot.
+
+"I was a big chump that I didn't bring some lunch along," he reasoned.
+And then he had to smile at himself, as he remembered how he had
+imagined that he might put up at some hotel in Camptown Falls! He had
+not dreamed that the place would prove such a lonely one. It was
+certainly an ideal spot for runaways who wished to remain
+undiscovered.
+
+Presently Dave found himself at the bank of the river, a wide but
+shallow stream, filled with sandbars, rocks, and piles of driftwood.
+Not a great distance off was the end of Moosetail Island.
+
+It was now so dark that our hero could see but little. As he stood at
+the edge of the river, he heard a patter on the leaves of the trees
+and knew it had begun to rain.
+
+"Wonder how they get to the island?" he mused. "They must either use
+canoes, or else wade across, or ford along the stones."
+
+He moved along the river-bank, and soon came to a point where the
+stones in the river seemed to stretch in a line from the bank to the
+island.
+
+"I guess I'll try it here," he told himself. "But I think I had better
+leave the suit-case behind."
+
+He placed the case in a tree, sheltering it as much as possible from
+the rain, which was now coming down at a lively rate. Then, donning
+his raincoat and waterproof cap, he set out over the rocks in the
+river, leaping from one to the next and heading for the island.
+
+It was no easy journey, and when but half-way to Moosetail Island Dave
+slipped and went into the stream up to his knees. He floundered around
+for a moment, splashing the water into his face and over his coat and
+cap.
+
+"Phew! this is lots of fun!" was his grim comment, as he at length
+found himself on a flat rock, catching his breath. "Well, I am
+half-way over, anyway."
+
+The remainder of the distance proved easier traveling, and ten minutes
+later our hero stood on the island. It was now raining steadily, and
+the darkness of the storm had settled everywhere.
+
+"I guess the best thing I can do is to move right around the shore of
+this island," he reasoned. "By doing that I am bound to strike one of
+the camps, sooner or later."
+
+He moved along as rapidly as the rocky shore of Moosetail Island
+permitted. He had to proceed with care, for there were many dangerous
+pitfalls.
+
+At length his heart was gladdened by the sight of a rude log cabin,
+set in the trees a little back from the water. He hurried to it and
+found the door and window closed. Evidently the spot was deserted.
+
+"Nobody here," he murmured, and his heart sank for the moment, for he
+could see that the camp had not been used for a long time. Then he
+went on, the rain in the meanwhile coming down harder than ever. The
+downfall made him think of the dam that was said to be weak. What if
+the present storm should make that structure give way?
+
+"I wish we were all out of this," he murmured. "I wonder if it would
+do any good to call?"
+
+He set up a yell and listened, and then he yelled again. From a long
+distance came an answering cry.
+
+"Hurrah, that's somebody, anyway!" he exclaimed. "I hope it was one of
+the boys!"
+
+He stumbled in the direction of the cry. Then he yelled once more, and
+again came the answering call. But now Dave was sure it was a man's
+voice, and he was somewhat disappointed.
+
+"Where are you?" he called out, a moment later. "Where are you?"
+
+"This way! Come this way!" was the reply, and soon Dave passed through
+a patch of timber and around some rocks and reached a spot where there
+was a tiny cove, with a stretch of fine sand. Facing the cove was a
+neat log cabin with a small lean-to, the latter containing a tiny
+stove.
+
+A tall, good-natured man stood in the lean-to, peering out into the
+rain. He watched Dave's approach with interest. He looked to be what
+he was, a camp-cook and general worker.
+
+"Hello!" he exclaimed, as Dave hurried in out of the rain and shook
+the water from his cap. "I thought you were one of our crowd."
+
+"What camp is this?" questioned our hero, eagerly.
+
+"Well, it ain't no camp in particular," answered the man, with a grin.
+"It's jest a camp."
+
+"But who is stopping here?"
+
+"Three young fellers and myself."
+
+"Are their names Beggs, Lawrence, and Basswood?"
+
+"You've struck it. Maybe you are a friend to 'em?" went on the man,
+inquiringly.
+
+"I am, and I have come a long distance to find them," returned Dave,
+and his tone of voice showed his relief. "Where are they?"
+
+"They left the camp right after dinner an' they ain't back yet. When
+you called I thought it was one of 'em, although they didn't expect to
+be back much before supper-time. But now it's rainin' I guess they'll
+come back sooner."
+
+"How long have they been here?"
+
+"Most a week now, I guess. I didn't come till day before yesterday. I
+didn't have nothin' to do an' they give me a job, cookin' an' like
+that," returned the man.
+
+He invited Dave to make himself at home, and our hero was glad enough
+to go inside and take off the wet raincoat and also his shoes and
+socks. The baggage belonging to Phil and the others was in the cabin,
+and he helped himself to dry garments and a dry pair of slippers.
+
+"We are all school chums," he told the man. "My name is Dave Porter."
+
+"Oh, I heard 'em talkin' about you!" cried the camp-worker, and then
+said his own name was Jerry Blutt, and that he was from Tegley, just
+across the Canadian border.
+
+"We are not far from the border here, are we?" asked our hero.
+
+"About six miles, thet's all," answered Jerry Blutt, and this reply
+gave Dave another idea. More than likely Buster and the others had
+chosen this spot so that, if pursued by the officers of the law, they
+could flee into Canada.
+
+Jerry Blutt said the three lads had spent their time in various ways,
+occasionally going fishing and swimming. They had also written some
+letters and gone to the railroad station to mail them in the box
+placed there for that purpose.
+
+"Have they been having a good time?" asked Dave, curiously.
+
+"I can't say as to that, Mr. Porter. They did seem mighty worried over
+something," answered the camp worker, and from this our hero felt
+certain that the man had not been let into the secret of why the
+runaways were there at all.
+
+Half an hour went by and it continued to rain as hard as ever, while
+the sky remained dark and the wind blew with more or less violence.
+Time and again Dave went to the cabin door, to peer out into the
+storm, but each time he turned back disappointed. His chums were not
+yet in sight.
+
+"They'll be surprised to see me," he thought. "I wonder if they will
+listen to reason and go back with me? Supposing they refuse to return?
+I'd hate to go back alone."
+
+Then he questioned Jerry Blutt about the dam above the Falls. The man
+shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"It ain't safe, so they tell me," he said. "But it's been that way a
+long time, so maybe it won't break away yet awhile. But I'd hate to be
+on the river when she does go."
+
+"Are there any other camps on this island?" went on our hero.
+
+"Not now. There was some other folks, two or three parties, I was
+told, but they all moved out yesterday an' the day before. Maybe they
+got afraid o' the dam," concluded the camp-worker.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+OUT IN THE STORM
+
+
+"This is getting to be something fierce!"
+
+It was Dave who uttered the words, about five o'clock in the
+afternoon. He was looking out of the door of the cabin, and beside him
+stood Jerry Blutt.
+
+The storm had kept up without intermission, the rain coming down in a
+perfect torrent, and the wind blowing in fitful gusts from the east.
+It was raw and depressing, and our hero could not help but shiver as
+he looked out on the turbulent waters of the river.
+
+"It's a pity them fellers ain't got back," said the camp-worker, with
+a slow shake of his head. "It ain't nice to be out in sech a downpour
+as this, an' with sech a wind! Might a tree blow down on 'em!" And he
+shook his head again.
+
+Dave was even more distressed than the man. He could not get that dam
+out of his mind. Such a heavy fall of rain would certainly cause a
+great flow of water, and if the structure was weak, most anything bad
+was liable to happen.
+
+"As soon as the boys get back I'll urge them to leave here," he told
+himself. "If that dam breaks we want to be on high ground, where the
+flood can't reach us."
+
+"'Pears to me like the river was gittin' putty high," remarked Jerry
+Blutt, a little later, as he watched the water in the cove closely.
+
+"Well, it would rise some with all this rain coming down," returned
+Dave.
+
+"So it might,--but I don't know. I wish this camp was on the shore,
+instid o' this island."
+
+"So do I," answered Dave, bluntly.
+
+A fire had been started in the stove and a lantern lit, and Jerry
+Blutt rather reluctantly began preparations for the evening meal. But
+he kept peering out of the doorway of the cabin, and from the lean-to,
+and his eyes always rested on the river, with its rain-swept, swollen
+surface.
+
+"I don't like it at all!" he said, finally. "I wish we had moved over
+to the shore."
+
+"Don't you think it is safe to stay here?"
+
+"It ain't as safe as it might be. If I was alone----" The man stopped
+short.
+
+"What would you do?"
+
+"I hate to say it, but I think I'd go over to the shore, till the
+storm was over and I knew jest how thet dam was a-goin' to act."
+
+"Well, I don't blame you," answered Dave. "And if you want to go, go
+ahead."
+
+"Want me to go alone?"
+
+"If you wish to go, yes."
+
+"But it ain't no safer fer you than it is fer me."
+
+"That's so, too. But I want to see those other fellows--in fact, I
+must see them. If I went to the shore I might miss them."
+
+"You could come back later on."
+
+"But I want to warn them of the danger from the dam."
+
+"You could write a letter and stick it up where they couldn't help but
+see it. Then---- What's that?"
+
+The camp-worker stopped short, as a distant cry reached their ears,
+sounding out above the wind. An instant later the cry was repeated.
+
+"That is Ben Basswood's voice!" cried Dave. "They must be coming
+back!"
+
+Soon another voice sounded out, and our hero recognized Buster Beggs's
+tones. He ran to the cabin door. All was dark outside, and the rain
+was being driven in sheets by the wind.
+
+"Hello! hello!" he yelled, and catching up the lantern, he swung it
+out in one direction and another. Then he saw two forms approaching on
+the run, each dripping with water.
+
+"Ben! And Buster!"
+
+"Why, if it isn't Dave!"
+
+"Where in the world did you come from?"
+
+"Where is Phil?" demanded our hero.
+
+"He is somewhere behind us," answered Buster. "Oh, what a time we've
+had!" and entering the cabin, the fat youth sank down on a bench all
+but exhausted.
+
+"We've had to tramp for over two miles in this rain," explained Ben.
+"And of course we had to ford to the island. Say, the current is
+something fierce now! And the water is getting higher every minute!"
+he added.
+
+"Did you say Phil was behind you?" demanded Dave. He still held the
+lantern on high.
+
+"I thought he was--sure, he must be," answered Ben. "Give him a hail,
+will you? I'm too tired," and he sank on the bench beside Buster.
+
+"Phil! Phil!" yelled our hero, at the top of his lungs. "This way!
+This way!" and he swung the lantern to the right and left.
+
+"Did you say the river is rising?" demanded Jerry Blutt. "How high is
+it? Over the White Bar yet?"
+
+"Yes, the Bar is a foot under water," answered Ben. "Oh, this is a
+great storm!"
+
+"A foot under water!" murmured the camp-worker. "Say, we better git
+out! First thing you know this hull island will be under! An' if thet
+dam breaks----"
+
+"Oh, the dam!" gasped Buster. "I forgot about that! They say it isn't
+safe at all! That is why all the other campers got out! Yes, we must
+leave the island and go to the shore." He turned to Dave. "Did you
+come alone?"
+
+"Yes, Buster. I'll tell you all about it later. But now we must find
+Phil."
+
+"I thought he was right behind me," came from Ben. He looked greatly
+distressed. "I wonder if anything happened to him? Maybe he slipped
+off the rocks into the river!"
+
+"We must look for him!" cried Dave, and reached for his coat and cap.
+"Show me the way you came, Ben."
+
+Ben was nothing loath, and side by side the two chums ran outside into
+the storm, and in the direction of the upper end of the island. They
+had gone but a short distance when they reached a low spot and here
+suddenly found themselves in water several inches deep.
+
+"Hello, you are taking me into the river!" cried Dave.
+
+"This isn't the river!" answered Ben, with a gasp. "Gosh! how the
+water is rising! This was dry when I came over it before!"
+
+"Dry!" ejaculated our hero. "Ben, are you sure?"
+
+"Positive! Say, the water is rising to beat the band! I guess we had
+better get out! If we don't we'll have to swim for it!"
+
+"Phil! Phil! Where are you?"
+
+Standing in water up to his ankles, our hero called again and again,
+and Ben joined in the cry. The lantern was flashed in all directions.
+But nothing was seen or heard of the missing student.
+
+"I am sure he started to follow us across the river," said Ben.
+"Buster was in front, I came next, and Phil was in the rear. I asked
+him twice if he was all right and he said he was. Then it blew so
+hard, and the rain got so heavy, none of us said any more. Oh, Dave,
+what shall we do?"
+
+"I don't know Ben--wish I did."
+
+"Do you think he slipped off the rocks and was--was--drowned?"
+
+"I hope not."
+
+"If he was, wouldn't it be terrible?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+A cry came from behind them, and Buster appeared, followed by Jerry
+Blutt.
+
+"Where is Phil?" demanded the stout youth.
+
+"We don't know."
+
+"The water is terribly high, and Jerry thinks we had better move to
+the shore. He says we might be drowned if that dam should break."
+
+"Don't you think we ought to find Phil first?"
+
+"Sure--if we can. Maybe he went back, when he found out how the water
+was rising," went on the stout youth, hopefully.
+
+"I don't think he'd desert us," answered Ben. "That isn't Phil's
+style."
+
+"You're right, Ben," said Dave.
+
+All splashed around in the water for several minutes, but without
+making any discovery of importance. The river was now rising more
+rapidly than ever, and the camp-worker showed increased nervousness.
+
+"Ain't no two ways about it--the dam's bust!" he cried, at last. "I'm
+goin' to git out, an' I advise all o' you to do the same. If you want
+me to carry anything to shore I'll do it."
+
+"We can't carry any trunks in such a hurry," said Buster.
+
+"Let us carry our suit-cases and bundles," said Ben.
+
+With heavy hearts, Dave and the others returned to the cabin. The
+water in the cove had now risen so high that it swept the edge of the
+lean-to.
+
+"Can we get to shore?" asked Buster. "We haven't any boat," he added,
+turning to Dave.
+
+"We can if you'll hurry," replied Jerry Blutt. "Every minit lost makes
+it jest so much more dangerous."
+
+In great haste Ben and Buster and the camp-worker gathered together
+such belongings as they could conveniently carry. The other things
+were placed in a trunk and hoisted by ropes into a big tree. Then a
+lantern was tied on a post in front of the cabin and to it was
+fastened a brief note, for Phil's benefit, stating they had gone to
+the shore.
+
+"Oh, I hope he is safe!" murmured Dave, anxiously.
+
+"So do I," added his chums.
+
+Jerry Blutt led the way along the shore of the island and then out
+into the stream. They had the second camp lantern with them, one
+belonging to Jerry. He led the way from rock to rock, and they
+followed in single file, Dave bringing up the rear. Ever and anon our
+hero looked back for some sign of Phil, but without avail.
+
+Once out in the river, all were certain that the dam above Camptown
+Falls had burst. The water ran with great rapidity and was filled with
+dirt and débris of various kinds. On the rocks that were low they had
+all they could do to keep their footing.
+
+The most dangerous part of the river had yet to be passed--a section
+close to the shore, where the water was deep and the rocks for fording
+few.
+
+"Mind your footin' here!" sang out the camp-worker. "An' if you slip,
+look out thet you don't hurt yourselves!"
+
+He was splashing along in water up to his knees, sometimes on the
+rocks and then again on a sandbar running in that direction. Then he
+had to make a turn, to avoid a deep portion of the stream, where the
+current was rapid.
+
+Ben was behind the man and Buster was just ahead of Dave. As all
+struggled along, there came an extra heavy blast of wind, followed by
+a perfect deluge of rain.
+
+"Oh!" screamed Buster, an instant later, and peering through the rain,
+Dave saw him suddenly throw up his arms and slip from a rock. There
+was a splash, and poor Buster disappeared from view.
+
+"Buster is in the river!" yelled our hero, and then he leaped for the
+rock from which the stout youth had fallen. He looked down and saw an
+arm and a head come up.
+
+"Help! hel----" came from the unfortunate one, and then the swift
+current caught him and turned him over, out of sight.
+
+"Help!" yelled Dave, to attract the attention of those ahead. And
+then, as he saw Ben turn back, he slipped down on the rock and into
+the swirling river and struck out after Buster.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+PERILS OF THE FLOOD
+
+
+"Dave! Dave!" yelled Ben, as he saw our hero disappear into the
+swiftly-flowing river. "Look out, or you'll both be drowned!"
+
+"What's the trouble?" yelled Jerry Blutt, as he turned back for the
+first time since leaving the island.
+
+"Buster slipped in, and Dave went after him," answered Ben. "Oh, what
+shall we do?" he went on, despairingly.
+
+"Here--we'll throw out the rope!" answered the camp-worker, and took
+from his shoulder a rope he carried.
+
+In the meantime Dave had come up and was striking out with might and
+main for his chum. Our hero realized that Buster must be hurt,
+otherwise he would swim to save himself.
+
+"Must have struck on his head, when he went over," he thought, and he
+was right, poor Buster had done just that and now lay half-unconscious
+as the current swept him further and further from his friends.
+
+It was too dark to see much, and Dave had all he could do to keep in
+sight of the unfortunate one. But presently the stout youth's body
+struck against a rock and was held there, and our hero came up and
+seized the lad by the arm.
+
+"Buster! Buster!" he called out. "What's wrong? Can't you swim?"
+
+"Hel--help me!" gasped the fat youth. "I--I got a knock on the head.
+I'm so--so dizzy I do--don't know what I--I'm do--doing!"
+
+The current now tore Buster away from the rock, and he and Dave
+floated along on the bosom of the river for a distance of fifty yards.
+It was impossible to do much swimming in that madly-rushing element
+and Dave wisely steered for shore. He continued to support his friend,
+who seemed unable to do anything for himself.
+
+At length, when our hero was all but exhausted, his feet struck a
+sandbar. At once he stood up, finding himself in water that reached to
+his waist. He caught up Buster and placed the weakened lad over his
+shoulder. In a dim, uncertain way he saw the shore loom up in front of
+him, and struck out in that direction.
+
+It was a short but hard struggle. Twice Dave went down, once losing
+his hold on his chum. But he got up each time and went after Buster in
+a hurry. Then he made a final dash, came in contact with some bushes,
+and hauled himself and his burden to temporary safety.
+
+All was dark around the two boys, and the rain came down as pitilessly
+as ever. But for this they did not, just then, care. They had been
+close to death, and now they were safe, and that counted for
+everything.
+
+Poor Buster had received a severe bump on the forehead and had a
+swelling there of considerable size. But the stunning effect was
+passing, and he was able to sit up and peer around him.
+
+"Oh, what a crack I got, when I fell over!" he murmured, and then he
+added, gratefully: "It was a fine thing for you to jump in after me,
+Dave!"
+
+"Well, I couldn't stand there and see you drown, Buster," answered our
+hero. "I had to do something."
+
+"Where are the others?"
+
+"Up the stream--unless they went overboard, too."
+
+"Then I suppose we ought to walk that way."
+
+"We will--after we get our breath and you feel strong enough."
+
+"Maybe you can call to them?"
+
+"I'll try."
+
+Dave yelled at the top of his voice, not once but several times.
+Presently an answering hail arose from a distance, and then Ben came
+running up, followed by Jerry.
+
+"Dave! Buster! Are you safe?"
+
+"Yes," answered both.
+
+"Oh, I am so glad! We were afraid you were both drowned! How did it
+happen?"
+
+The two told their story, and then the others told how they had thrown
+out the rope and had seen Dave disappear in the darkness after
+Buster.
+
+"I would have jumped in, too, but I didn't see how I could do any
+good," went on Ben. "Jerry said we had better come ashore and look for
+you down here. So we did that. My! but it's a fearful flood, isn't
+it!"
+
+"Yes. I wish we knew where Phil was," and Dave heaved a deep sigh. Had
+their chum lost his life in that rapidly-rising river?
+
+"Ain't no ust to stay here--gitting wetter an' wetter," said the
+camp-worker, after a pause. "Besides, if that flood gits wuss it is
+bound to come up here. We better git further back--up the hill."
+
+"Is there any shelter around here? I mean on high ground?" asked
+Dave.
+
+"Yes, I know of a cabin up on the hill," answered Buster. "I don't
+know if I can find it in the rain and darkness, but I can try."
+
+He walked along, through the trees, until he reached a footpath
+running up from the shore. They followed the path for about a hundred
+yards, and then came in sight of a long, low, rambling cabin, the home
+in years gone by of some lumbermen. It was in a dilapidated state,
+with doors and windows gone, but it would provide a roof over their
+heads, and that was something.
+
+Entering, the lantern was hung on a nail, and they looked around them.
+There was a fireplace, with some dry sticks handy, and soon they had a
+fire started, which added much to the comfort of the surroundings.
+They hung up the majority of their wet garments and sat close to the
+blaze, drying themselves.
+
+"If I only knew where to look for Phil, I'd go after him," said Dave.
+"But to look for him in the darkness is like looking for the
+proverbial needle in the haystack."
+
+"We'll have to go out first thing in the morning," returned Ben.
+
+"Yes, as soon as we can see," added Buster.
+
+The boys who had run away were anxious to learn what Dave had to say
+about affairs at Oakdale, and in a low voice, while the camp-worker
+was preparing hot coffee and something to eat, he related what had
+happened since their departure.
+
+"You made a big mistake to run away," he said, earnestly. "Just
+because you did that, many folks feel sure you must be guilty. You
+ought to go right back and face the music."
+
+"I guess you are right, Dave," answered Ben, shamefacedly. "But when
+Phil said 'run,' I didn't stop to think, but just got out."
+
+"And that is what I did, too," added the stout youth. "But I don't
+blame Phil any more than I blame myself," he added, hastily.
+
+"Nor do I," said Ben. "We made a big mistake. We should have stood our
+ground, like you and Roger did."
+
+"Well, you come back with me, and we'll face this to a finish," went
+on our hero. "But, of course, we've got to find Phil first."
+
+Only the camp-worker slept well that night. The boys were restless,
+and several times one or another got up, to go to the doorway and
+listen, thinking he had heard a call from Phil. But the calls were
+only imaginary, and morning dawned without a sign of the missing one.
+
+It was still raining, but not so hard as before, and by eight o'clock
+the clouds broke away and the sun commenced to shine. All had an early
+breakfast, from the stores brought along, and then the party hurried
+down to the river.
+
+That the dam above Camptown Falls had broken was plainly evident on
+all sides. During the night the river had risen seven or eight feet,
+bearing on its bosom many trees and bushes, with here and there the
+remains of camps that had been located on low ground. Moosetail Island
+had been swept from end to end, only the higher spots escaping the
+flood. The waters were now going down, the rush from the broken dam
+having spent itself.
+
+The boys gave scant heed to the destruction effected by the rain and
+the broken dam. All their thoughts were centered on Phil. What had
+become of their chum? Was he dead or alive?
+
+"I wonder if it wouldn't be best to get over to the island and look
+around?" suggested Dave. "Most likely he went there--thinking you
+would be at the cabin."
+
+"But how are we to get to the island?" asked Buster. He had no desire
+to fall into the turbulent stream again.
+
+"Oh, the water is going down rapidly, Buster. I think we can make it
+by noon."
+
+All walked up and down the river bank, looking in vain for some trace
+of the shipowner's son. Once they met some people from another camp
+and asked about Phil. But these folks shook their heads.
+
+"Didn't see a soul," said one of the men.
+
+Jerry Blutt had been looking the situation over carefully, and he said
+he thought they could get to the island by going up the river a
+distance.
+
+"Then the current will help us along, and we won't have to fight so
+hard," said the camp-worker. He did not like the idea of crossing the
+water, but did not wish to desert the boys.
+
+On the trip they carried the rope, with Jerry at the head and Dave at
+the rear. All took tight hold, so that if one slipped the others might
+pull him up.
+
+"Now, take it easy," cautioned the camp man. "This water is runnin'
+putty swift, even yet."
+
+He had mapped out a course with his eye, and proceeded slowly and
+cautiously. Once away from the shore, they felt the full force of the
+onrushing waters and were all but swept from their feet. It was well
+that they were a good distance above Moosetail Island, for to reach
+this spot by going straight out in the stream would have been
+impossible.
+
+It was a long, hard, and dangerous trip, and all drew a deep breath of
+relief when they finally set foot on the island. At times they had
+been in water up to their waists and it had looked as if they must
+surely be swept away. Once a tree branch, coming swiftly along, had
+caught Dave and literally carried him off his feet for several yards.
+
+They landed at one end of the island, at a point where the bushes were
+still two feet under water. The evidences of the flood were on every
+hand, and the water was muddy and filled with broken-away brushwood
+and trees.
+
+"I guess we had better strike out for the camp," said Dave. "Phil
+would go there if he went anywhere."
+
+As they advanced one or another gave a loud call. But no answer came
+back, and this made them look gravely at each other. Was the perilous
+trip to the island to prove a vain one?
+
+In a quarter of an hour they came in sight of the camp. The cove had
+been blotted out, and the water was eddying around the cabin to a
+depth of several inches. Mud was everywhere, inside the place and out,
+and this showed that the flood had swept the spot at a height of
+several feet.
+
+"We might have stayed here," was Buster's comment. "It didn't hurt the
+big tree."
+
+"But we didn't know how bad it was going to be," answered Ben. "It
+might have washed away the whole island."
+
+"Let us go up to the high ground and look for Phil," suggested Dave.
+"Maybe he went to the highest spot he could find."
+
+The others agreed, and leaving the camp-worker at the cabin, the boys,
+led by Buster, tramped through the wet and mud to a little hill. Again
+they set up their calls, but, as before, no answer came back.
+
+"I don't believe he came here," said Ben, at last. "If he was here he
+would surely hear us."
+
+"Unless he was hurt and couldn't answer," returned Dave.
+
+From the top of the little hill they could see both ends of Moosetail
+Island and also both shores of the river. As they gazed about them,
+Dave suddenly gave a shout.
+
+"Look! look!" he cried, pointing to the shore which they had left but
+a short while before. "There is somebody waving a handkerchief at
+us!"
+
+"It's Phil!" returned Ben.
+
+"Are you sure?" questioned Buster. "I can see it is a man or a boy,
+but that is all."
+
+"It looks like Phil," said Dave. "Oh, I hope it is!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+BACK TO THE SCHOOL
+
+
+They waved frantically to the person on the shore, and he waved
+frantically in return, and at last all were convinced that it must
+really be their missing chum.
+
+"He must think I am Jerry," said Dave. "Won't he be surprised to see
+me!"
+
+"He will be, unless he was at the cabin last night and read the note,"
+returned Buster.
+
+"The note wasn't touched," said Ben. "I noticed that it was exactly as
+we left it."
+
+All gave a parting wave and pointed to the shore, and then left the
+hill. They made their way down to the cabin, and told the camp-worker
+what they had seen.
+
+"It must be Lawrence," said Jerry Blutt. "Maybe he'll come over here,
+instead of waiting for us to go to him."
+
+"Gracious, I never thought of that!" cried Buster.
+
+"We'll be like the men in one of Shadow's stories," said Ben. "One was
+upstairs in a big office building and one downstairs. The man
+upstairs went down, and the downstairs man went up, and they kept that
+up until both stopped, tired out, one upstairs and one down." And the
+others had to smile at the brief yarn.
+
+All journeyed to the lower shore of the island, where they could get a
+better view of the spot where the person they thought was Phil had
+been. They saw the party walking up the river bank, looking for a good
+place to ford. All shouted loudly and waved their hands to keep him
+where he was, and he nodded his head deeply, to show that he
+understand.
+
+"It must be Phil," said Dave. "Oh, how thankful I am that he wasn't
+carried away by the flood!"
+
+The boys were impatient to get back to the shore, and Jerry Blutt did
+not blame them. To carry any of the stuff over was still out of the
+question, and they did not attempt it.
+
+"You can come and get it some day, Jerry," said Buster. "You can ship
+it to us by express, and we'll pay you for your trouble;" and so it
+was arranged.
+
+It was as hard to gain the shore as it had been to reach the island,
+and all were well-nigh exhausted when they finally left the water, not
+to return again. Phil saw them coming, and when he made out Dave he
+was almost dumfounded.
+
+"Where in the world did you come from?" he demanded, as he caught our
+hero by the hand.
+
+"From Oakdale, Phil."
+
+"Did you run away, too?" demanded the shipowner's son.
+
+"Hardly," answered Dave, with a grin. "I came to bring you fellows
+back. But first tell us, how did you get out of the flood last
+night?"
+
+"Oh, I had a fierce time of it. I tried to get back to the camp, but
+stumbled over some tree-roots and went down in a hole and hurt my
+ankle. When I got up I couldn't see the others, and I must have lost
+my way. Then it began to rain and get dark, and I didn't know which
+way to turn. I yelled dozens of times, but I didn't hear any answer. I
+tried to locate the cabin, but I must have been completely turned
+around, for I came out on the shore. Then the flood came along, and
+before I knew it I was floating down the river. I hit a tree and clung
+to that, and we drifted a mile or more before the tree got stuck on a
+sandbar. I stayed there, in the rain and darkness, until morning and
+then waded and swam ashore. I was so tired out I had to rest for
+awhile, and then I came up here, to try to find out something about
+our crowd. I was thinking of getting over to the island again when I
+saw you on the top of the hill. Of course, I thought Dave was
+Jerry."
+
+"We were scared to death, thinking you had been drowned," said Ben.
+
+"Well, I came pretty close to it," was the serious reply. "No more
+such flood for me!"
+
+All turned towards the cabin where four of the party had spent the
+night, and there Jerry was called on to prepare the best meal their
+limited stores afforded. On the river-bank they had picked up some
+fish cast up by the flood, and these were broiled, making a welcome
+addition to the meal.
+
+While the meal was being prepared, and after it had been eaten, Dave
+had a serious talk with Phil and the others, and all realized the
+folly they had committed in running away from Oak Hall. Phil in
+particular, was much disturbed and said he had been thinking of coming
+back.
+
+"But we saw that article in the newspaper, and it scared us," went on
+the shipowner's son. "Of course, it didn't mention any names, but we
+knew it was meant for us. I know now, just as well as the others, that
+it was a mistake to run away."
+
+"Then, you'll go back with me?" questioned Dave, eagerly.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And you'll go back, too, Ben and Buster?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I am mighty glad to hear it--and I feel that this thing will come
+out all right in the end," returned Dave.
+
+"By the way, there is one thing I haven't told you, Dave," said
+Buster, a minute later. "The general excitement drove it clean out of
+my head. We know who it was that spoiled the feast Phil got up for the
+crowd."
+
+"You do?" asked our hero, with interest.
+
+"Yes. It was Nat Poole. He went to Rockville and sent those telephone
+messages to Jason Sparr and that musical professor, calling the whole
+affair off. He did it because he wasn't invited to take part."
+
+"How did you learn this?"
+
+"I heard it the night I went to the Hall to get our baggage. When I
+was in hiding, waiting for a chance to go to the dormitory, I saw Nat
+Poole come in, along with that new student, Will Fasey. They had been
+out somewhere having a good time, and Nat was telling Fasey how he had
+sent the telephone messages and queered the feast. I would have
+pitched into him then and there only I didn't dare expose myself,"
+went on the stout youth.
+
+"But he'll get what is coming to him from me, when I get back to the
+school," put in Phil. "It was a contemptible piece of business, and I
+want everybody to know it. Besides, he has got to pay for what I lost
+by the transaction."
+
+"If it wasn't for that, maybe we wouldn't have been suspected of
+blowing up the hotel," said Ben. "Then you really think the wild man
+did it, Dave?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But what of that letter Jason Sparr got, saying our crowd was
+guilty?"
+
+"I don't know what to make of that, Ben. I don't think the wild man
+could write that."
+
+"Would Nat Poole be bad enough to do it?"
+
+"Maybe. But it was an awful thing to do. I didn't think Nat would be
+as mean as that."
+
+The boys had dried and pressed their clothing as best they could, and
+put on clean collars, cuffs, and neckties, and therefore looked quite
+presentable once more.
+
+"As soon as we get to town we can get cleaned up a little better,"
+said Dave. "So we won't look quite like tramps when we return to the
+Hall."
+
+"I hate to face Doctor Clay," remarked Phil, dubiously.
+
+"So do I," added Ben and Buster.
+
+"Well, it has got to be done," answered Dave. "So make the best of it.
+The doctor understands the situation, so I don't think he'll be hard
+on you."
+
+"I hope they have got the wild man, and that they prove he blew up the
+hotel," said Phil, wistfully. "That is the only thing that will
+really clear us."
+
+"Oh, they are bound to get the wild man sooner or later," answered
+Dave, hopefully.
+
+It was decided to take the one afternoon train from Camptown Falls,
+and at the proper time the boys walked to the little depot, Dave with
+his suit-case, and the others with some hand baggage. Instructions
+were left with Jerry Blutt regarding the other baggage, and the man
+was paid for his services. He said he was glad that nobody had been
+drowned in the flood, and added that he was going up to the
+broken-away dam later on to see how matters looked.
+
+It was a rather quiet crowd that got aboard the train when it came
+along. The conductor wanted to know how they had fared in the flood,
+and they told him. At Lumberport the boys had to wait an hour for the
+next train to Oakdale Junction, and they spent the time in getting a
+good supper, and in having their shoes shined, and in brushing up
+generally.
+
+"I'll be glad to get back late at night," said Phil to Dave. "I'd hate
+to have the whole crowd staring at us when we came in."
+
+At the Junction they waited but a few minutes, and the run to Oakdale
+did not take long. They were the only ones to get off at the depot,
+and the spot was all but deserted. But they had telegraphed ahead,
+and Horsehair was on hand, with a carriage, to meet them.
+
+"Glad to see you young gents back, indeed I am," said the school
+driver.
+
+"Any news, Horsehair?" asked Dave, as they piled into the carriage.
+
+"Not as I know of."
+
+"Have they got that wild man yet?" questioned Phil.
+
+"No, sir. But they seen him--along the river--day before yesterday. He
+was sleepin' in a barn. But he got away before the farmer and his man
+could git him."
+
+"Where was that?" questioned Ben.
+
+"Up to the Morrison place."
+
+"The Morrison place," mused Buster. "I know that family. When I get a
+chance I am going to ask them about this," he added.
+
+When the boys arrived at Oak Hall they found Doctor Clay sitting up to
+receive them. He smiled at Dave, but was somewhat cold towards the
+others.
+
+"It is too late to listen to what you have to say to-night," said he.
+"All of you may report in my office directly after our opening
+exercises in the morning."
+
+When the boys went upstairs there were a good many exclamations of
+surprise, and Roger and the others wanted to ask innumerable
+questions. But a monitor cut all talk short, and Dave and the
+runaways got to bed as quickly as possible.
+
+All were up early, and Dave, Phil, and the others had to tell their
+story before going down to breakfast. Roger and those who had been
+left behind with him listened eagerly to the tale of the flood and the
+other happenings.
+
+"I guess Dave got there just in time," said the senator's son. "How
+about it, Buster?"
+
+"He sure did," said the stout lad, and shuddered to think how close he
+had been to drowning.
+
+It can well be imagined that Phil, Ben, and Buster did not have much
+appetite for breakfast. Phil looked around for Nat Poole, but the
+money-lender's son had not yet returned to the school.
+
+"Now, tell me everything," said Doctor Clay, when the boys at length
+filed into his office. "As they say in court, we want the truth, the
+whole truth, and nothing but the truth."
+
+"And that is what I'm going to give you, Doctor Clay," answered Phil.
+"I made a big mistake in running away, and I am glad Dave came to
+bring us back. I haven't done anything wrong, and I am here to face
+the music, as the saying goes."
+
+"And so am I," came from Ben and Buster.
+
+Then the boys told their story in detail, omitting nothing, and Dave
+related how he had gone to Camptown Falls, and how the flood had
+caught him. In the midst of the narrative came a sharp knock on the
+door.
+
+"Come in," said the doctor, and one of the servants entered.
+
+"A man to see you, sir," said the servant. "He says it is very
+important--something about that wild man, sir! He's terribly excited,
+sir!"
+
+"The wild man again!" murmured the master of the school, while the
+boys looked at him and the servant with interest. "Show the visitor in
+and I will hear what he has to say."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+THE TRAIL THROUGH THE WOODS
+
+
+In a minute the servant ushered in a farmer whom the boys recognized
+as Henry Morrison, a man who had a farm along the river-front, about a
+mile from Oak Hall.
+
+"Good-morning, sir," said the farmer, bowing to the doctor and then to
+the boys. "Excuse me for being in such a hurry, but I thought you
+would like to know."
+
+"I'll be glad to hear what you have to say, Mr. Morrison," replied the
+master of the school. "Sit down," and he pointed to a handy chair.
+
+"It's about that wild man, Doctor Clay!" exclaimed the farmer,
+dropping into the seat and mopping his forehead with his handkerchief.
+"It's something terribul, the way he carries on. He 'most scared my
+wife to death!"
+
+"He has been to your place again?"
+
+"Yes, sir, last night. He was in the barn, and he jumped out at my
+wife and said he was going to blow the fort to pieces! She got so
+scared she dropped her pailful of milk and ran to the house. I got
+mad and got my shotgun, but the fellow had skipped out before I could
+catch sight of him."
+
+"What time was this?"
+
+"Just about six o'clock. But that ain't all. This morning I started
+for town, intending to tell the constable and the justice about it,
+when all of a sudden, when I was passing the end of your property, I
+see the wild man down there, behind a tree."
+
+"Just now?" asked Dave, eagerly.
+
+"Not more'n a quarter of an hour ago. That's why I stepped in here.
+He's a dangerous man, Doctor Clay, and I think he ought to be rounded
+up!" went on Henry Morrison, earnestly.
+
+"You are right, he certainly ought to be put under restraint,"
+answered the master of Oak Hall. "I will see to this at once. Will you
+assist in the hunt, Mr. Morrison?"
+
+"Of course--if I don't have to go alone. I don't think it is safe for
+anybody to tackle him alone, he's that wild and dangerous."
+
+"Can we take part in the search?" asked Phil, eagerly. "Oh, do let us
+do it, Doctor Clay!" he pleaded.
+
+"I suppose so, if you will promise to be careful. Mr. Morrison, can
+you point out the exact spot where you saw the man?"
+
+"Of course I can."
+
+"Then we will at once make up a searching party."
+
+Doctor Clay could act quickly when the occasion demanded, and inside
+of ten minutes a searching party was made up, composed of Dave and his
+chums, Mr. Dale, Horsehair, and several men who chanced to be working
+around the grounds.
+
+"Oh, I hope we catch him and are able to prove that he blew up the
+hotel dining-room," said Phil to Dave.
+
+"So do I, Phil."
+
+Henry Morrison led the way, and it was not long before the spot was
+gained where he had seen Wilbur Poole. From that point a path ran from
+the river back into the woods.
+
+"Maybe he took that path," suggested our hero, and several thought the
+same.
+
+"I think we had better scatter," suggested Mr. Dale, who had been
+placed in charge by the doctor. "By doing that we can cover a wide
+range of territory in a comparatively short space of time. And keep as
+quiet as possible, for should he hear us he will most likely start and
+run."
+
+"If he didn't run when he saw Mr. Morrison," murmured Buster. "He may
+be miles away already."
+
+The crowd separated into pairs, Dave and Phil going together and Roger
+going with Ben, and Buster with Horsehair. All had armed themselves
+with sticks, and Mr. Dale carried a pair of handcuffs, and one of the
+hired men had a rope.
+
+Deeper and deeper into the woods went the party, spread out in a long
+line. They had examined the river-front and felt fairly certain that
+the wild man had not left by boat.
+
+"Looks like a wild-goose chase," remarked Phil, with a sigh, after a
+half an hour had passed.
+
+"Oh, we don't want to give up yet," answered Dave. "Why, it isn't much
+after ten o'clock. We can stay out till noon, at least."
+
+"I'd stay out all day, if I thought we could catch him," returned the
+shipowner's son, promptly.
+
+Presently the boys espied a small stone house, standing beside a brook
+which flowed through the woods into the river. In the house lived an
+old man who made his living by making baskets and fancy articles of
+birch bark.
+
+"Let us see if old Herick is around," suggested Dave. "He may be able
+to tell us something."
+
+They found the old man hard at work on a fancy basket. He looked
+surprised when thus suddenly confronted by the students.
+
+"Did I see a wild man?" he queried, in reply to their question. "I
+guess I did,--at least he acted queer enough. He danced up here, made
+a deep bow, and told me the army would be along in four minutes. Then
+he made another bow and walked off, as stiff as a drum-major."
+
+"When was this?" demanded Dave.
+
+"About half an hour ago."
+
+"And which way did he go?" put in Phil, eagerly.
+
+"That way," and the old basket-maker pointed up the brook. "Walked
+right in the water, too. I was going to follow him at first but then I
+didn't think it was any use."
+
+The boys waited to hear no more, but telling old Herick to watch for
+the other searchers and tell them about the wild man, they set off up
+the brook as fast as they could travel.
+
+As the chums progressed they looked to the right and left, wondering
+if Wilbur Poole had kept to the tiny watercourse or taken to the
+woods, which were now exceedingly dense.
+
+"I see his footprints!" cried Phil, as they passed a sandy stretch.
+"Anyway, those marks look fresh."
+
+"I fancy you are right, Phil, and if so, he can't be very far ahead of
+us."
+
+They went on, following the windings of the stream until it became
+less than a foot wide. It came to an end at a number of springs among
+the rocks.
+
+"Fine, cold water," announced Dave. "Here is a chance for a good
+drink, Phil."
+
+Both were drinking their fill when a loud voice suddenly challenged
+them.
+
+"Ha! What are you doing at my fountain?"
+
+Both looked up hurriedly and saw the wild man standing on the highest
+of the rocks. He had his arms folded and was glaring at them sternly.
+
+"Oh!" murmured Phil. "Say, Dave, there he is! What shall we do?"
+
+"Let us try to make friends with him," suggested Dave. "If we don't,
+he may run away, and he can easily do that in these thick woods."
+
+"If we could only notify the others!"
+
+"You can go back if you wish, while I talk to him."
+
+"Aren't you afraid?"
+
+"Oh, I reckon I can take care of myself," answered Dave.
+
+"Do you not know I gave a million dollars for these fountains?" went
+on the wild man.
+
+"Well, they are worth it," answered Dave, calmly. "It is very good
+water. Why don't you have it bottled, Mr. Poole?"
+
+"Who calls me Poole? I am the King of Sumatra. My army is following
+me."
+
+"To blow up another fort, I suppose," said Phil, as he commenced to
+back away.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then I must go, for I don't want to be blown up," and, so speaking,
+Phil commenced to retreat.
+
+"The fort is not here--it is in Oakdale, close to the other fort,"
+said the wild man, and now he came down from the big rock and stood
+quite close to Dave. There was a strange look of cunning in his eyes,
+and Dave had to shiver, although he did his best to keep calm.
+
+"In Oakdale," said Dave, slowly. "Say, you blew up that hotel fort in
+fine shape, didn't you?"
+
+"Ha! ha! so I did! But I was discovered, worse luck, I was
+discovered!" continued the wild man, with a sad shake of his head.
+"The enemy saw me!"
+
+"Somebody saw you?" queried our hero, with interest.
+
+"Yes, worse luck. But it shan't happen again. Next time I shall go
+masked. I have my mask here." And Wilbur Poole pulled from his pocket
+a mask made of a bit of blue cloth. "I will show you how I wear it."
+And he fastened it over his face by means of a couple of strings.
+
+"Fine! fine!" cried Dave, in pretended delight. He wished to humor the
+man until Phil returned with the others. "It couldn't be better. You
+ought to patent that kind of a mask."
+
+"I will patent it soon, after the other fort is down."
+
+"You just said somebody saw you when you blew up the other," continued
+our hero. "Who was it?"
+
+"Ha! that is a state secret. Only the cabinet must know of it--the
+cabinet and the man who makes shoes."
+
+"I am sorry you won't let me in on your secrets," said Dave. "I want
+to help you. Won't you hire me as a clerk?"
+
+"How much do you want a week?" demanded the wild man, in a
+business-like tone.
+
+"How much will you give?"
+
+"To a good clerk forty dollars."
+
+"Then I'll take the job."
+
+"Very good. Your name is Crusoe, isn't it--Robinson Crusoe?"
+
+"You've got it."
+
+"If I give you the job, you must have your hair shaved off," continued
+the wild man, looking at Dave's hair critically.
+
+"All right, I'll have that done when we reach a barber shop."
+
+"It isn't necessary to wait!" cried Wilbur Poole. "I am a barber."
+
+"You?"
+
+"To be sure--I have a certificate from the Emperor of Siam. See
+here!"
+
+The wild man put his hand into an inner pocket and suddenly brought
+forth a pair of long shears.
+
+"I can cut your hair and shave you," he announced. "Just sit down on
+yonder throne and I'll start to work." And he pointed to a flat
+rock.
+
+The sight of the sharp-pointed shears was not a pleasant one, and when
+the wild man invited him to sit down Dave felt very much like running
+away. The man evidently saw how he felt, and suddenly caught him by
+the arm.
+
+"Sit down!" he thundered. "I won't hurt you. I am an expert barber."
+
+"Let us talk about the job first," said Dave, trying to keep his wits
+about him, although he was terribly disturbed. He wondered how long it
+would be before Phil would return.
+
+"What do you want to know?"
+
+"Will you cut my hair in the latest fashion?"
+
+"I never cut hair in any other way."
+
+"And will you curl the ends? I like curls."
+
+"If you want them, although they make a man look girlish," answered
+the wild man.
+
+"And will you----" went on Dave, when Wilbur Poole suddenly grabbed
+him by both arms and forced him backwards on the flat rock.
+
+"I'll go to work at once!" cried the wild man. "Sit still!" And he
+flourished the shears before our hero's face.
+
+Dave felt a chill run down his backbone. But a moment later he felt a
+thrill of relief, as from the bushes behind the wild man stepped Phil,
+Mr. Dale, and several others.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+THE CAPTURE OF THE WILD MAN
+
+
+"Now then, you may go to work," said our hero, as he saw Mr. Dale come
+up close behind the wild man. "But sharpen the scissors first,
+please."
+
+"I will," was Wilbur Poole's answer, and he opened up the shears and
+commenced to stroke them back and forth on a rock near by.
+
+An instant later the wild man was jerked over backwards and the
+dangerous shears were snatched from his grasp. He commenced to
+struggle, but the whole crowd surrounded him, and before he could
+realize the situation his hands were made fast.
+
+"It is treachery, base treachery!" he groaned. "My army has betrayed
+me!" And he commenced to weep.
+
+"What a terrible state of mind to be in!" murmured Roger. "He is
+certainly as crazy as they make 'em!"
+
+"I guess you are right," answered Phil. "But I am glad we have got
+him."
+
+"He spoke about the blowing up of the hotel," said Dave. "And he said
+somebody saw him do it."
+
+"Who was it?"
+
+"He didn't mention any names."
+
+"Maybe he was simply wandering in his mind," suggested Ben.
+
+"I don't think so," returned Dave. "I think, if he was questioned long
+enough, we could get the truth out of him. He doesn't seem to be crazy
+all the time."
+
+"It's a terrible thing for the Poole family--to have such a crazy man
+in it," was Buster's opinion; and the other lads agreed with him.
+
+The prisoner was marched along the brook, past the home of old Herick,
+and then down the river-road. By this time all the searchers had come
+together, including Henry Morrison and some outsiders.
+
+"I'm mighty glad you've got him," said the farmer. "And I hope he
+don't get away from you."
+
+"He won't get away," answered Mr. Dale.
+
+"The women of this district have been afraid to go out alone," went on
+Henry Morrison. "They'll be glad to know he's been captured."
+
+"We'll have to let the Pooles know right away," said Dave.
+
+"I fancy Doctor Clay will send a telegram," answered Mr. Dale. "And
+in the meanwhile we'll have to take the prisoner to the Oakdale
+lockup."
+
+It was nearly noon when the crowd reached Oak Hall. The wild man had
+but little to say. His capture had evidently broken his spirit, and he
+was inclined to cry. But when Doctor Clay asked him if he would like
+to have something to eat, he brightened up wonderfully.
+
+"It is a sad case," said the master of the Hall. "But under proper
+treatment I think he can be cured."
+
+The news quickly circulated throughout the school that the wild man
+had been caught and that he was Wilbur Poole, an uncle to Nat, and all
+the boys were anxious to catch a sight of the strange individual. The
+teachers and servants were likewise curious, and looked at him as he
+ate his dinner in a corner of the dining-hall, surrounded by those who
+had captured him and who were watching, to see that he did not get
+away. He was not allowed to use a knife and fork, but his food was cut
+up for him and served with a spoon.
+
+The only person at Oak Hall who did not come in to see the wild man
+was Job Haskers. When asked about this, the dictatorial teacher
+shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Some of the boys are wild enough for me," he said. "I want nothing to
+do with the insane."
+
+"It is a sad case," said the teacher who was addressing Job Haskers.
+
+"There are many just as bad," responded the other, coldly. "It is up
+to the Poole family to look after that man and see that he doesn't
+break out again."
+
+It was decided to take the wild man down to Oakdale in the school
+carryall, to be driven by Horsehair. Mr. Dale was to go along, and so
+were Phil, Dave, Ben, Buster, and Doctor Clay.
+
+The carryall was brought around to the side entrance of the school,
+and Wilbur Poole was told that he was about to take a ride through the
+country. He walked through the hallway willingly enough, but suddenly,
+on turning a corner, set up a shout.
+
+"You! you! I have found you at last!" he cried, rushing forward. "You
+are the one who exposed me! Base soldier that you are! You have ruined
+the whole army!" And in a sudden fit of passion he ran up to Job
+Haskers and caught him by the throat.
+
+"Le--let g-g-go!" gasped the teacher, and tried to shake the man off.
+Then the others ran up, and Wilbur Poole was dragged back and
+handcuffed.
+
+"Do you know that man?" asked Dave, struck by a sudden idea.
+
+"Yes! yes!" groaned the wild man. "He exposed me! The army is lost!"
+
+"How did he expose you?"
+
+"He saw me do it."
+
+"Do what?"
+
+"Blow up the fort-hotel. Oh, what a base villain he was to look on!"
+groaned the wild man, and suddenly commenced to weep.
+
+"What is--the--er--man talking about?" stammered Job Haskers, and all
+saw him turn pale.
+
+"He says you saw him blow up Sparr's place," said Dave, pointedly.
+
+"It is false, absurd!" said the teacher. "I--er--I never saw the
+rascal before."
+
+"He isn't a rascal, Mr. Haskers. He is simply out of his mind,"
+remonstrated Mr. Dale. "He is not accountable for his actions."
+
+"Well, he ought not to say such things," returned the dictatorial
+teacher.
+
+"You saw me--you know you did!" cried Wilbur Poole. "You spoiled
+everything! I might have blown up many forts if it hadn't been for
+you!" And he shook his head dolefully.
+
+"Take him away," said the teacher, and turned his back on the wild
+man.
+
+"Dave, I think the wild man speaks the truth!" whispered Phil to our
+hero.
+
+"Possibly, Phil. I think the matter will bear investigation."
+
+"And if old Haskers saw the thing done, why didn't he tell about it.
+Do you think that letter--"
+
+"It struck me that such might be the truth, Phil. But don't say
+anything until you are sure."
+
+"He was down on us--ever since we mentioned that affair with the Widow
+Breen," went on the shipowner's son.
+
+"I'd like to see that letter Jason Sparr got--saying we were guilty,"
+returned our hero. "Maybe Doctor Clay can get hold of it."
+
+All the way to Oakdale the boys spoke of the case in whispers. Phil
+was quite sure Job Haskers had seen Wilbur Poole blow up the hotel and
+equally sure that the dictatorial teacher had written the letter to
+the hotel-keeper stating he, Dave, and their chums were guilty.
+
+"He thought we'd be locked up, or at least that we'd be sent away from
+the school and he would be rid of us," said Phil. "He is growing
+afraid of us! Oh, if we can prove that he did it, I'll make it hot for
+him!"
+
+"If he did such a thing as that, he ought to be discharged from Oak
+Hall," was Ben's comment.
+
+"I'll get my father to sue him for damages," put in Buster.
+
+"Well, don't be hasty," advised Dave. "There may be some
+mistake--although I think not."
+
+At Oakdale, Wilbur Poole was turned over to the authorities, who
+placed him in a comfortable room attached to the lockup. As it was
+known that he was insane, he could not be counted a criminal, and the
+majority of the people pitied him and hoped that some day he would be
+restored to his right mind.
+
+A telegram was sent to the Poole family, and the next day came a reply
+that some men would come to take Wilbur Poole away to a sanitarium. It
+was established beyond a doubt that he had used the dynamite to blow
+up the dining-room of Sparr's hotel, and, consequently, our hero and
+his chums were cleared of that charge, much to their satisfaction.
+
+"I wonder if Nat will come back?" said Shadow. "I should think he
+would hate to do it."
+
+"I don't think he will," said Luke.
+
+"What will you do if he does come back, Phil?" asked Gus.
+
+"I don't know, Gus. Of course, I'll let him know what I think of him
+for spoiling my plans for a spread. But I hate to be hard on him,
+because of this disgrace about his uncle."
+
+"Yes, that's a terrible thing," was Chip Macklin's comment. "I'd hate
+to have a crazy man in my family."
+
+"Well, such things can't be helped," put in Polly Vane. "The Poole
+family will have to make the best of it."
+
+It was several days later when Nat Poole showed himself. Phil and Dave
+did not see him until later, and both were struck by the change in his
+appearance. He looked haggard and much older, and his arrogance was
+completely gone.
+
+"Got back, eh?" said Phil, walking up to him.
+
+"Yes," returned the money-lender's son, and his voice sounded hollow.
+
+"What have they done with your uncle, Nat?" asked Dave, kindly.
+
+"Put him in another sanitarium, where he will have the best of care
+and doctoring."
+
+"I hope he gets well."
+
+"We all hope that." Nat swallowed a lump in his throat and then looked
+gloomily at Phil. "Well, you got the best of me," he said, shortly.
+
+"How the best of you?" demanded the shipowner's son.
+
+"I understand you found out about that spread."
+
+"I did."
+
+"Well, I'll pay for the damage done--as soon as I get the money. I
+haven't any now--Dad's got too much to pay on Uncle Wilbur's account."
+Nat swallowed another lump in his throat. "I'm sorry I did it now,
+Phil, honest I am," he went on, brokenly.
+
+"Well, if that's the case, let us drop the matter, Nat," was the
+instant reply. "I don't believe in hitting a fellow when he is down.
+You haven't got to pay me anything. The whole thing is past and
+gone,--and that ends it."
+
+"Thank you." Nat wanted to say something more, but his voice suddenly
+broke and he turned away to hide his emotion, and then walked away.
+
+"He's hit and hit hard," said Roger, in a low voice.
+
+"And you did well to drop that matter, Phil," added Dave. "Maybe Nat
+has learned a lesson he won't easily forget."
+
+Dave was right about the lesson Nat Poole had learned. He was deeply
+humiliated, both by the exposure concerning the feast and by what had
+been learned concerning his insane uncle, and for a long time was
+quite another boy.
+
+It may be added here that at a new sanitarium, and under first-class
+medical treatment, a marked change came over Wilbur Poole, and in less
+than a year he was completely cured of his weakmindedness. With a
+nurse as a companion he went into the country to rest both body and
+mind, and later on came out into the world again as well as anybody.
+Strange to say, he remembered nothing of calling himself the King of
+Sumatra, nor of blowing up Jason Sparr's hotel. But others did not
+forget about the blowing up, and the damage done had to be settled for
+by Mr. Aaron Poole, who was his brother's guardian and manager of his
+estate for the time being.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+A BIT OF EVIDENCE
+
+
+"Dave, what do you make of this?"
+
+"Well, to tell the truth, Phil, I don't think much of it."
+
+"You don't think it is a clew?"
+
+"Do you?"
+
+"It's rather faint, I must confess."
+
+"Oh, I don't think there is anything to it," declared Ben.
+
+"There is something, but not a great deal," came from Roger. "I don't
+see how you are going to follow it up."
+
+This talk between the boys occurred after Dave, Phil, Ben, Roger, and
+Buster had called upon Jason Sparr and the justice and insisted on
+seeing the letter the hotel man had received which stated that the
+boys were guilty of blowing up the dining-room of his hostelry.
+
+The hotel man had treated them kindly, for he was in dread that the
+boys would get their folks to sue him for damages. He had offered to
+pay back the money taken from Phil for the spread, and the
+shipowner's son had taken the amount, to which he was justly
+entitled.
+
+The examination of the letter had revealed next to nothing. It was
+evidently written in a disguised hand, but some of the letters looked
+like Job Haskers's handwriting. In the corner of the paper some sort
+of an advertisement had been torn off, only the letters, "_blisher_"
+showing.
+
+"I think those letters are part of the word, '_Publisher_,'" Dave had
+said. "This letter was evidently penned by somebody who used some
+publisher's blank."
+
+"Maybe Job Haskers had those blanks," Phil had exclaimed. "Remember,
+he said he published or was going to publish something once upon a
+time."
+
+The boys talked it over, but could reach no conclusion. Jason Sparr
+told how the letter had come to him, but this added no new light on
+the subject.
+
+"Well, it was a nasty trick, no matter who played it," said Dave.
+
+"I sha'n't rest until I find out who did it," retorted Phil.
+
+All were resolved to watch Job Haskers and also Nat Poole. But while
+doing this they had to turn once more to their studies. Phil, Ben, and
+Buster had to work harder than ever, and so did Dave, to make up for
+the time lost during their absence. But Doctor Clay was kind to them,
+and for once Job Haskers did not say anything, although he showed that
+he expected them to "toe the mark," as Roger expressed it.
+
+Several weeks slipped by, and during that time Oak Hall played several
+games of ball. One game of importance was won, and this was celebrated
+in a befitting manner. Dave attended the games, and so did Phil and
+Roger, but none of the three allowed the sport to interfere with their
+studies. All were "in the grind," and resolved to graduate that coming
+June with the highest possible honors.
+
+During those days Dave received many letters from home. His folks and
+friends were glad to know that the wild man had been captured and the
+mystery of the blowing up cleared away. Jessie sent him a very warm
+letter in particular, congratulating him for bringing back the
+runaways, and saying she hoped he would have no more trouble during
+the final term at Oak Hall. She added that she and all the others
+expected to come to the school at graduation exercises.
+
+"Now it is up to me to make good," said Dave, after reading this
+letter several times. "Dad expects it, and Jessie, and everybody, and
+I am not going to disappoint them."
+
+But it was no light task to remain at the top of the senior class, or
+even near it, for there were bright seniors in plenty, including the
+studious Polly Vane, who seemed the brightest of all. But Dave plugged
+away, day after day, resolved to keep at it until the very last. He
+was writing on his theme and had it about half finished.
+
+"One month more and it will all be over but the shouting," said Roger
+one day, as he came into the room where Dave was studying.
+
+"All over but the shouting or weeping," returned Phil, who was
+present. "I am afraid some of the fellows will do more weeping than
+cheering," he added, grimly.
+
+"Let us hope that everybody passes," said Dave, looking up with a
+quiet smile.
+
+"Such a thing has never been done," said Ben. "Somebody is bound to
+drop by the wayside--I hope it isn't yours truly," and he sank his
+head again into his book.
+
+"I think old Haskers is commencing to tighten the screws again," said
+Buster. "He let up for a while, after the wild man was caught, but
+yesterday and to-day--phew! we caught it, didn't we?"
+
+"We sure did!" cried Phil. "I can't understand that man. Why is he a
+teacher when he just naturally hates boys?"
+
+"That's a conundrum that can't be answered," said the senator's son.
+
+"Well, we won't weep on leaving him," remarked Luke, dryly.
+
+"Say, that puts me in mind of a story," said Shadow. "Once on a time a
+man in an auto ran into a boy carrying a cat in a basket. He didn't
+hurt the boy much but he killed the cat. Says he, 'I am sorry, my boy,
+and I'll pay you for the cat. How much?' 'I--I don't know,' blubbered
+the boy. 'Will two dollars do?' asked the man. 'Yes,' says the boy,
+and took the money. 'Were you taking the cat home?' asked the man,
+when he was ready to drive on. 'No,' said the boy. 'I was going to
+take him down to the canal and drown him!'" And there was a smile over
+Shadow's yarn.
+
+It had been a blustery day, and as night came on the wind increased in
+violence, until it fairly howled around Oak Hall. It tore through the
+branches of the oaks that gave the place its name, until it looked as
+if some of the trees might be broken off by the fury of the elements.
+
+"My gracious! I never saw such a wind!" cried Roger, as he came in
+from a trip to the gymnasium.
+
+"It must be fierce at sea," returned Dave, who was with him. "I am
+glad I am on shore. The newspapers will tell about wrecks along the
+coast to-morrow."
+
+Nobody thought of going out that evening, and the boys put in the time
+studying and reading. The windows rattled, and occasionally a shutter
+banged, and a good night's rest seemed out of the question.
+
+"My, what a night for a fire!" remarked Phil, while he and his chums
+were undressing.
+
+"Don't mention such a thing!" returned Ben, with a shiver. "It would
+burn down everything!"
+
+At last the boys retired. A few dropped off to sleep, but Dave was not
+one of them. He had studied hard and was restless, and the fury of the
+elements added to his nervousness.
+
+At last he could stand it no longer to remain in bed, and got up to
+sit in an easy-chair for awhile.
+
+He was just crossing the dormitory floor when there came an extra
+heavy blast of wind outside, followed by a crash, as one of the giant
+oaks standing close to the school building was broken off near the
+top. Then came another crash, a jingling of glass, and a sudden wild
+cry for help.
+
+"Hello, something's gone through a window!" Dave muttered. "Maybe it's
+in the next room!"
+
+He ran to the window and looked out. Just below the window-sill he saw
+some branches of the broken tree. He looked down and noted that the
+tree-top had gone into the window of the room below.
+
+"What's the row?" cried Roger, springing up and rubbing his eyes.
+
+"Is the roof caving in?" asked Phil.
+
+"Some tree-branches came down and went through the window right below
+us," answered Dave. "Listen!"
+
+All did so, and heard the cry for help repeated.
+
+"It's Job Haskers calling!" said the senator's son. "He uses the room
+below us now."
+
+"Let us see if he is hurt," suggested another of the boys.
+
+Clad in their pajamas, the boys flocked out into the hallway, there to
+be joined by others. Word was passed around of what had occurred, and
+all made their way to the door of the instructor's apartment. They
+heard him yelling for help with all his might.
+
+The door was locked, and Dave and some others put their shoulders to
+the barrier and forced it open. All was dark in the room, and the wind
+was rushing around, sending books, pictures, and other things in all
+directions.
+
+Several matches were struck, and at last a sheltered light was lit.
+Doctor Clay, Mr. Dale, and some of the other teachers had now arrived,
+and instructors and students gazed curiously at the scene before
+them.
+
+The top of the tree had come straight through the big window of the
+apartment, crashing down on a bureau and a writing-desk, smashing both
+flat. Some branches of the tree rested on the side of the bed, pinning
+Job Haskers against the wall, as if in a cage.
+
+[Illustration: "HELP ME! SAVE ME!" SPLUTTERED THE TERROR-STRICKEN
+TEACHER.--_Page 287_.]
+
+"Help me! Save me!" spluttered the terror-stricken teacher. "I am
+being crushed to death!"
+
+"All hands to the tree!" shouted Mr. Dale, and showed what he meant.
+Boys and men took hold of the tree-branches and pulled them to one
+side.
+
+"Are you much hurt, Mr. Haskers?" asked Doctor Clay, kindly.
+
+"I--I don't know, I think so!" gasped the teacher. His face was white
+and he was shivering from fright.
+
+"Can't you crawl under the branches?" asked Mr. Dale. "Here, come this
+way."
+
+He showed how it could be done, and trembling from head to feet, the
+scared teacher got out from under the tree-top. His face and one
+shoulder were scratched, but otherwise he appeared to be unhurt. But
+all were forced to acknowledge that he had had a narrow escape.
+
+"You had better take one of the spare rooms, Mr. Haskers," said Doctor
+Clay, as another blast of wind swept through the room. "You cannot
+remain here, with this tree-top in the room. And I am afraid we shall
+have to saw it up to get it out again. You can be thankful that your
+life has been spared."
+
+"The furniture is smashed!" murmured the teacher.
+
+"Never mind the furniture, so long as you are not hurt. It can be
+mended, and all the window needs is some new sash."
+
+"My things have been scattered," grumbled the teacher. "A perfect
+mess!"
+
+"Leave it until morning--you can do nothing to-night," said the
+doctor; and so it was finally decided, and teachers and pupils trooped
+off to bed. The broken-in door was closed, but it could not be
+locked.
+
+The boys had scarcely gotten back to the dormitories when Dave called
+Phil, Ben, Roger, and Buster to one side.
+
+"Now is our chance," he whispered. "Did you notice that the bureau and
+the writing-desk in Haskers's room were smashed? It may not be the
+most honorable thing to do, but I think we are justified in looking
+his things over and seeing if we can't find some clew to that letter
+Jason Sparr received."
+
+"Right you are!" declared Phil, promptly, and the others said
+practically the same.
+
+They waited until the other boys had retired once more, and then, at a
+signal from Dave, all filed silently into the hallway again and
+tiptoed their way to the room below. Soon, they were inside and had
+the light lit, and also a lantern which belonged to Ben's bicycle,
+and which he had chanced to have on hand.
+
+Silently and with great care the boys went over the many things that
+had been scattered over the floor--wearing apparel, books, pads,
+papers, and various articles of more or less value. Presently Phil
+gave a low cry.
+
+"Look at this!" And he held up several sheets of paper. In one corner
+were the words:
+
+ LATIN MADE EASY
+
+ _JOB HASKERS, Publisher,_
+
+ ALBANY, N. Y.
+"It's the same paper!" cried Dave. "He tore the corner off so that
+just the letters '_blisher_' remained."
+
+"That's pretty good evidence," said Roger.
+
+"I should say it was!" cried Ben. "Wonder what he will have to say
+about it, when we confront him with it?"
+
+"Let us look for more evidence, while we are at it," came from Buster.
+And then the midnight search continued.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+THE EXPOSURE--GOOD-BY TO OAK HALL
+
+
+"Doctor Clay, we must see you about something that is very
+important."
+
+Thus spoke Dave, the next morning, as he and his chums filed into the
+doctor's private office after the opening of the school. Job Haskers
+was not at his class, but in his room, straightening out his things,
+while some men had been sent up, to get rid of the tree-top and repair
+the window. The storm was a thing of the past, and no other damage of
+importance had been done.
+
+"Very well, boys," returned the master of the school, kindly. "Come in
+and let me know what it is."
+
+The students came in, rather awkwardly it must be admitted, for they
+had much on their minds and did not know just how the worthy doctor
+would take it. But they had decided on a course of action, and they
+had given their word to stick together to the end. Dave, as the
+natural leader, had been chosen spokesman.
+
+"Doctor Clay, we want to bring up a subject of great importance,"
+said Dave. "Important to us, and to you, and to the whole school. The
+boys have asked me to speak for them and for myself."
+
+"About what?" demanded the master, somewhat shortly.
+
+"About Mr. Haskers and how he has treated us."
+
+"What has he done now?"
+
+"It isn't what he has done now, Doctor Clay, it is what he did some
+time ago--did his best to get us into grave trouble," answered Dave,
+warmly. "You'll remember the letter Mr. Sparr got, stating we were
+guilty of trying to blow up his hotel. We are now satisfied that Mr.
+Haskers penned that letter--in fact, we have the evidence to prove
+it."
+
+"Impossible!"
+
+"No, sir, it is true, and I dare him to deny it. It is an absolute
+fact, Doctor Clay, and we have come here this morning to inform you
+that we can no longer attend a school where he is a teacher," went on
+Dave, firmly.
+
+"But--but you--er--you astound me, Porter! Tell me what you know, or
+think you know."
+
+In a plain, straightforward manner Dave mentioned the letter and the
+printing that had appeared on it. Then he told how he and his chums
+had searched the bedroom after the tree-top crash and found the
+sheets of paper with that same printing, and he produced them.
+
+"And we also found these, in a corner of the broken writing-desk," he
+continued. "Some writing by Mr. Haskers, in which he practiced
+backhand. This writing is just like that which appears in the letter
+Mr. Sparr got. Compare the two and you will see we are right. Wilbur
+Poole said Mr. Haskers saw him blow up the hotel, and he told the
+truth, even if he is weak-minded."
+
+"But why should Mr. Haskers do such an outrageous thing?" asked the
+master of Oak Hall.
+
+"I will tell you why, sir," returned Dave, and related the affair of
+the Widow Breen. "That made him very sore on us, and he wanted to get
+us out of the school. At first he tried it by overworking us in our
+lessons, and when he found that that didn't work he tried this game of
+making out that we were criminals."
+
+"Yes, but--but would a teacher of mine stoop so low?" murmured the
+worthy doctor, shaking his head doubtfully.
+
+"No ordinary teacher would, Dr. Clay. But Mr. Haskers is not an
+ordinary man--he is very dictatorial and harsh, and he hates boys even
+though he has to teach them. He isn't a bit like Mr. Dale, or the
+others."
+
+"We never had any trouble with any teacher but Haskers," put in
+Phil.
+
+"And if we have to leave Oak Hall I'm going to get my father to sue
+Haskers for damages," added Roger.
+
+A talk lasting the best part of an hour followed, and at last the
+worthy doctor had his eyes opened to the unworthiness of his
+assistant. He scanned the sheets of paper and the writing the boys had
+brought with interest.
+
+"You are right--this is Mr. Haskers's hand," he said, slowly. "But is
+it the same hand that wrote that villainous letter to Mr. Sparr?"
+
+"Compare the two and you will see that we are right," answered Dave.
+
+"I will," answered the doctor; and a little later he set off for
+Oakdale in his buggy, going alone.
+
+The boys walked down to the gymnasium, resolved to keep out of all
+classes until the matter had been settled. They had impressed it on
+Doctor Clay's mind that either Job Haskers must leave the school or
+they would do so.
+
+It was nearly noon when the master of Oak Hall came back, driving
+slowly and looking very thoughtful. The boys met him at the entrance
+to the grounds and he told them to come to the office, and closed the
+door carefully behind them.
+
+"You were right," he said, almost brokenly. "I have been deceived by
+this--this--I do not know what to call him! It will make a great stir
+when the truth is known--and it will hurt the school," he added, with
+a sigh.
+
+"Why should we make a stir about it?" asked Dave, quickly. "Let him
+go, that is all we ask. He can resign."
+
+"No, the truth must come out," was the firm reply. "He shall not
+shelter himself behind you, even for the benefit of the school. I have
+already told the authorities the facts in the case. If they wish to
+arrest him they can do so, and you may appear against him, if you
+wish."
+
+"When will you tell him?" asked Phil, as there came a brief pause.
+
+"At once! And I wish you to be present and hear what is said,"
+returned Doctor Clay. He rang a bell and a servant appeared. "Tell Mr.
+Haskers to come here immediately."
+
+There was silence after this, the boys not knowing what to say, and
+the master of the school being busy with his thoughts. Presently the
+door opened and Job Haskers came in, with a look of curiosity on his
+face.
+
+"You sent for me, Doctor?" he inquired.
+
+"I did, Mr. Haskers," was the cold reply. "I want your resignation,
+and I want it at once!"
+
+The master of Oak Hall had gotten to his feet and the two men stood
+facing each other. Doctor Clay had his jaw set, and never had the
+students seen him look so determined. He was no longer a kindly
+schoolmaster, he was a judge, and a stern judge at that.
+
+"You--you want my resignation?" faltered Job Haskers.
+
+"Yes, and at once."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because you are not fit to teach here--you are not fit to teach
+anywhere!" thundered the doctor. "I want your resignation, and then I
+want you to leave just as soon as you possibly can."
+
+"But--but--I want you to explain. I want----"
+
+"It is not necessary for me to explain, Haskers. You have been found
+out. You are a despicable villain, and you ought to be in jail. I
+trusted you, and you have deceived me. More than that, you have tried
+to get these young gentlemen into serious trouble. Don't deny it, for
+it will do no good. We have the absolute proof against you, and those
+proofs are also in the hands of the law. If you don't want to be
+arrested, you will leave this school as soon as you can get your
+baggage packed."
+
+"Sir, I want you to know----" commenced Job Haskers, but stopped
+short, for Doctor Clay had taken a stride forward and was shaking a
+finger in the teacher's face.
+
+"I will not argue with you, Haskers. For a long time I have not been
+satisfied with your work, for you did not seem to have the students'
+interest at heart. You have a good education. But a teacher must have
+more than that--he must have a heart for his work. Now you are found
+out, and I want nothing more to do with you. I will give you a check
+for what is due you up to to-day, and you will sign a receipt in full,
+and also your resignation, and then I never want to see or hear of you
+again."
+
+"And suppose I won't resign?" snarled the teacher. "I have a
+contract----"
+
+"If you don't get out, you'll go to jail."
+
+"And we'll sue you," Dave could not help putting in.
+
+"That's right, we'll push the case as far as the law allows," added
+Phil.
+
+"Ha! you think you are smart, but you don't know it all," snarled the
+teacher, but his manner showed his uneasiness. He attempted to argue,
+but Doctor Clay would not listen, and when he said he would send for a
+constable, Job Haskers quickly capitulated, signed his resignation,
+took his check, and hurried away to pack his baggage. He left about an
+hour later, by the back way, so that none of the students saw him go.
+An hour after that a man came for his trunks and bags; and that was
+the last seen or heard of him at Oak Hall.
+
+"Hurrah!" cried Dave, when the affair was at an end. "How glad I am
+that Haskers is gone! I feel as if a weight had been taken from my
+head!"
+
+"I guess everybody will be glad," returned Roger, and he was right.
+Some of the students wanted to get up a celebration in honor of the
+unpopular teacher's departure, but this was not permitted. But the
+boys had a time on the quiet, and thoroughly enjoyed it.
+
+With the going away of Job Haskers, and the clearing up of the mystery
+surrounding the letter, Oak Hall settled down once more to its normal
+condition. Another teacher came to take the place of the man who had
+left, and he proved popular all around, and made Doctor Clay wonder
+why he had not made a change long before.
+
+With their minds free from worry, Dave and his chums buckled down to
+their lessons, and our hero spent much time over his paper on "The
+Future of Our Country." Soon the examinations started, and then the
+boys fell to worrying over how they would fare in this final test.
+
+"Well, I hope I pass," remarked Phil, when the last examination was
+over. "I don't expect to be near the top. I lost too much, going to
+Cave Island, and when I ran away."
+
+"Me for the passing mark, too," chimed in Ben.
+
+"Well, I am hoping for something better," said Roger.
+
+"What about you, Dave?" queried Buster.
+
+"I am like Roger, hoping for something better," answered our hero,
+with a smile. "But I'm prepared to take what comes," he added.
+
+At last came the day when the announcements were to be made. Dave had
+sent in his theme and he expected to hear from this as well as from
+his studies. In the meantime, preparations were going forward for the
+graduation exercises, and visitors were expected from far and near.
+Nearly all the folks from Crumville were coming, and also the parents
+of Phil, Roger, and the other seniors.
+
+The big assembly room was crowded when the announcements were made.
+The passing mark was seventy-five per cent., and many of the boys
+dreaded to think that they might be below that.
+
+"I will read the names in the order of merit," said Doctor Clay, after
+the opening exercises. "Only two boys have failed to pass for
+graduation, and they will be conditioned, if they so desire. I am
+proud of the record." And then the master of the school proceeded to
+read the list. Polly Vane and Dave had each ninety-six per cent.,
+Roger had ninety-four, Shadow ninety, Sam and Luke each eighty-eight,
+Phil eighty-seven, Gus eighty-six, and so on down to Buster, who
+squeezed through with seventy-eight. The boys who had failed to pass
+were Nat Poole, who had only sixty-eight, and one of his cronies, who
+was marked sixty-nine.
+
+"It ain't fair! I did as well as lots of 'em," said Nat, when the
+reading was over. But nobody listened to him, for all knew that the
+examinations had been just in every particular.
+
+"I will now announce the prizes for the best themes on the subject,
+'The Future of Our Country,'" went on Doctor Clay. "The reading of the
+nine papers handed in has afforded me great pleasure, for all are good
+and many of them excellent. But I think the best of all is that
+written by David Porter, and the committee of teachers who have
+examined the papers agree with me. Porter, I congratulate you, and I
+will now ask you to come forward and read your meritorious composition
+to your fellow-students."
+
+And amid a general handclapping our hero went to the platform and
+commenced to read the theme. Everybody listened with close attention,
+and loud was the applause when he had concluded. It was certainly a
+fine paper, and later on Doctor Clay had it published in one of the
+school journals, where it attracted not a little attention.
+
+Dave was certainly happy and he had good reason to be. He sent word
+home that night of how he had fared and the next day received several
+messages of congratulation. One message from Jessie he prized very
+highly, for she wrote, "You deserve a big hug for coming through so
+finely. My very best wishes." The other boys also got congratulations;
+and that night and the night to follow were "bonfire nights," in more
+ways than one.
+
+"Well, we are rid of Haskers, and also Merwell and Jasniff," remarked
+Roger to Dave. "We ought to be happy, eh, Dave?"
+
+"Yes, and especially over coming out so well for graduation," answered
+Dave.
+
+"Do you think we'll ever see Haskers or Merwell again?" questioned
+Phil.
+
+"I don't know--I trust not," answered our hero. But his wish was not
+fulfilled. He did meet the pair, and in a most unexpected fashion, as
+will be related in the next volume of this series, to be called "Dave
+Porter in the Gold Fields; or, The Search for the Landslide Mine," in
+which we will learn how Dave went West with some of his chums, and
+joined an old prospector in a hunt for a lost mine that had been
+willed to Roger Morr's mother.
+
+The graduation exercises at Oak Hall that year formed a gala event
+long to be remembered. The school and the campus were crowded, and
+Dave and his chums surprised even Doctor Clay by "chipping in" and
+hiring a brass band to play outside, after the exercises were over.
+The boys also presented their teachers and the master with some
+volumes of history and poetry, and received numerous gifts in return.
+From his father Dave got a bank-book, with an amount written therein
+that was a complete surprise. His sister gave him a neat stickpin and
+his uncle a set of books, and from Jessie and her folks came a desk
+set, of solid silver, suitably engraved.
+
+"Well, I think I ought to be the happiest boy alive," said Dave, after
+the exercises were over, and he had his diploma, tied with a broad
+ribbon. "I feel just as if I was walking on air."
+
+"And I am glad, too," said his sister Laura, warmly.
+
+"We are all glad," put in Jessie, and gave him her brightest smile.
+
+"Glad and proud, Dave," said his father. "My boy, you have done very
+well."
+
+And then the whole party went down to the gymnasium, where
+refreshments were being served to the visitors. And here let us leave
+Dave Porter, wishing him well.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+DAVE PORTER SERIES
+
+By EDWARD STRATEMEYER
+
+"Mr. Stratemeyer has seldom introduced a more popular hero than Dave
+Porter. He is a typical boy, manly, brave, always ready for a good
+time if it can be obtained in an honorable way."--Wisconsin,
+Milwaukee, Wis.
+
+"Edward Stratemeyer's 'Dave Porter' has become exceedingly popular."
+--Boston Globe.
+
+"Dave and his friends are nice, manly chaps."--Times-Democrat,
+New Orleans.
+
+DAVE PORTER AT OAK HALL
+ Or The School Days of an American Boy
+
+DAVE PORTER IN THE SOUTH SEAS
+ Or The Strange Cruise of the Stormy Petrel
+
+DAVE PORTER'S RETURN TO SCHOOL
+ Or Winning the Medal of Honor
+
+DAVE PORTER IN THE FAR NORTH
+ Or The Pluck of an American Schoolboy
+
+DAVE PORTER AND HIS CLASSMATES
+ Or For the Honor of Oak Hall
+
+DAVE PORTER AT STAR RANCH
+ Or The Cowboy's Secret
+
+DAVE PORTER AND HIS RIVALS
+ Or The Chums and Foes of Oak Hall
+
+DAVE PORTER ON CAVE ISLAND
+ Or A Schoolboy's Mysterious Mission
+
+DAVE PORTER AND THE RUNAWAYS
+ Or Last Days at Oak Hall
+
+DAVE PORTER IN THE GOLD FIELDS
+ Or The Search for the Landslide Mine
+
+DAVE PORTER AT BEAR CAMP
+ Or The Wild Man of Mirror Lake
+
+DAVE PORTER AND HIS DOUBLE
+ Or The Disappearance of the Basswood Fortune
+
+DAVE PORTER'S GREAT SEARCH
+ Or The Perils of a Young Civil Engineer
+
+DAVE PORTER UNDER FIRE
+ Or A Young Army Engineer in France
+
+DAVE PORTER'S WAR HONORS
+ Or At the Front with the Fighting Engineers
+
+For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by
+the publishers.
+
+LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO. BOSTON
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Dave Porter and the Runaways, by Edward Stratemeyer
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DAVE PORTER AND THE RUNAWAYS ***
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+<title>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook of Dave Porter and the Runaways, by Edward Stratemeyer.
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+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Dave Porter and the Runaways, by Edward Stratemeyer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Dave Porter and the Runaways
+ Last Days at Oak Hall
+
+Author: Edward Stratemeyer
+
+Illustrator: H. Richard Boehm
+
+Release Date: May 1, 2009 [EBook #28654]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DAVE PORTER AND THE RUNAWAYS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_1' id='linki_1'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-001.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 320px; height: 498px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 320px;'>
+<span style='font-variant:small-caps'>He saw an arm and a head come up.</span>&mdash;<i>Page 240.</i><br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='margin-top:20px;font-size:1.2em;'>Dave Porter Series</p>
+<hr class='p10' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:2.2em;margin-top:15px;margin-bottom:10px;'>DAVE PORTER<br />AND THE RUNAWAYS</p>
+<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:10px;font-size:smaller;'>OR</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;margin-bottom:20px;'>LAST DAYS AT OAK HALL</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:smaller;margin-bottom:10px;'>BY</p>
+<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:10px;font-size:1.2em;'>EDWARD STRATEMEYER</p>
+<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:15px;font-size:smaller;'>Author of &#8220;Dave Porter at Oak Hall,&#8221; &#8220;The Lakeport Series,&#8221;<br />
+&#8220;Old Glory Series,&#8221; &#8220;Pan-American Series,&#8221; etc.</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-style:italic;margin-bottom:30px;'>ILLUSTRATED BY H. RICHARD BOEHM</p>
+
+<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
+<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-emb.png' />
+</div>
+
+<p class='tp' style='margin-top:30px;letter-spacing:0.2em;'>BOSTON</p>
+<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:20px;'>LOTHROP LEE &amp; SHEPARD CO.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='font-size:smaller;'>
+<p class='tp' style='margin-top:20px;margin-bottom:20px;'>Published, March, 1913</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-variant:small-caps;'>Copyright, 1913, by Lothrop, Lee &amp; Shepard Co.</p>
+<hr class='p10' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-style:italic;'>All Rights Reserved</p>
+<hr class='p10' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-variant:small-caps;letter-spacing:0.2em;margin-bottom:20px;'>Dave Porter and the Runaways</p>
+<p class='tp' style=''>Norwood Press</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-variant:small-caps;'>Berwick &amp; Smith Co.</p>
+<p class='tp' style=''>Norwood, Mass.</p>
+<p class='tp' style=''>U.S.A.</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_iii' name='page_iii'></a>iii</span></div>
+<h3>PREFACE</h3>
+<p>&#8220;<span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Dave Porter and the Runaways</span>&#8221; is a
+complete story in itself, but forms the ninth
+volume of a line issued under the general title of
+&#8220;Dave Porter Series.&#8221;</p>
+<p>In the first volume of this series, entitled
+&#8220;Dave Porter at Oak Hall,&#8221; the reader was introduced
+to a typical American lad, and the particulars
+were given of his doings at an up-to-date
+boarding school.</p>
+<p>There was a cloud over Dave&#8217;s parentage, and
+in order to solve the mystery of his identity he
+took a long voyage over the ocean, as related in
+the second volume, called &#8220;Dave Porter in the
+South Seas.&#8221; Then he came back to his schoolmates,
+as told of in &#8220;Dave Porter&#8217;s Return to
+School,&#8221; and then took a long trip to Norway, to
+hunt up his father, the particulars of which are
+given in &#8220;Dave Porter in the Far North.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Having settled the matter of his identity to his
+satisfaction, our hero came back to Oak Hall and
+had a number of strenuous contests, related in
+detail in &#8220;Dave Porter and His Classmates.&#8221;
+Following this came the summer vacation, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_iv' name='page_iv'></a>iv</span>
+the youth made a trip West, the happenings of
+which are set down in &#8220;Dave Porter at Star
+Ranch.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When Dave returned to Oak Hall once more
+he found the school rivalries as bitter as ever, and
+what these led to has been related in &#8220;Dave
+Porter and His Rivals.&#8221; His enemies tried hard
+to do our hero much injury, but he exposed them
+and they were forced to flee, to escape the consequences
+of their actions.</p>
+<p>The winter holidays found Dave homeward
+bound. He had anticipated some jolly times
+among his relatives and friends, but a robbery
+upset all his plans, and, almost before he knew
+it, he found himself bound southward, as related
+in &#8220;Dave Porter on Cave Island.&#8221; On the
+island he had many adventures out of the ordinary,
+and he came home more of a hero than
+ever, having saved Mr. Wadsworth, his benefactor,
+from ruin.</p>
+<p>In the present story Dave is back once again
+at school. There are some queer happenings,
+and then some lads run away. How Dave
+proved his common sense, and brought the runaways
+back, I leave for the pages which follow
+to tell. I trust the reading of this volume will
+do all my young friends good.</p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'><span style='margin-right: 1.5625em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Edward Stratemeyer</span>.</span><br /></p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:left'><span style='margin-left: 0.78125em;'><i>February</i> 1, 1913.</span><br /></p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h3>CONTENTS</h3>
+<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Contents' style='margin:1em auto;'>
+<tr>
+ <td align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-size:small;'>CHAPTER</span></td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align='right'><span style='font-size:small;'>PAGE</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>I.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Dave and His Chums</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_I_DAVE_AND_HIS_CHUMS'>1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>II.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A Glimpse at the Past</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_II_A_GLIMPSE_AT_THE_PAST'>11</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>III.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A Talk of the Future</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_III_A_TALK_OF_THE_FUTURE'>21</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>IV.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Mr. Job Haskers&#8217;s Doings</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IV_MR_JOB_HASKERSS_DOINGS'>31</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>V.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>At Oak Hall Once More</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_V_AT_OAK_HALL_ONCE_MORE'>41</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>VI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Phil Shows His Stubbornness</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VI_PHIL_SHOWS_HIS_STUBBORNNESS'>52</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>VII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Phil and Ben Make a Move</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VII_PHIL_AND_BEN_MAKE_A_MOVE'>62</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>VIII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>An Unusual Compact</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VIII_AN_UNUSUAL_COMPACT'>72</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>IX.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The King of Sumatra</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IX_THE_KING_OF_SUMATRA'>82</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>X.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Nat Poole Wants to Know</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_X_NAT_POOLE_WANTS_TO_KNOW'>91</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Bonfire Night at the Hall</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XI_BONFIRE_NIGHT_AT_THE_HALL'>101</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Plans for a Spread</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XII_PLANS_FOR_A_SPREAD'>111</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XIII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Cabin on the Island</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIII_THE_CABIN_ON_THE_ISLAND'>121</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XIV.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Bandanna Handkerchief</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIV_THE_BANDANNA_HANDKERCHIEF'>131</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XV.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>At the Hotel</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XV_AT_THE_HOTEL'>141</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XVI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Blowing up of the Bridge</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVI_THE_BLOWING_UP_OF_THE_BRIDGE'>151</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XVII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A Serious Accusation</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVII_A_SERIOUS_ACCUSATION'>161</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XVIII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Meeting on the Road</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVIII_THE_MEETING_ON_THE_ROAD'>171</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XIX.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Looking for the Runaways</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIX_LOOKING_FOR_THE_RUNAWAYS'>181</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XX.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Wild Man Again</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XX_THE_WILD_MAN_AGAIN'>190</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XXI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Something of a Clew</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXI_SOMETHING_OF_A_CLEW'>200</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XXII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>After the Runaways</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXII_AFTER_THE_RUNAWAYS'>210</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XXIII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>At the Camp</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXIII_AT_THE_CAMP'>220</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XXIV.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Out in the Storm</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXIV_OUT_IN_THE_STORM'>230</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XXV.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Perils of the Flood</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXV_PERILS_OF_THE_FLOOD'>239</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XXVI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Back to the School</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXVI_BACK_TO_THE_SCHOOL'>249</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XXVII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Trail Through the Woods</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXVII_THE_TRAIL_THROUGH_THE_WOODS'>259</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XXVIII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Capture of the Wild Man</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXVIII_THE_CAPTURE_OF_THE_WILD_MAN'>268</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XXIX.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A Bit of Evidence</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXIX_A_BIT_OF_EVIDENCE'>278</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XXX.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Exposure&mdash;Good-By to Oak Hall</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXX_THE_EXPOSUREGOODBY_TO_OAK_HALL'>287</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_1' name='page_1'></a>1</span></div>
+<p style='font-size:1.3em; text-align:center; margin-top:3em; margin-bottom:1em;'>DAVE PORTER AND THE RUNAWAYS</p>
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 0; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_I_DAVE_AND_HIS_CHUMS' id='CHAPTER_I_DAVE_AND_HIS_CHUMS'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+<h3>DAVE AND HIS CHUMS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;I say, Dave, here&#8217;s an odd piece of news.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;An odd piece of news, Roger? What
+about?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A wild man in the woods back of Oak Hall,&#8221;
+answered Roger Morr, who held a letter in his
+hand. &#8220;Queerest thing you ever heard of.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I should say it was, if it&#8217;s about a wild man,&#8221;
+returned Dave Porter. &#8220;Who sent that letter?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shadow Hamilton.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe it&#8217;s another one of Shadow&#8217;s innumerable
+yarns,&#8221; suggested Dave, with a faint smile.
+&#8220;If he can&#8217;t tell them by word of mouth, he writes
+them down.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What has Shadow got to say about the wild
+man?&#8221; asked Phil Lawrence, looking up from
+the suit-case he was packing. &#8220;Has he been trying
+to clean out Oak Hall, or anything like that?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_2' name='page_2'></a>2</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;No, not exactly,&#8221; returned Roger, turning
+back to the letter, which he had not yet finished.
+&#8220;He keeps in the woods, so Shadow says, and
+scares everybody who comes that way.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How does he scare them?&#8221; asked Dave, pausing
+in the act of stowing a suit of clothing in a
+trunk.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shadow writes that he and Lazy were out
+walking one day and the wild man came after
+them with a big club. He wears long hair and
+a long beard, and his clothes are in tatters.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What did they do?&#8221; questioned Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They ran back towards the school. The wild
+man followed &#8217;em as far as the bridge over the
+brook, and then jumped into the bushes and disappeared.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph!&#8221; muttered Phil. &#8220;Is that all?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, no! The day before that, Chip Macklin
+and two other of the smaller boys went out, along
+the river, and the wild man came after them and
+shoved Chip into the water. He yelled to them
+never to come near him again. The other fellows
+ran away, and as soon as Chip could get out of
+the water he went after &#8217;em. Then, three days
+later, Doctor Clay sent out Mr. Dale and Horsehair,
+the driver, to look into the matter, and the
+wild man met them at the bridge and threw mud
+balls at &#8217;em. One mud ball hit the teacher in the
+arm, and one struck Horsehair in the nose and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_3' name='page_3'></a>3</span>
+made it bleed. Horsehair was afraid to go on,
+because the wild man jumped around and shouted
+so furiously. Mr. Dale tried to catch him, but
+he ran away.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Poor chap! He must be crazy,&#8221; was Dave&#8217;s
+comment. &#8220;He ought to be taken care of by the
+authorities.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, but they can&#8217;t catch him,&#8221; continued
+Roger. &#8220;They have tried half a dozen ways, but
+he slips &#8217;em every time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who is he?&#8221; asked Dave, as he continued to
+pack his trunk.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nobody has the least idea, so Shadow
+writes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, that will give us something to do&mdash;when
+we get back to Oak Hall!&#8221; cried Phil. &#8220;We&#8217;ll
+organize a posse to round up the wild man!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think we&#8217;ll have plenty of other things to
+do when we get to school, Phil,&#8221; remarked Dave.
+&#8220;Just remember that we have lost a lot of time
+from our lessons, and if we want to make up
+what we have missed, and graduate from Oak
+Hall with honor, we&#8217;ve got to buckle down and
+study.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I know that,&#8221; answered Phil, and gave a
+little sigh. &#8220;Just the same, I&#8217;m going to have a
+try at the wild man&mdash;if he comes my way.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So am I,&#8221; cried Roger. &#8220;And Dave will try
+with us; won&#8217;t you, old man?&#8221; And Roger
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_4' name='page_4'></a>4</span>
+caught his chum affectionately by the shoulder.
+&#8220;You are the fellow to solve mysteries!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dave was about to answer when there came a
+knock on the bedroom door. He opened it to
+find himself confronted by a middle-aged lady,
+who was smiling but anxious.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How are you getting along, boys?&#8221; she
+asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;First-rate, Mrs. Wadsworth,&#8221; answered
+Roger. &#8220;We&#8217;ll soon be finished now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are the girls getting anxious?&#8221; questioned
+Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, what do you think?&#8221; burst out Phil.
+&#8220;We are going back to Oak Hall to capture a
+wild man who&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Phil!&#8221; burst out both Dave and Roger,
+and the other youth stopped short in confusion.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A wild man?&#8221; cried the lady of the house, in
+consternation. &#8220;Oh, Dave, I hope&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, don&#8217;t let him worry you, Mrs. Wadsworth,&#8221;
+responded Dave, quickly. &#8220;There is a
+wild man up there, but I don&#8217;t think he will bother
+us any, and we&#8217;ve got too much to do to hunt for
+him.&#8221; And the lad gave his chum a look that said
+as plainly as words: &#8220;What did you want to
+mention it for?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh&mdash;I&mdash;er&mdash;I was only fooling,&#8221; stammered
+Phil. &#8220;Of course, if there is a wild man he won&#8217;t
+come near us. Tell the girls we&#8217;ll be ready in five
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_5' name='page_5'></a>5</span>
+minutes&mdash;at least I will,&#8221; he added, and resumed
+his packing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can I do anything for you?&#8221; asked the lady.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You might try to find my striped cap,&#8221; answered
+Dave. &#8220;I can&#8217;t seem to locate it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is in the library&mdash;I saw it a while ago,
+Dave.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And my baseball bat&mdash;the new one with the
+black handle.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is in the back hall, in a corner. How
+about your books?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got all of them. Send Laura with the bat
+and cap, will you, please?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes;&#8221; and Mrs. Wadsworth hurried off,
+anxious to be of all the assistance possible.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, that was a bad break for me,&#8221; murmured
+Phil, as the door closed, and before Dave or
+Roger could speak. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t want to worry her,
+Dave. I&#8217;m sorry I mentioned the wild man.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And the man may be caught before we get
+back to Oak Hall,&#8221; said Roger. He crossed the
+room and peered into a closet. &#8220;Has anybody
+seen my baseball shoes?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You left those at the Hall, Roger,&#8221; answered
+Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did I? All right, then. I came away in such
+a hurry I can&#8217;t remember what I took and what I
+didn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess we&#8217;ve got about everything now,&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_6' name='page_6'></a>6</span>
+resumed Dave, looking around the bedroom.
+He glanced at his watch. &#8220;Ten minutes to twelve.
+We are to have lunch at a quarter past, and start
+at one, sharp.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Provided the auto is ready,&#8221; interposed Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It will be&mdash;trust my Uncle Dunston for that,&#8221;
+answered Dave. &#8220;My, but isn&#8217;t it jolly to think
+we are going back to school in the auto instead of
+by train!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, and to think that the girls and your uncle
+are going with us!&#8221; added Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dave, look out for Roger, he&#8217;s got his eye on
+Laura!&#8221; said Phil, slyly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, you give us a rest, Phil Lawrence!&#8221;
+burst out Roger, growing red. &#8220;I guess you&#8217;ve
+got an eye on her yourself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Poor me! Poor me!&#8221; murmured Phil, as if
+talking to himself. &#8220;Roger will talk to nobody
+but Laura, and Dave will see and hear and think
+of nobody but Jessie, and I&#8217;ll be left in the cold!
+Oh, what a cruel world this is! If only&mdash;wow!&#8221;
+and Phil&#8217;s pretended musings came to a sudden
+end, as Dave shied a pair of rolled-up socks at
+him and Roger followed with a pillow. In another
+instant a mimic battle was on, with pillows
+and various articles of clothing for ammunition.
+Then came another knock on the door and Laura
+Porter appeared, with a baseball bat in one hand
+and her brother&#8217;s cap in the other.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7' name='page_7'></a>7</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh dear me!&#8221; she cried, and then stopped
+short, for a red sweater, thrown by Roger at Phil,
+had missed its aim and landed on her head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon, Laura, really I do!&#8221;
+gasped Roger, as he sprang forward and took
+the sweater from its resting-place. &#8220;I&mdash;I didn&#8217;t
+mean that for you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Roger, of course you did!&#8221; cried Phil,
+with a twinkle in his eye. &#8220;That&#8217;s the way he
+salutes girls always, Laura.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is this the way you are packing up?&#8221; demanded
+Dave&#8217;s sister, with a little smile, while
+poor Roger grew redder than ever.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, we were only waiting for you to bring
+my things, Laura,&#8221; answered her brother, coolly.
+&#8220;We&#8217;ll be ready in three minutes and a half by
+the factory whistles.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, what is this I hear about a wild man?&#8221;
+continued Laura, as she sat down on a chair
+Roger shoved towards her. &#8220;You&#8217;ve made Mrs.
+Wadsworth and Jessie all excited over it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, it isn&#8217;t anything,&#8221; burst out Phil, quickly.
+&#8220;I made a mistake even to mention it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;She came down and told Jessie and me that
+she was afraid you&#8217;d have more trouble, when you
+got back to school. As if you haven&#8217;t had troubles
+enough already!&#8221; And Laura looked affectionately
+at her brother, and then at his chums.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, this won&#8217;t amount to anything, Laura,&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8' name='page_8'></a>8</span>
+said Dave. &#8220;So tell Mrs. Wadsworth and Jessie
+not to worry about it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But I want to know what it means?&#8221; demanded
+the sister; and in the end Dave and his
+chums had to relate what they knew about the
+wild man. As they finished the girl shook her
+head doubtfully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t like that a bit,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I am sure
+you&#8217;ll get mixed up with that wild man somehow.
+Why, he might attack you and try to kill
+you!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll be on our guard&mdash;when we go near the
+woods,&#8221; answered Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You had better not go alone,&#8221; insisted the
+girl.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We seldom travel alone,&#8221; said her brother.
+&#8220;Generally Roger, Phil, and I are together, and
+very often some of the other fellows are with us.
+But don&#8217;t you worry, Laura, and tell Jessie and
+her mother it will be all right.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And there is another thing to be careful
+about, Dave,&#8221; went on Laura, as she prepared to
+leave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Be careful of how you treat Nat Poole.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, what do you mean?&#8221; cried Dave, and
+then he added quickly, as he saw that his sister
+had something on her mind: &#8220;What has happened
+now?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9' name='page_9'></a>9</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know exactly, Dave. But I got word
+through Ben Basswood&#8217;s cousin that Nat had
+told Ben he wasn&#8217;t going to let you ride over
+him this term. I think Nat is jealous because
+you were so successful in that trip to Cave
+Island.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you learn of anything Nat intended to
+do?&#8221; questioned Roger, curiously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, excepting that he said he wasn&#8217;t going
+to play second fiddle to your crowd any longer.
+He tried to get into a quarrel with Ben, but Ben
+would have nothing to do with him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did Nat go back to the Hall when it
+opened?&#8221; asked Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, the same day Ben went back.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am not afraid of Nat Poole,&#8221; declared
+Dave, stoutly. &#8220;He is a bully, always was, and
+I suppose he always will be. I tried to do him a
+favor the last time I saw him&mdash;but he doesn&#8217;t
+seem to have appreciated it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Laura!&#8221; called a musical voice, from the
+stair landing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Coming, Jessie!&#8221; answered Laura. &#8220;Now
+you boys, hurry&mdash;lunch will be served in a few
+minutes;&#8221; and she left the room.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So Nat Poole wants to make more trouble,
+eh?&#8221; mused Dave, as he resumed packing.
+&#8220;What a chap he is! Why can&#8217;t he be decent and
+mind his own business?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10' name='page_10'></a>10</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Because he isn&#8217;t that breed, that&#8217;s why,&#8221; answered
+Phil. &#8220;He hates to see another fellow
+become popular. Dave, you take my advice and
+watch him, when we get back to school.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll do it,&#8221; answered Dave, thoughtfully.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_II_A_GLIMPSE_AT_THE_PAST' id='CHAPTER_II_A_GLIMPSE_AT_THE_PAST'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+<h3>A GLIMPSE AT THE PAST</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Everything ready?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, so far as I know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then we are off! Good-by, everybody!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-by! Take care of yourself, Dave!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will!&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a tooting of an automobile horn, a
+chorus of cries and cheers, a waving of caps, and
+then the big touring car that had been drawn up
+in front of the Wadsworth mansion rolled from
+the piazza steps through the spacious grounds;
+and Dave Porter and his chums were once more
+on their way to boarding school.</p>
+<p>To those who have read the previous volumes
+of this line of stories Dave Porter will need no
+special introduction. For the benefit of new readers
+allow me to state that Dave was a wideawake
+American lad, now well along in his school years.</p>
+<p>When a small child our hero had been found
+one day, walking along the railroad tracks near
+the town of Crumville. He could tell nothing
+about himself, and as nobody came to claim him,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span>
+he was taken to the local poorhouse, where he
+remained a number of years. Then he was bound
+out to a broken-down college professor named
+Caspar Potts, who was farming for his health.
+The professor did what he could for the lad, but
+soon got into difficulties with a mean money-lender
+named Aaron Poole, and would have lost his farm
+had it not been for something out of the ordinary
+happening.</p>
+<p>On the outskirts of the town lived a wealthy
+jewelry manufacturer, Oliver Wadsworth. Mr.
+Wadsworth had a daughter named Jessie, and
+one day, through an explosion of an automobile
+tank, the little miss was in danger of being burned
+to death, when Dave came to her assistance. This
+so pleased the Wadsworths that they came not
+only to the boy&#8217;s aid but also helped Caspar Potts.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The lad shall go to boarding school and get
+a good education,&#8221; said Oliver Wadsworth. And
+how Dave was sent off has already been related
+in the first book of this series, entitled &#8220;Dave
+Porter at Oak Hall.&#8221; At the school he made
+many warm friends, including Roger Morr, the
+son of a United States senator; Phil Lawrence,
+the offspring of a wealthy shipowner; Buster
+Beggs, who was fat as he was jolly, and Maurice,
+otherwise &#8220;Shadow&#8221; Hamilton, who would
+rather spin yarns than eat. He also made some
+enemies, not the least of whom were Gus Plum,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span>
+a great bully, and Nat Poole, son of the money-lender
+already mentioned. Plum had since reformed,
+but Nat was as overbearing and dictatorial
+as ever.</p>
+<p>The great cloud resting over Dave in those days
+was the question of his identity, and when some of
+his enemies spoke of him as &#8220;that poorhouse nobody&#8221;
+he resolved to find out who he really was.
+Getting a strange clew, he set forth on his travels,
+as described in &#8220;Dave Porter in the South Seas,&#8221;
+where he found his uncle, Dunston Porter. Then
+he came back to Oak Hall, as told of in &#8220;Dave
+Porter&#8217;s Return to School,&#8221; and next went to the
+Land of the Midnight Sun, as set forth in &#8220;Dave
+Porter in the Far North,&#8221; where he was gladdened
+by a long-hoped-for meeting with his father.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They can&#8217;t say I&#8217;m a poorhouse nobody now,&#8221;
+he told himself, and went back to Oak Hall once
+again, as set forth in &#8220;Dave Porter and His
+Classmates.&#8221; Here he made more friends than
+ever, but he likewise made enemies, the most bitter
+of the latter being one Link Merwell, the son
+of a ranch-owner of the West. Merwell did his
+best to get Dave into trouble, but in the end was
+exposed and had to leave the school.</p>
+<p>Vacation time was now at hand, and through
+Laura Porter, our hero&#8217;s newly-found sister,
+Dave and his chums were invited to visit some of
+Laura&#8217;s friends in the Far West. Laura Porter
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span>
+and Jessie Wadsworth went along; and what a
+grand time the young folks had can be realized by
+reading &#8220;Dave Porter at Star Ranch.&#8221; The
+boys went hunting and fishing, and learned to do
+some broncho-riding, and they likewise fell in
+with Link Merwell again and showed that bully
+up in his true colors.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Back to the grind now!&#8221; said Dave, after the
+vacation was over, and back he did go, to Oak
+Hall, as told of in &#8220;Dave Porter and His Rivals.&#8221;
+That term was a lively one, for some lads came
+there from another school, and they, led by Nat
+Poole, tried to run matters to suit themselves.
+But when the newcomers lost an important football
+contest, Oak Hall woke up to the true condition
+of affairs, and Dave and his chums quickly
+regained their places on the eleven, and then won
+a grand victory. During this time Link Merwell,
+in company with another bad boy named Nick
+Jasniff, became a student at Rockville Military
+Academy, a rival institution of learning. Both
+bullies did their best to make trouble for our
+hero, but, as before, he exposed them, and this
+time they had to flee to escape arrest.</p>
+<p>When the Christmas holidays came around
+Dave went back to Crumville, where he and his
+family and old Caspar Potts now lived with the
+Wadsworths. At that time Mr. Wadsworth had
+at his jewelry works some rare diamonds, waiting
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span>
+to be reset. Directly after Christmas came a
+startling robbery. The diamonds were gone, and
+it was learned by Dave that if they were not recovered,
+not only would Mr. Wadsworth be
+ruined, but that his own father and his uncle
+would be seriously crippled financially, as they had
+gone on a bond for the return of the gems.</p>
+<p>At first, clews to the robbers were scarce, but
+soon Dave made a queer discovery, and followed
+this up by another, as set forth in the volume preceding
+this, entitled, &#8220;Dave Porter on Cave
+Island.&#8221; He and his chums became satisfied that
+Link Merwell and Nick Jasniff had committed
+the theft, and they followed the evil pair, first to
+Florida and then to Cave Island, so named because
+of the numerous caverns it contained. The
+evil-doers were caught and the diamonds recovered,
+but, at the last moment, Link Merwell managed
+to escape.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let him go,&#8221; said Dave. &#8220;He acts as if he
+wanted to turn over a new leaf.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am glad it wasn&#8217;t Jasniff,&#8221; returned Phil.
+&#8220;He is the worse of the pair.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Right you are,&#8221; agreed Roger.</p>
+<p>The senator&#8217;s son and Phil had accompanied
+Dave to Crumville, and all had received a warm
+reception at the hands of those who were waiting
+for them. Mr. Wadsworth was delighted to get
+back the jewels, and thanked Dave over and over
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span>
+again for what he had done. Dave&#8217;s father and
+his uncle were also happy, and as for Laura, she
+had to hug her brother over and over again. Jessie
+wanted to hug him, too, but her maidenly
+modesty prevented this, but she gave Dave a look
+and a hand squeeze that meant a good deal, for
+our hero was her hero, too, and always had been.</p>
+<p>The boys knew they had to go back to Oak
+Hall, but the older folks had insisted that they
+rest up a bit, after their traveling. So they
+&#8220;rested&#8221; by going skating and sleigh-riding for
+the last time that season, taking the girls along.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got an idea,&#8221; said Dave&#8217;s uncle, one
+morning, after the snow had cleared away. &#8220;The
+roads are so fine just now, what is to prevent my
+taking you to Oak Hall in the touring car? We
+can make it in a day, I think.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Grand!&#8221; shouted Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just the thing!&#8221; added Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Couldn&#8217;t be better,&#8221; supplemented Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You can ship your baggage on by express,&#8221;
+went on Dunston Porter, &#8220;and then we&#8217;ll have
+room enough to take Laura and Jessie, if they
+want to go along.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fine!&#8221; burst out Roger, so quickly that it
+made Phil wink, and then the senator&#8217;s son grew
+red. &#8220;Isn&#8217;t it all right?&#8221; he demanded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure thing,&#8221; responded the shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>The matter was talked over; and that night it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span>
+was arranged that the two girls should go along
+on the trip, returning later to Crumville with Mr.
+Porter. Not to tire Laura and Jessie too much,
+it was decided to leave after lunch the next day,
+stopping over night at Ryeport, and finishing the
+trip to Oak Hall the morning following.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If only the good weather holds out,&#8221; said
+Roger, wistfully. And then he added suddenly:
+&#8220;Who is going to sit in front with your uncle,
+Dave?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, you are, of course,&#8221; broke in Phil, with
+a grin.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why&mdash;er&mdash;I&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; stammered the senator&#8217;s
+son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now, Phil, you know you said you&#8217;d like that
+seat,&#8221; broke in Dave. &#8220;He&#8217;s only fooling you,
+Roger.&#8221; And then Roger looked quite satisfied,
+for, it might as well be confessed, Roger and
+Laura were very friendly and liked greatly to be
+in each other&#8217;s company. The senator&#8217;s son had
+a manly regard for Dave&#8217;s sister&mdash;the same kind
+of a feeling that our hero had for dear little
+Jessie.</p>
+<p>The trunks and suit-cases had been shipped off,
+and the big six-cylinder car&mdash;a new machine belonging
+to the Porters&mdash;had been brought around,
+with Dunston Porter at the wheel, for the old
+hunter and traveler had taken a strong liking to
+autoing. The girls and boys had piled in, after
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span>
+much handshaking and some kisses, and now the
+car was rolling out of the grounds, leaving Mr.
+and Mrs. Wadsworth, Dave&#8217;s father, and old
+Caspar Potts standing on the piazza, waving the
+travelers adieu.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Take care of yourself, my boy!&#8221; shouted Mr.
+Porter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will, Dad!&#8221; called back Dave. &#8220;You take
+it easy till I get back,&#8221; he added, for he knew that
+his parent had been working hard of late.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hate to see Dave go&mdash;he is so full of life and
+good cheer,&#8221; murmured Mrs. Wadsworth, with a
+sigh.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Best lad in the world,&#8221; added her husband.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, yes! The very best!&#8221; came in a quavering
+voice from old Caspar Potts, and the tears
+stood in his glistening eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I trust he comes through this year at Oak
+Hall all right,&#8221; resumed Mr. Porter, as, the automobile
+having disappeared, those left behind reentered
+the house. &#8220;He wishes to graduate, you
+know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you think he&#8217;ll come through?&#8221; asked
+the manufacturer, quickly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not sure about it. He has lost so much
+time&mdash;on that trip he and the others took&mdash;you
+know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is true.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Davy will come through, never fear!&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span>
+cried Caspar Potts. &#8220;I know the lad. If he
+makes up his mind&mdash;well, it&#8217;s as good as done,&#8221;
+and he nodded his whitened head several times.
+To the old college professor who knew him so
+well, there was no youth quite so clever and manly
+as Dave Porter.</p>
+<p>In the meantime the big touring car was leaving
+Crumville rapidly behind. On the front seat, beside
+Mr. Porter, sat Phil, waving an Oak Hall
+banner and cracking all kinds of jokes. In the
+back were the two girls with Dave and Roger.
+All were well bundled up, for the air, though clear,
+was still cold.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here is where we make fifty miles an hour!&#8221;
+cried the shipowner&#8217;s son, gayly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Phil!&#8221; burst out Laura. &#8220;Fifty miles
+an hour! Uncle Dunston, don&#8217;t you dare&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Phil is fooling,&#8221; interrupted her uncle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s it&mdash;I made a mistake&mdash;we are to go at
+sixty miles an hour, just as soon as we pass the
+next chicken coop. We won&#8217;t dare do it before,
+for fear of blowing the coop over. We&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why not make it seventy-five miles while you
+are at it,&#8221; broke in Dave. &#8220;Nothing like going
+the limit.&#8221; And at this there was a general laugh.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is a bad turn ahead,&#8221; said Dunston
+Porter, a minute later. &#8220;They have torn up part
+of the road around the hill. We&#8217;ll have to take it
+pretty slowly.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span></p>
+<p>The touring car crept up the hill, past several
+heaps of dirt, and then started to come down on
+the other side. Here there was a sharp curve,
+with heavy bushes on both sides. Mr. Porter
+blew the horn loud and long, to warn anybody
+ahead that he was coming.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look out!&#8221; yelled Phil, suddenly. But the
+warning was not necessary, for Dunston Porter
+saw the danger and so did the others. A horse
+and buggy were just ahead on the torn-up highway,
+going in the same direction as themselves. The
+horse was prancing and rearing and the driver
+was sawing at the lines in an effort to quiet the
+steed. It looked as if there might be a collision.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_III_A_TALK_OF_THE_FUTURE' id='CHAPTER_III_A_TALK_OF_THE_FUTURE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+<h3>A TALK OF THE FUTURE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The girls screamed and the boys uttered various
+cries and words of advice. Dave leaned forward,
+to jam on the hand-brake, but his uncle
+was ahead of him in the action. The foot-brake
+was already down, and from the rear wheels came
+a shrill squeaking, as the bands gripped the hubs.
+But the hill was a steep one and the big touring
+car, well laden, continued to move downward,
+although but slowly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Keep over! Keep over to the right!&#8221; yelled
+Dunston Porter, to the driver of the buggy. But
+the man was fully as excited as his horse, and he
+continued to saw on the reins, until the turnout
+occupied the very center of the narrow and
+torn-up highway.</p>
+<p>It was a time of peril, and a man less used to
+critical moments than Dunston Porter might have
+lost his head completely. But this old traveler
+and hunter, who had faced grizzly bears in the
+West and lions in Africa, managed to keep cool.
+He saw a chance to pass on the right of the turnout
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span>
+ahead, and like a flash he let go on the two
+brakes and turned on a little power. Forward
+bounded the big car, the right wheels on the very
+edge of a water-gully. The left mud-guards
+scraped the buggy, and the man driving it uttered
+a yell of fright. Then the touring car went on, to
+come to a halt at the bottom of the hill, a short
+distance away.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello!&#8221; exclaimed Dave, as he looked back
+at the turnout that had caused the trouble. &#8220;It&#8217;s
+Mr. Poole!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean Nat&#8217;s father?&#8221; queried Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hi, you! What do you mean by running into
+me?&#8221; stormed the money-lender, savagely, as
+he presently managed to get his steed under control
+and came down beside the touring car.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean by blocking the road, Mr.
+Poole?&#8221; returned Dunston Porter, coldly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t block the road!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You certainly did. If we had run into you,
+it would have been your fault.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nonsense! You passed me on the wrong
+side.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because you didn&#8217;t give me room to pass on
+the other side.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And your horn scared my horse.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see how that is my fault. Your horse
+ought to be used to auto-horns by this time.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve scraped all the paint off my carriage,
+and I had it painted only last week,&#8221; went on
+the money-lender, warming up. &#8220;It&#8217;s an outrage
+how you auto fellows think you own the whole
+road!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I won&#8217;t discuss the matter now, Mr. Poole,&#8221;
+answered Dunston Porter, stiffly. &#8220;I think it was
+your fault entirely. But if you think otherwise,
+come and see me when I get back from this trip,
+which will be in four days.&#8221; And without waiting
+for more words, Dave&#8217;s uncle started up the
+touring car, and Aaron Poole was soon left far
+behind.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If he isn&#8217;t a peach!&#8221; murmured Roger, slangily.
+&#8220;It&#8217;s easy to see where Nat gets his meanness
+from. He is simply a chip off the old block.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s a pretty big chip,&#8221; returned Phil, dryly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see how he can blame us,&#8221; said Dave.
+&#8220;We simply couldn&#8217;t pass him on the left. If we
+had tried, we&#8217;d have gone in the ditch sure. And
+the scraping we did to his buggy amounts to next
+to nothing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am not afraid of what he&#8217;ll do,&#8221; said Dunston
+Porter. &#8220;A couple of dollars will fix up
+those scratches, and if he is so close-fisted I&#8217;ll foot
+the bill. But I&#8217;ll give him a piece of my mind for
+blocking the road.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But his horse was frightened, Uncle Dunston,&#8221;
+said Laura.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;A little, yes, but if Poole hadn&#8217;t got scared
+himself he might have drawn closer to the side of
+the road. I think he was more frightened than
+the horse.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He certainly was,&#8221; declared Phil. &#8220;When
+we scraped the buggy his face got as white as
+chalk, and he almost dropped the lines.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;ll hate all of us worse than ever for this,&#8221;
+was Dave&#8217;s comment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am not afraid of him,&#8221; answered the uncle.</p>
+<p>On and on sped the big touring car, and soon
+the stirring incident on the road was, for the time
+being, forgotten. Crumville had been left far behind,
+and now they passed through one pretty
+village after another. On the broad, level
+stretches Dunston Porter allowed the boys to
+&#8220;spell&#8221; him at the wheel, for each knew how to
+run an automobile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Twenty miles more to Ryeport!&#8221; cried Dave,
+as they came to a crossroads and read a signboard.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And it&#8217;s just half-past five,&#8221; added the senator&#8217;s
+son, consulting his watch. &#8220;We&#8217;ll get there
+in plenty of time to wash up and have a fine
+dinner.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And, say, maybe we won&#8217;t do a thing to that
+table!&#8221; murmured Phil, smacking his lips.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, you boys are always hungry,&#8221; was Jessie&#8217;s
+comment.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, you know, we&#8217;ve got to grow,&#8221; answered
+Phil, with a grin.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think I&#8217;ll enjoy eating after such a long
+ride,&#8221; said Laura. &#8220;The fresh air certainly does
+give one an appetite.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think I&#8217;ll order bread and milk for all
+hands,&#8221; remarked Dunston Porter, with a sly
+smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bread and milk!&#8221; murmured Jessie, in dismay.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure. It&#8217;s famous for your complexion.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A juicy steak for mine!&#8221; cried Dave.
+&#8220;Steak, and vegetables, and salad, and pudding or
+pie.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I guess that will do for me, too,&#8221; said
+his uncle, simply. &#8220;You see, I suppose I&#8217;ll have to
+eat to keep you company,&#8221; and he smiled again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Uncle Dunston, what a tease you are!&#8221; murmured
+Laura. &#8220;Your appetite is just as good as
+that of any of the boys.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dave was at the wheel, and he sent the touring
+car along the smooth highway at a speed of
+twenty miles an hour. He would have liked to
+drive faster, but his uncle would not permit this.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The law says twenty miles an hour, and I believe
+in obeying the law,&#8221; said Dunston Porter.
+&#8220;Besides, you can never tell what may happen,
+and it is best to have your car under control.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The truth of the latter remark was demonstrated
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span>
+less than five minutes later, when they
+came to another crossroads. Without warning of
+any kind, a racing car came rushing swiftly from
+one direction and a coach from the other. Dave
+could not cross ahead of the racing car, and the
+approach of the coach from the opposite direction
+cut him off from turning with the car. So
+all that was left to do was to jam on both brakes,
+which he did, and then, as the racing car shot past,
+he released the wheels and went on, just ahead
+of the coach. But it was a narrow escape all
+around, and the girls and Roger leaped to their
+feet in alarm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Phew! see them streak along!&#8221; was Phil&#8217;s
+comment, gazing after the racing car, which was
+fast disappearing in a cloud of dust.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They ought to be arrested!&#8221; was Laura&#8217;s
+comment. &#8220;Why, we might have been smashed
+up!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good work, Davy!&#8221; cried Dunston Porter.
+&#8220;You did just the right thing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Even if that coach driver is shaking his fist
+at us, eh?&#8221; answered Dave, and he bobbed his
+head in the direction of the coach, which had
+hauled up but was now going on.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you had been going a little faster it would
+have been all up with us,&#8221; said Phil, with a grave
+shake of his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let me take the wheel now,&#8221; said Dunston
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span>
+Porter, quietly, and Dave slid out of the driving-seat
+willingly enough, for the excitement had left
+him somewhat limp.</p>
+<p>Half-past six found them in Ryeport, and a
+few minutes later they rolled up to the National
+Hotel, and the girls and boys got out, while Mr.
+Porter took the car around to the garage. They
+had sent word ahead for rooms, and all soon felt
+at home. The girls had a fine apartment on the
+second floor, front, with Dunston Porter next to
+them, and the three boys in a big room across the
+hallway.</p>
+<p>When the young people assembled in the dining-room,
+after brushing and washing up, a surprise
+awaited them. They had a table to themselves,
+ordered by Dunston Porter, and decorated with a
+big bouquet of roses and carnations. A full course
+dinner was served.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, this is lovely!&#8221; cried Jessie, as she caught
+sight of the flowers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just grand, Uncle Dunston!&#8221; added Laura.
+And then she added, in a lower voice: &#8220;If there
+wasn&#8217;t such a crowd, I&#8217;d give you a big hug for
+this!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And so would I,&#8221; added Jessie.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, that&#8217;s one you owe me, girls, remember
+that,&#8221; answered the old hunter and
+traveler.</p>
+<p>They spent over an hour at the table, enjoying
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span>
+the bountiful spread provided, and telling stories
+and jokes. The boys were in their element, and
+kept the girls laughing almost constantly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll be back to the grind day after to-morrow,
+so we had better make the best of it,&#8221;
+was the way Dave expressed himself.</p>
+<p>After the meal, Dunston Porter went out to
+give directions concerning the touring car, and
+Phil accompanied him. This left our hero and
+Roger alone with the two girls. They sought out
+the hotel parlor, which they found deserted, and
+Dave and Jessie walked to the far end, where
+there was an alcove, while Roger and Laura went
+to the piano.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dave, won&#8217;t it be hard work to go back to the
+grind, as you call it?&#8221; questioned Jessie, as both
+stood looking out of the window.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In a way, yes, but it&#8217;s what a fellow has got
+to expect, Jessie,&#8221; he returned. &#8220;A chap can&#8217;t
+get an education without working for it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I trust you pass with high honors,&#8221; the girl
+went on, with a hopeful look into his face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll try my best. Of course, I&#8217;ve lost some
+time&mdash;going to Cave Island and all that. Maybe
+I&#8217;ll flunk.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Dave, that would be&mdash;be&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; Jessie
+could not go on.</p>
+<p>&#8220;As soon as I get back I&#8217;m going to buckle
+down, and get to be a regular greasy grind, as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span>
+they call &#8217;em. I&#8217;ve made up my mind to one
+thing I&#8217;m afraid the others won&#8217;t like.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going to cut the baseball nine, if I can.
+It takes too much time from our studies.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Won&#8217;t that be easy?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. I made quite a record, you
+know. Maybe the crowd will insist on it that I
+play. Of course, I don&#8217;t want to see Oak Hall
+lose any games. But I guess they&#8217;ll have players
+enough&mdash;with all the new students coming
+in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And if you do graduate, Dave, what then?&#8221;
+asked Jessie, after a pause. This question had
+been on her mind a long time, but she had hesitated
+about asking it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;To tell the honest truth, Jessie, I don&#8217;t know,&#8221;
+answered Dave, very slowly. &#8220;I&#8217;ve thought and
+thought, but I can&#8217;t seem to hit the right thing.
+Your father and Professor Potts seem to think
+I ought to go to college, and I rather incline that
+way myself. But then I think of going to some
+technical institution, and of taking up civil engineering,
+or mining, or something like that. Uncle
+Dunston knew a young fellow who became a civil
+engineer and went to South America and laid out
+a railroad across the Andes Mountains, and he
+knew another young fellow who took up mining
+and made a big thing of a mine in Montana. That
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span>
+sort of thing appeals to me, and it appeals to
+Dad, too.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But it would take you so far from home,
+Dave!&#8221; and Jessie caught hold of his arm as she
+spoke, as if afraid he was going to leave that
+minute.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know it, but&mdash;er&mdash;but&mdash;would you care,
+Jessie?&#8221; he stammered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Care? Of course, I&#8217;d care!&#8221; she replied, and
+suddenly began to blush. &#8220;We&#8217;d all care.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But would you care very much?&#8221; he insisted,
+lowering his voice. &#8220;Because, if you would, I&#8217;d
+tell you something.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What would you tell me?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The young fellow who went to South America
+as a civil engineer took his wife with him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Dave!&#8221; and for the moment Jessie
+turned her head away.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If I went so far off, I&#8217;d want somebody with
+me, Jessie. A fellow would be awfully lonely
+otherwise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&mdash;I suppose that would be so.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you thought enough of a fellow, would you
+go to South America, or Montana, or Africa with
+him?&#8221; And Dave looked Jessie full in the face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d go to the end of the world with him,&#8221; she
+answered, with sudden boldness.</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Porter and Phil came back, and the
+conversation became general.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IV_MR_JOB_HASKERSS_DOINGS' id='CHAPTER_IV_MR_JOB_HASKERSS_DOINGS'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+<h3>MR. JOB HASKERS&#8217;S DOINGS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;And now for Oak Hall!&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was Dave who uttered the words, the next
+morning, after a good night&#8217;s rest and an early
+breakfast. The big touring car had been brought
+around by Dunston Porter, and the young folks
+had climbed in and stowed away the limited baggage
+they carried. All felt in excellent spirits,
+and Dave was particularly gay. What Jessie had
+said the evening before, and the way she had said
+it, still hung in his mind. She was a splendid girl,
+and if it was in him to do it, he was going to make
+himself worthy of her. He was still young, so
+he did not dwell long over these things, but his
+regard for her was entirely proper, and likely to
+make him do his best in his endeavors.</p>
+<p>Phil had asked for permission to run the car
+for a while and took the wheel as soon as Ryeport
+was left behind. The shipowner&#8217;s son knew
+how to handle an automobile almost as well as
+any of them, but he had one fault, which was, that
+he did not steer out of the way of sharp stones
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span>
+and like things calculated to bring on punctures
+and blow-outs.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My, what a glorious morning!&#8221; exclaimed
+Laura, as they bowled along over the smooth
+roads.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Couldn&#8217;t be better,&#8221; answered Roger.
+&#8220;Wish we were going on all day!&#8221; he added.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So do I,&#8221; added Dave. They expected to
+reach Oakdale by noon, get dinner there, and
+then run up to the school.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not too fast, Phil,&#8221; warned Mr. Porter, as
+the shipowner&#8217;s son &#8220;let her out a bit,&#8221; as he expressed
+it. &#8220;You don&#8217;t know what sort of a
+road you&#8217;ve got beyond the turn.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll soon be coming to some roads we
+know,&#8221; answered Phil. &#8220;Those we used to travel
+on our bicycles.&#8221;</p>
+<p>They passed through several towns and villages.
+Then they reached a crossroads, and here
+some men and a steam roller were at work, and
+the road was closed. One of the workmen motioned
+for them to take the road on the left.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Must be a road around,&#8221; said Dunston Porter.
+&#8220;It doesn&#8217;t look very good, but you can try
+it. Shall I take the wheel?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I can run the car easily enough,&#8221; answered
+Phil.</p>
+<p>For half a mile they went on without trouble,
+through a rolling country where the scenery was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span>
+very fine. Then they reached a point where the
+road was full of loose stones.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Be careful!&#8221; cried Mr. Porter.</p>
+<p>They rolled on, past a pretty farmhouse and
+some barns. They were just on the point of making
+another turn when there came a sudden bang!
+from under the car, and the turnout swayed to one
+side of the road. Phil threw out the clutch and
+put on the brakes, and they came to a standstill.
+Then the driver shut off the engine.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is the matter?&#8221; queried Jessie.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A blow-out, I guess,&#8221; answered Dave.
+&#8220;We&#8217;ll soon see.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dunston Porter and the boys got down to the
+ground and made an examination. The shoe of
+the rear left wheel had been badly cut by the
+sharp stones and the inner tube had been blown out
+through the cut.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll have to put on one of the other shoes,&#8221;
+said Mr. Porter. They carried two with them,
+besides half a dozen inner tubes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, here is where we get to work!&#8221;
+cried Dave. &#8220;Somebody time us, please,&#8221; and he
+started in by getting off his coat and cuffs and donning
+a working jumper. His uncle quickly followed
+suit, while Phil and Roger got out
+the lifting-jack and some tools.</p>
+<p>The girls stood watching the proceedings for
+a while and then strolled back towards the farmhouse.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span>
+The boys and Mr. Porter became so engrossed
+in putting on a new inner tube and a shoe
+that they did not notice their absence. The new
+shoe fitted the rim of the wheel rather tightly
+and they had all they could do to get it into
+place.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Phew! this is work and no mistake!&#8221; murmured
+Roger. &#8220;I wonder why they can&#8217;t get
+tires that won&#8217;t blow out or go down.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe some day they will have them,&#8221; answered
+Dunston Porter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon this is all my fault,&#8221; put in Phil,
+ruefully. &#8220;I must have gone over some extra
+sharp stone, and it cut like a knife.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, such accidents are liable to happen to
+anybody,&#8221; answered Dave. He looked at his
+watch. &#8220;Twenty-five minutes, and we haven&#8217;t
+blown it up yet! No record job this time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank fortune we&#8217;ve got a patent pump to do
+the pumping for us,&#8221; remarked his uncle. Pumping
+tires by hand he found a very disagreeable
+task.</p>
+<p>At last the shoe and tube were in place and
+the pump was set in motion. Dave watched the
+gauge, and when it was high enough he shut
+off the air. The tools were put away, and they
+were ready to go on again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The girls went back to that farmhouse,&#8221; said
+the senator&#8217;s son, pointing to a small cottage.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us run back and pick them up, and wash our
+hands at the well.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Once in front of the house, Dunston Porter,
+who was at the wheel, sounded the horn. At the
+same time the boys made for the well, which
+stood between the house and one of the barns.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe the girls went inside,&#8221; remarked Dave,
+as he looked in vain for them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Must be somewhere around,&#8221; returned Phil.</p>
+<p>All washed up, using soap and towels carried
+in the car. Then Dave went to the door of the
+farmhouse and knocked. In answer to the summons
+Laura appeared.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Dave, come in!&#8221; she cried. &#8220;I want
+you to meet the lady here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Wondering what his sister wanted, our hero
+stepped into the sitting-room, which was small and
+plainly but neatly furnished. In a rocking-chair
+sat an elderly woman, pale and careworn.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mrs. Breen, this is my brother,&#8221; said Laura.
+&#8220;And these are his school chums,&#8221; she added,
+nodding towards Phil and Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How do you do, boys?&#8221; said the woman, in a
+thin, trembling voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We just told her we were bound for Oak
+Hall,&#8221; said Jessie, who was also present. &#8220;And
+she says she knows somebody there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;She knows Mr. Job Haskers,&#8221; finished Laura.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Haskers!&#8221; repeated Dave, mentioning
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span>
+the name of one of the teachers&mdash;a dictatorial individual
+nobody liked, and who was allowed to
+keep his position mainly because of his abilities as
+an instructor. The chums had had more than one
+dispute with Job Haskers, and all wished that he
+would leave the school.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, yes, I know him,&#8221; answered Mrs. Breen,
+nodding her head gravely and thoughtfully. &#8220;He
+is a great scholar&mdash;a very great scholar,&#8221; and she
+nodded again. She was not well and her mind
+did not appear to be overly bright. She lived
+alone in the cottage, a neighboring farmer taking
+care of her few acres of ground for her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dave, come here,&#8221; whispered Laura, and led
+her brother to a corner of the room. &#8220;Mrs.
+Breen tells me that Mr. Haskers owes her money&mdash;that
+he used to board with her and that he borrowed
+some&mdash;and she says he writes that he can&#8217;t
+pay her because he gets so little salary, and
+that sometimes he has to wait a long while himself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How much is it?&#8221; asked Dave, with interest.
+He remembered how close-fisted Job Haskers
+had been on more than one occasion.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nearly two hundred dollars, so she says.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He ought to be able to pay that, Laura. I
+think he gets a fair salary&mdash;in fact, I am sure of
+it&mdash;and I am also pretty sure that Doctor Clay
+doesn&#8217;t keep him waiting for his money.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;It is too bad! She looks so helpless and so
+much in need,&#8221; murmured the girl.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll find out about this,&#8221; answered Dave.</p>
+<p>He sat down, as did the others, and soon had
+the elderly lady telling her story in detail. It was
+not very long. Job Haskers had boarded with
+her one summer, just before obtaining his position
+at Oak Hall, and he owed her sixty dollars
+for this. During the time he had spent with her
+he had spoken of a school-book he was going to
+publish that would bring him in much money, and
+she had loaned him a hundred and twenty-five
+dollars for this. But she had never seen the
+school-book, nor had he ever paid back a cent.
+His plea, when she had written to him, had been
+that his pay was poor and that he had to wait
+a long time to get money, and that his publishers
+had not yet gotten around to selling his
+book.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I never heard of any book he got out,&#8221; said
+Roger. &#8220;And I think I would hear if there was
+such a book.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s so,&#8221; added Phil. &#8220;Old Haskers
+would be so proud of it he would want everybody
+to know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is certainly a shame he doesn&#8217;t pay this lady,
+if he has the money,&#8221; was Dunston Porter&#8217;s comment.
+&#8220;Did he give you a note?&#8221; he asked of
+Mrs. Breen.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;He wrote out some kind of a paper and was
+going to give it to me. But I never got it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s a swindler, that&#8217;s what he is!&#8221; murmured
+Phil, wrathfully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It looks that way,&#8221; answered Dave, in an
+equally low tone.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He knows this lady is next to helpless and he
+intends to do her out of the money!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He ought to be sued,&#8221; exclaimed Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have no note, or other writing about
+the money?&#8221; questioned Mr. Porter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have his letters,&#8221; answered the elderly lady.
+&#8220;They are in the bureau yonder.&#8221; And she
+pointed to an ancient chest of drawers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shall I get them?&#8221; asked Jessie, for she saw
+that it was a task for the old lady to move around.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you will, my dear. I am so stiff it is hard
+to get up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Both girls went to the chest of drawers and
+brought out a small box of letters. Mrs. Breen
+put on her glasses and fumbled them over and
+brought forth three communications which were,
+as the boys recognized, in Job Haskers&#8217;s well-known
+jerky handwriting. She passed them over
+to be read, and all present perused them with
+interest.</p>
+<p>The contents, however, were disappointing,
+especially to the boys and Dunston Porter, who
+had hoped to find something by which legally to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span>
+hold the school-teacher. Not once did Job Haskers
+mention that he owed Mrs. Breen any money.
+He simply stated that he regretted he could do
+nothing for her, that times were hard, and that
+his income was limited and hard to get. He said
+as little as possible, and the tone of the communications
+showed that he hoped he would hear no
+more from the old lady who had done what she
+could to aid him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think this is the limit!&#8221; said Dave to his
+uncle. &#8220;Don&#8217;t you think he ought to be sued?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know about suing him, Dave; but I
+think this ought to be put in a lawyer&#8217;s hands.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He makes money enough to pay this lady,&#8221;
+said Phil. &#8220;Say, I&#8217;ve a good mind to give him
+a piece of my mind!&#8221; he added, hotly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll look into this when I come back this way,&#8221;
+said Dunston Porter, after a little more talk.
+&#8220;Perhaps I can get one of our lawyers to prod
+this Haskers a little, and also state the case to
+Doctor Clay.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, will you do that, Uncle Dunston?&#8221; cried
+Laura, brightening, for she, as well as all of the
+others, felt sorry for Mrs. Breen, who seemed so
+poor, old, and lonesome.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I&#8217;ll do it. And now we had better be
+on our way,&mdash;if we want to reach Oakdale by
+noon,&#8221; went on Mr. Porter.</p>
+<p>The boys went out, followed by Jessie. Laura
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span>
+lingered, to whisper something in her uncle&#8217;s ear.
+Dunston Porter nodded, and then Laura joined
+the others.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mrs. Breen, I will be back in a day or two,
+to see you about this money affair,&#8221; said Mr.
+Porter, when he and the old lady were alone.
+&#8220;In the meantime, as you were so kind as to take
+the young ladies in while we were mending our
+machine, allow me to make you a little present,&#8221;
+and as he finished he placed a five-dollar bill in
+her lap.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; she cried, taking up the banknote.
+&#8220;Why, it&#8217;s five dollars! I&mdash;I can&#8217;t really take all
+that money!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, yes, you can,&#8221; said Mr. Porter, smiling.
+&#8220;Use it as you see fit, and remember that I&#8217;ll be
+back, and we&#8217;ll do what we can to get that money
+from Mr. Haskers.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are very, very kind!&#8221; murmured the old
+lady, and tears stood in her eyes. The past winter
+had been a severe one for her, and she had had a
+hard struggle to get along.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-by!&#8221; shouted the girls and boys to her,
+and she waved her hand to them. Then the
+automobile started off once more, in the direction
+of Oakdale.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_V_AT_OAK_HALL_ONCE_MORE' id='CHAPTER_V_AT_OAK_HALL_ONCE_MORE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+<h3>AT OAK HALL ONCE MORE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Hurrah! here we are at Oakdale at
+last!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Old town looks natural, doesn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So it does, Roger. See any of the fellows?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not yet, Dave. But we are sure to meet
+somebody, even if it is a school-day,&#8221; went on the
+senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Uncle Dunston, let me take the auto around
+to the hotel,&#8221; said our hero. &#8220;I know the streets
+better than you do. We have to make several
+turns.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, Dave,&#8221; was the ready answer, and
+Dunston Porter arose and allowed his nephew
+to crowd into the driver&#8217;s seat.</p>
+<p>The run to the town in the vicinity of which
+Oak Hall was located had been made without
+further incident. On the way the party had talked
+over Mrs. Breen&#8217;s affairs, and Dunston Porter
+had promised to take the matter up, through his
+lawyer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think it best that our names don&#8217;t appear
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span>
+in the case,&#8221; said he. &#8220;Otherwise, Mr. Haskers
+might not treat you so well during the term.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He never treats us well, anyway,&#8221; grumbled
+Phil. &#8220;But you are right, don&#8217;t mention our
+names.&#8221;</p>
+<p>On this late winter day the town looked rather
+dreary, but the young folks were in high spirits,
+and Dave, with a grand flourish, ran the car up
+to one of the best hotels the place afforded. As
+before, word had been sent ahead that they were
+coming, and the host of the resort came out to
+meet them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll have dinner ready inside of quarter of
+an hour,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Come in and make yourselves
+at home.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The repast was fully as good as the dinner
+served at Ryeport, and everybody enjoyed it
+greatly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And now for the Hall!&#8221; cried Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Glad to leave us?&#8221; asked Jessie, half-reproachfully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You know better than to ask such a question,&#8221;
+he replied. &#8220;But if we have got to get
+back to the grind, why, we might as well do it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;m a bit anxious to see how the old
+place looks,&#8221; added the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dave, you can run the car to the Hall, if
+you wish,&#8221; said Mr. Porter, feeling sure the youth
+would like to do that very thing.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;All right.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The touring automobile was brought around,
+and they were just getting in when there came a
+sudden hail from across the way.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello, there, everybody!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s Dave Porter, and Roger, and Phil!&#8221;
+said somebody else.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, how are you, Shadow!&#8221; cried our hero.
+&#8220;And how are you, Buster?&#8221; he added, as
+Maurice Hamilton and Buster Beggs came across
+the road to greet them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fine!&#8221; puffed Buster, who was very fat and
+jolly. &#8220;Only Shadow has been walking the feet
+off of me!&#8221; And then the stout youth shook
+hands all around.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now, just to hear that!&#8221; cried Shadow, as he,
+too, shook hands. &#8220;Why, all we did was to walk
+from the Hall to here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And up one street and down another for half
+an hour,&#8221; burst in Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, that puts me in mind of a story!&#8221; cried
+Shadow, who was noted for his yarn-spinning
+weakness. &#8220;Once two men started to walk&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Stow it!&#8221; came from three of the other lads
+in concert.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s too early yet to tell stories, Shadow,&#8221;
+said Dave, with a smile. &#8220;You can tell them to-night.
+Tell us now, is there anything new at the
+Hall?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;There sure is.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What?&#8221; asked Phil and Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The wild man.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, has he turned up again?&#8221; asked the girls,
+with interest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Twice&mdash;yesterday morning and this morning,&#8221;
+said Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He didn&#8217;t turn up at all, Buster,&#8221; interposed
+Shadow. &#8220;When you start to tell a story, why
+don&#8217;t you tell it straight?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, you tell it,&#8221; grumbled the fat boy.
+&#8220;You have that sort of thing down to a science.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;There isn&#8217;t very much to tell,&#8221; went on
+Shadow Hamilton. &#8220;He left his mark, that&#8217;s
+all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Left his mark?&#8221; queried Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s it&mdash;wide, blue marks. He must have
+about a ton of blue chalk.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, Shadow, you are talking in riddles,&#8221;
+burst out the shipowner&#8217;s son. &#8220;Give it to us
+in plain United States, can&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure I can. Well, this wild man visited the
+school yesterday morning and this morning, before
+anybody was up. The first time he went into
+the big classroom and took some books, and the
+next time he visited the kitchen and pantry and
+took some grub&mdash;I beg the ladies&#8217; pardon&mdash;I
+should have said food&mdash;a ham, a chicken, and
+some doughnuts.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;And the blue chalk&#8211;&#8211;?&#8221; queried Mr.
+Porter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I was coming to that. In the classroom he
+left his mark&mdash;a big circle, with a cross inside,
+in blue chalk.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And how do you know that is the mark of
+the wild man?&#8221; asked Laura.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, we found that out some time ago,&#8221; answered
+Shadow. &#8220;He seems to have a mania for
+blue chalk, and even puts it on his face sometimes,
+and he chalks down that circle with the cross
+wherever he goes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then, if he does that, why can&#8217;t they trail
+him down?&#8221; asked Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because he is like a flea&mdash;when you try to
+put your hands on him he isn&#8217;t there,&#8221; answered
+Shadow. &#8220;And say, that puts me in mind of another
+story. Once three boys were&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That will do, Shadow!&#8221; cried Roger.
+&#8220;About the wild man is enough for the present.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have they any idea who he is?&#8221; asked Dunston
+Porter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not the slightest,&#8221; answered Buster. &#8220;And
+they don&#8217;t know where he keeps himself, although
+it must be in the woods near the school.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Dave, I hope he doesn&#8217;t harm anybody!&#8221;
+cried Jessie, with a shiver.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you boys ready to go back to the Hall?&#8221;
+asked Dunston Porter.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I am,&#8221; responded Buster, readily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So am I,&#8221; added the story-teller of the
+school.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then we&#8217;ll take you along, provided you
+don&#8217;t mind being crowded.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We won&#8217;t mind, if the young ladies won&#8217;t,&#8221; returned
+the fat youth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, come in by all means!&#8221; cried Laura.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll make room somehow,&#8221; added Jessie.</p>
+<p>A minute later the big car started on the way
+to Oak Hall, with Dave at the wheel and his
+uncle beside him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Looks familiar, doesn&#8217;t it?&#8221; called out Roger,
+as they spun along the turnpike.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It certainly does!&#8221; answered Roger, and then
+he added, &#8220;What do you say to the old school
+song?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fine!&#8221; came back the answer, and then the
+senator&#8217;s son commenced a song they all knew well,
+which was sung to the tune of &#8220;Auld Lang Syne.&#8221;
+The girls knew the song, too, and readily joined
+in.</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p style='margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
+&#8220;Oak Hall we never shall forget,<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>No matter where we roam;</span><br />
+It is the very best of schools,<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>To us it&#8217;s just like home!</span><br />
+Then give three cheers, and let them ring<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Throughout this world so wide,</span><br />
+To let the people know that we<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Elect to here abide!&#8221;</span></p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span></div>
+<p>Loud and clear over the cool air sounded the
+song, and it was sung several times. Then, just
+as the car rolled into the grounds of the school,
+the boys gave one of the Hall yells, and Dave
+honked the horn of the automobile loud and
+long.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello! It&#8217;s the Porter crowd!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Welcome to our city!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How about Cave Island, Dave! Did you
+bring it with you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Heard you caught Jasniff and Merwell,
+Roger. Good for you!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, Phil, you&#8217;re as sunburnt as if you&#8217;d been
+to the seashore for a summer.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So the talk ran on as half a dozen students
+flocked up to the car. The afternoon session was
+over, and despite the chilliness many lads were out
+on the campus. Many knew the girls&mdash;having
+met them at some athletic games and at a commencement&mdash;and
+those that did not were glad of
+a chance for an introduction.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am real glad to see you back, boys,&#8221; said
+Doctor Hasmer Clay, the head of the institution,
+as he appeared and shook hands. &#8220;Glad to see
+you, Mr. Porter, and also the young ladies,&#8221; he
+added. &#8220;So you came all the way by automobile,
+eh? It must have been a delightful
+trip.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was,&#8221; answered Dave&#8217;s uncle.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span></p>
+<p>All went inside, and the visitors were permitted
+to accompany Dave and his chums to their dormitory.
+The boys&#8217; baggage had already arrived, so
+it did not take the lads long to settle down.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And now we&#8217;ll have to start back,&#8221; said Dunston
+Porter, a little later. &#8220;Dave, take good
+care of yourself, and make a good record.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll do my best, Uncle Dunston.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And don&#8217;t let that wild man get you,&#8221; added
+Jessie, as she took his hand and allowed him to
+hold her own, perhaps longer than was necessary.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And don&#8217;t forget to write,&#8221; put in his sister.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;ll not forget that!&#8221; answered Dave,
+with a smile, both to his sister and to the girl
+whom he regarded so warmly.</p>
+<p>It was a trying moment&mdash;this parting&mdash;but it
+was soon over, and, with Dunston Porter at the
+wheel, and the girls and boys waving their hands,
+the touring car left the Oak Hall grounds, on its
+return journey to Crumville.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, here we are, as the pug dog said to the
+looking-glass, when he walked behind it to look
+for himself,&#8221; remarked Phil, dropping into a
+chair.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose it will take us a few days to get
+settled down,&#8221; answered Dave, resting on the top
+of a table. &#8220;I don&#8217;t feel much like unpacking
+yet, do you?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;No, let us wait until to-night or to-morrow,&#8221;
+returned Roger, dropping on one of the beds.
+He was still thinking of how clear and deep
+Laura&#8217;s eyes had appeared when she had said
+good-by to him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I really hope you will not be homesick,&#8221; said
+a girlish voice, and Bertram Vane, one of the
+students, appeared from the next room and sat
+down on a chair. &#8220;Homesickness is such an
+awfully cruel thing, don&#8217;t you know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No homesickness here, Polly,&#8221; answered
+Dave. &#8220;I guess we are just tired out, that&#8217;s all.
+We&#8217;ve done a lot of traveling since we left Oak
+Hall.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So I understand. Wasn&#8217;t it dreadful that
+Jasniff and Merwell should prove such villains!&#8221;
+went on the girlish student. &#8220;Weren&#8217;t you really
+afraid to&mdash;er&mdash;to touch them?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not much!&#8221; cried Phil. &#8220;I am only sorry
+Merwell got away.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But you got the diamonds, I heard?&#8221; put in
+Sam Day, who was another of the chums.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We did.&#8221;</p>
+<p>At that moment came musical sounds from another
+room near by&mdash;the sounds of somebody
+strumming on a guitar.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello, there&#8217;s Luke Watson!&#8221; cried Roger.
+&#8220;Hi, come in with that guitar and give us a tune,
+Luke!&#8221; he called out.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Thought I might cheer you up,&#8221; said Luke,
+appearing. &#8220;How would you like me to play
+&#8216;The Girl I Left Behind Me,&#8217; or something like
+that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Make it &#8216;Oh, Those Eyes So Tender!&#8217;&#8221;
+suggested Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Or else that beautiful ditty called, &#8216;He
+Loved, But Had to Leave Her,&#8217;&#8221; suggested
+Shadow. &#8220;Say, that puts me in mind of a
+story,&#8221; he went on. &#8220;This is true, too, though
+you may not believe it. A young man went to
+call on his best girl and took a bouquet of flowers
+along. The bouquet was done up in several thicknesses
+of tissue paper. Some of his friends
+who were jokers got hold of that bouquet
+and fixed it up for him. He gave it to the girl,
+and when she took off the tissue paper what
+do you suppose she found? A bunch of celery
+and some soup greens! He was so fussed
+up he didn&#8217;t know what to say, and he got out in
+a hurry.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hurrah for the chaps who fixed up the
+bouquet!&#8221; cried Phil. &#8220;But start up, Luke.
+Something in which we can all join.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But not too loud,&#8221; cautioned Roger. &#8220;Old
+Haskers might not like&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, hang old Haskers!&#8221; interrupted Phil.
+&#8220;He can&#8217;t&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sh-sh!&#8221; came from Dave, suddenly, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span>
+silence fell on the group of boys. All turned
+towards the doorway leading to the hall. There,
+on the threshold, stood the instructor just mentioned,
+Mr. Job Haskers.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VI_PHIL_SHOWS_HIS_STUBBORNNESS' id='CHAPTER_VI_PHIL_SHOWS_HIS_STUBBORNNESS'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+<h3>PHIL SHOWS HIS STUBBORNNESS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Not one of the boys knew how to act or what
+to say. All wondered if Job Haskers had heard
+his name mentioned.</p>
+<p>If the ill-natured instructor had heard, he made
+no mention of it. He looked sharply about the
+apartment and waved his hand to Luke.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Watson, how many times have I told you that
+you make too much noise with your musical instruments?&#8221;
+he said, harshly. &#8220;You disturb the
+students who wish to study.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I thought this was the recreation hour, Mr.
+Haskers,&#8221; answered the lad, who loved to play
+the guitar and banjo.</p>
+<p>&#8220;True, but I think we get altogether too much
+of your music,&#8221; growled the instructor. He
+turned to Dave, Roger, and Phil. &#8220;So you are
+back at last. It is high time, if you wish to go on
+with your regular classes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We told Doctor Clay that we would make up
+what we have missed, Mr. Haskers,&#8221; answered
+Dave, in a gentle tone, for he knew how easy it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span>
+was to start a quarrel with the man before him.
+As Phil had once said, Job Haskers was always
+walking around &#8220;with a chip on his shoulder.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And how soon will you make up the lessons
+in my class?&#8221; demanded the instructor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think I can do it inside of ten days or two
+weeks.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That won&#8217;t suit me, Porter. You&#8217;ll have to
+do better. I&#8217;ll give each of you just a week&mdash;one
+week, understand? If you can&#8217;t make the lessons
+up in that time I&#8217;ll have to drop you to the
+next lower class.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Mr. Haskers!&#8221; burst out Roger. He
+knew what that meant only too well. They would
+not have a chance to graduate that coming
+June.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll not argue the point, Morr. I&#8217;ll give you
+a week, starting to-morrow. When you come to
+the classroom I will show you just what you have
+to make up.&#8221; Job Haskers looked around the
+room. &#8220;Now, then, remember, I want less noise
+here.&#8221; And so speaking, he turned on his heel and
+walked away.</p>
+<p>For a moment there was silence, as the boys
+looked at each other and listened to the sounds
+of Mr. Haskers&#8217;s retreating footsteps. Then
+Phil made a face and punched one of the bed pillows,
+savagely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now, wouldn&#8217;t that make a saint turn in his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span>
+grave?&#8221; he remarked. &#8220;Isn&#8217;t he the real, kind,
+generous soul!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He ought to be ducked in the river!&#8221; was
+Buster&#8217;s comment. &#8220;Why, how can anybody
+make up the lessons you&#8217;ve missed in a week?
+It&#8217;s absurd! Say, do you know what I&#8217;d do if
+I were you? I&#8217;d complain to the doctor.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So would I,&#8221; added Sam Day. &#8220;Two weeks
+would be short enough.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll not complain to the doctor,&#8221; returned
+Phil. &#8220;But I know what I will do,&#8221; he added,
+quickly, as though struck by a sudden idea.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What?&#8221; came from several.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Never mind what. But I&#8217;ll wager he&#8217;ll give
+us more time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess I know what you think of doing,&#8221; said
+Dave. &#8220;But take my advice and don&#8217;t, Phil.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph! I&#8217;ll see about it, Dave. He isn&#8217;t
+going to run such a thing as this up my back without
+a kick,&#8221; grumbled the shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, wait first and see if he doesn&#8217;t change
+his mind, or if we can&#8217;t get through in the week,&#8221;
+cautioned Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What was Phil going to do?&#8221; questioned
+Luke, strumming lowly over the strings of his
+guitar.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, don&#8217;t let&#8217;s talk about it,&#8221; cried Dave, before
+Roger could speak. He did not wish the
+Mrs. Breen affair to become public property.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span>
+&#8220;Tell us about the wild man, and all the other
+things that have happened here since we went
+away.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you tell us all about Cave Island and
+those stolen jewels,&#8221; said Buster.</p>
+<p>Thereafter the conversation became general,
+Dave and his chums telling of their quest of the
+Carwith diamonds, and the other students relating
+the particulars of a feast they had had in
+one of the dormitories, and of various efforts
+made to catch the so-called wild man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t believe he is what one would call a
+wild man,&#8221; said Ben Basswood, Dave&#8217;s old chum
+from home, who had just come in from some experiments
+in the school laboratory. &#8220;He is simple-minded
+and very shy. He gets excited once
+in a while, like when he threw those mud-balls.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, you ought to know,&#8221; remarked Buster.
+&#8220;Ben is the only fellow here who has talked to
+the man,&#8221; he explained.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When was that, Ben?&#8221; questioned Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That was when the man first appeared,&#8221; answered
+the Crumville lad. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t find out
+until yesterday that he was the wild man, and then
+it was because of that blue chalk he uses. I met
+him in the woods when I was out during that last
+snow, looking for rabbits with my shotgun. I
+came across him, sitting on a rock, looking at an
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span>
+old newspaper. He had some of the blue chalk
+in his hand and had marked a circle with a cross
+on the rock. He asked me where I was going,
+and told me to look out and not shoot a star, and
+then he asked me if I used chalk for powder, and
+said he could supply a superior brand of chalk
+cheap. I thought at first that he was merely joking,
+but I didn&#8217;t like the look in his eyes, and then
+I made up my mind he was not right in his head,
+and I left him. When I came back that way, an
+hour later, he was gone, and I have never seen
+him since.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where was this, Ben?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Up in the woods, where the brook branches off
+by the two big rocks.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know the spot!&#8221; cried Roger. &#8220;Say, maybe
+he hangs out around there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, we hunted around there yesterday, but
+he wasn&#8217;t to be seen. I don&#8217;t believe he has any
+settled place of abode, but just roams through the
+woods.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Poor fellow! Somebody ought to catch him
+and place him in a sanitarium,&#8221; was Dave&#8217;s comment.</p>
+<p>Various matters were talked over until the
+supper hour, and then the boys filed down to the
+dining-hall. Here our hero met more of his
+school chums, including Gus Plum, who had once
+been his enemy but who was now quite friendly,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span>
+and little Chip Macklin, who in days gone by had
+been Plum&#8217;s toady.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very glad to see you back, Dave!&#8221; cried Gus.
+&#8220;And, say, you&#8217;ve certainly made a hero of yourself,&#8221;
+he added, warmly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was great, what you and Roger and Phil
+did,&#8221; added Chip, in deep admiration.</p>
+<p>Everybody was glad to see Dave back, and
+after supper it was all he could do to get away
+from many of his friends. But he managed it at
+last, and he, Roger, and Phil went upstairs, to
+put away their things and get out their schoolbooks.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We have got to study and that is all there
+is to it,&#8221; said Dave, firmly. &#8220;Fun is one thing
+and getting ready to graduate is another. We
+have got to get down to the grind, boys.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s right,&#8221; answered the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But don&#8217;t forget what old Haskers said,&#8221;
+grumbled Phil. &#8220;He&#8217;ll make us sweat, just you
+wait and see!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Sufficient for the day is the evil thereof,&#8217;&#8221;
+quoted Dave. &#8220;I think we can get through if we
+buckle down hard.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Supposing Mr. Dale and the other teachers
+pin us down as old Haskers did?&#8221; demanded
+Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They won&#8217;t do it,&#8221; declared our hero. &#8220;Take
+my word for it, Mr. Dale will give us a month,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span>
+if we want it. I know him. And the others
+will do the same.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, maybe we can get through, if that&#8217;s the
+case,&#8221; said the shipowner&#8217;s son, slowly. &#8220;Just
+the same, I think old Haskers the meanest man
+alive.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The following morning, after a good night&#8217;s
+rest, the boys went to their various classes. As
+Dave had predicted, Mr. Dale, the head teacher,
+treated them with all possible consideration,
+for he loved boys and understood them thoroughly.
+The other teachers were likewise very
+lenient.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Old Haskers is the one stumbling-block,&#8221;
+said Roger. &#8220;Dave, maybe we had better see
+Doctor Clay about him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not much!&#8221; cried Phil. &#8220;We&#8217;ve got a club
+we can use on Haskers. Why not use it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean, go to him and tell him we know
+about that Mrs. Breen affair, and that we will
+expose him if he doesn&#8217;t let up on us, Phil?&#8221; said
+Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you think that is a&mdash;well, a gentlemanly
+thing to do?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s what old Haskers would do, if he was in
+our place.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps. But I&#8217;d rather not do it. Let my
+uncle&#8217;s lawyer try to collect that money without
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span>
+our appearing in the case. We have had trouble
+enough in the past with Haskers. Let us buckle in
+and study up. I am sure we can get through,&#8221;
+added Dave, earnestly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; growled Phil; but his manner
+showed that he was not satisfied.</p>
+<p>Two days went by, and the boys settled down to
+the regular routine of the school. The lessons to
+be made up were exceedingly hard, and Dave
+found he had to study almost constantly to do
+what was required of him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But I am going to make it!&#8221; he murmured,
+setting his teeth hard. &#8220;I am not going to disappoint
+the folks at home.&#8221;</p>
+<p>One afternoon the three chums had a very hard
+lesson in Latin to do. It was a clear, sunshiny
+day and they had one of the windows wide open
+to let in the fresh air. Dave and Roger were
+bending over their books when they heard a sudden
+exclamation from Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll be hanged if I&#8217;m going to do it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And then of a sudden a Latin book was hurled
+across the room, to land on a bureau, just missing
+the glass.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello!&#8221; cried Dave, raising his head.
+&#8220;What&#8217;s wrong now?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not going to do it!&#8221; cried Phil, stretching
+himself. &#8220;It&#8217;s an outrage and I won&#8217;t submit
+to it.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean this boning away for Haskers?&#8221;
+queried Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just that,&#8221; answered the shipowner&#8217;s son.
+&#8220;Why can&#8217;t he treat us as fairly as the other
+teachers did? It wouldn&#8217;t hurt him a bit to give
+us more time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Phil, what&#8217;s the use of talking it over again?&#8221;
+asked Dave. &#8220;I thought we had settled it once
+for all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I won&#8217;t stand it, I tell you,&#8221; cried Phil,
+stubbornly. &#8220;He can&#8217;t make a pack-mule of me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, then, speak to the doctor about it,&#8221;
+advised Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t have to speak to the doctor,&#8221; stormed
+Phil; and walking over to a rack, he caught up his
+cap and marched from the room.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He is certainly in a bad humor,&#8221; was Dave&#8217;s
+comment. &#8220;I am afraid he&#8217;ll put his foot into it,
+Roger.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So am I. He&#8217;s been aching to get back at old
+Haskers ever since he put all this studying up to
+us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you know, Ben is just as angry at Haskers
+as Phil is?&#8221; went on our hero, after a pause, during
+which both had hoped that their close chum
+would return. But Phil had stalked down the
+stairs and out of the building.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ben?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, so he told me this noon.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;What about?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Ben talked in class and old Haskers
+penalized him heavily&mdash;gave him a lot of extra
+Latin to do. It nearly broke Ben up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You told Ben about that Breen affair, didn&#8217;t
+you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe he and Phil will both go to Haskers
+about it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hope not, Roger. I don&#8217;t think it is just
+the right thing to do&mdash;to use that as a club over
+Haskers to get him to let us off. I don&#8217;t like
+that kind of dealing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Neither do I. But it&#8217;s just what such a mean-spirited
+fellow as Haskers deserves. He has
+never treated us squarely since we came here. I
+think this school would be a good deal better off
+without him, even if he is well educated.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dave heaved a deep sigh. He was on the point
+of replying, but changed his mind. He took up
+his book again, and soon was trying his best to
+study. Roger followed his example.</p>
+<p>But both boys made slow progress. Each was
+thinking about Phil. What would be the outcome
+of their headstrong chum&#8217;s actions?</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VII_PHIL_AND_BEN_MAKE_A_MOVE' id='CHAPTER_VII_PHIL_AND_BEN_MAKE_A_MOVE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+<h3>PHIL AND BEN MAKE A MOVE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>So far Dave and Nat Poole had not met face
+to face. Our hero had seen the money-lender&#8217;s
+son a number of times, but Nat had always been
+with some of his cronies and had, apparently, not
+taken any notice.</p>
+<p>But on the morning following the conversation
+just recorded, the pair came face to face in one
+of the narrow hallways.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-morning, Nat,&#8221; said Dave, pleasantly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Morning,&#8221; grumbled the other student. He
+was about to pass Dave, but suddenly changed his
+mind. &#8220;So you got back, eh?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I&#8217;ve been back several days.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I heard that Link Merwell got away from
+you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is true.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph! If I had the chance to nab him
+that you had, I&#8217;d not let him get away.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We held Jasniff.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe you let Merwell go on purpose,&#8221; continued
+the money-lender&#8217;s son, shrewdly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Not at all, Nat. He gave us the slip, clean
+and clear.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph!&#8221; Nat paused for a moment. &#8220;I
+got word from my dad that you almost smashed
+him up on the road with your auto.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hardly as bad as that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He is going to make your uncle pay for the
+damage done.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It wasn&#8217;t much.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was enough. You want to be more careful
+with your car after this. You auto fellows
+seem to think you own the whole road.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What about your motor-boat, Nat?&#8221; asked
+Dave. He remembered how the money-lender&#8217;s
+son had played more than one mean trick while
+running the craft.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, my boat is all right, Dave Porter!&#8221;
+sniffed Nat; and then he moved on, with a scowl
+on his face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The same old Nat,&#8221; soliloquized our hero.
+&#8220;Too bad that he can&#8217;t make himself a bit more
+agreeable.&#8221;</p>
+<p>That day was a particularly trying one in the
+classroom. The lessons were unusually hard,
+and Dave had all he could do to pass, especially
+in those studies presided over by Professor Haskers.
+Roger made one miss in his Latin and
+poor Phil made several, while Ben Basswood&#8217;s
+recitation was a complete failure.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span></p>
+<p>As was usual with him, Job Haskers was exceedingly
+dictatorial, and said some cutting things that
+brought the blood to Dave&#8217;s face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You must do much better than this, Porter
+and Morr,&#8221; said the professor. &#8220;Otherwise I
+shall have to place you in the next lower class.
+You, Lawrence and Basswood, have failed so utterly
+that I will have to take your cases under
+immediate consideration. The class is dismissed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The old bear!&#8221; growled Ben, under his
+breath.</p>
+<p>He looked inquiringly at Phil, and the latter
+nodded knowingly.</p>
+<p>Dave did not know what to do. He did not
+wish Phil and Ben to get into further trouble, yet
+he did not know how to interfere. Besides, he
+was suffering himself and hardly knew what to do
+on his own account.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This is the worst yet,&#8221; cried Roger, as he and
+our hero came out of the classroom side by side.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There go Phil and Ben,&#8221; returned Dave.
+&#8220;Roger, they have got some plan up their sleeve.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I believe you, Dave. I wish I knew what to
+do. Shall we go to Doctor Clay?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been thinking of that, Roger. But I
+hate to do it. I&#8217;d rather fight my own battles.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So would I.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us wait until to-morrow and see if things
+don&#8217;t take a turn for the better.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, just as you say. But it&#8217;s a shame,
+the way old Haskers treats us,&#8221; grumbled the
+senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>In the meantime Phil and Ben had gone on
+ahead. Both were exceeding angry and consequently
+not in a frame of mind to use their best
+judgment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s an outrage!&#8221; burst out the shipowner&#8217;s
+son. &#8220;An outrage, Ben! I am not going to stand
+for it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I am with you, Phil,&#8221; returned Ben.
+&#8220;But what can we do?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You know what I spoke about last evening?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How about doing that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am with you, if you are game.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course we may make old Haskers tearing
+mad.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll only face him with the truth, won&#8217;t
+we?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then, let us do it. And the sooner the
+better.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, but we must see him alone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course. I think we can manage it just before
+supper&mdash;when he goes up to his room to fix
+up for the evening.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The two chums talked the affair over for a
+long time.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t suppose Dave will like this,&#8221; ventured
+Ben, presently. &#8220;What do you think?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He isn&#8217;t hit as hard as we are,&#8221; answered
+Phil, lamely. &#8220;If he was&mdash;well, he might look
+at things in a different light.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s so,&#8221; answered Ben. But deep down
+in his heart he was afraid that our hero would
+not altogether approve of what he and Phil proposed
+to do.</p>
+<p>The boys took a walk, and purposely kept out
+of the way of Dave and Roger. They did not
+return to the Hall until fifteen minutes before the
+first bell for supper. Then they came in by a side
+entrance and passed swiftly up the stairs and
+along the hallway to the room occupied by Job
+Haskers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who is it?&#8221; asked the teacher, sharply, when
+Phil had knocked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Haskers, it is Phil Lawrence,&#8221; was the
+reply. &#8220;Ben Basswood is with me. We wish to
+see you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ah, indeed!&#8221; said the teacher, coldly. &#8220;You
+come to me at an unusual hour. You may see me
+to-morrow, before class.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Haskers, we wish very much to see
+you now,&#8221; put in Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We have got to see you,&#8221; added Phil, warmly.</p>
+<p>There was no immediate reply to this. The
+boys heard Job Haskers moving around the room
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span>
+and heard him shut a bureau. Then the door was
+flung open.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You insist upon seeing me, eh?&#8221; demanded
+the professor, harshly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We do, Mr. Haskers,&#8221; returned Phil, boldly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well, young gentlemen; step in.&#8221; And
+Job Haskers glared at the boys as he stood aside
+for them to enter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We came to see you, sir, about those Latin
+lessons,&#8221; went on Phil, finding it just then difficult
+to speak. He realized that Job Haskers
+was in no humor for being lenient.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well?&#8221; shot out the professor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We feel that we are not being treated fairly,&#8221;
+put in Ben, believing he should not make Phil do
+all the talking.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not treated fairly? I believe I am the best
+judge of that, Basswood.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Haskers, I hate to say it, but you are a
+hard-hearted man!&#8221; cried out Phil, the door being
+closed, so that no outsider might hear. &#8220;You
+are not giving us a fair chance. The other teachers
+have given me and Dave Porter and Roger
+Morr several weeks in which to make up those lessons
+we missed while we were away. You wish
+to give us only a week.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you didn&#8217;t give me a fair chance to make
+up,&#8221; added Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;See here, who is master here, you or I?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span>
+demanded Job Haskers, drawing himself up.
+&#8220;Boys, you are impudent! I will not stand it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, you will stand it,&#8221; cried Phil, throwing
+caution to the winds. &#8220;All we ask is a fair deal,
+and you have got to give it to us. We&#8217;ll make up
+those lessons, if you&#8217;ll give us a fair amount of
+time. I don&#8217;t intend to be put in a lower class for
+nothing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;m not going to stand it either,&#8221; came
+from Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ha! this to me?&#8221; snarled Job Haskers.
+&#8220;Take care, or I&#8217;ll have you dismissed from the
+Hall!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you try it, it will be the worst day&#8217;s work
+you ever did, Mr. Haskers,&#8221; warned the shipowner&#8217;s
+son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What, you threaten me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We are going to make you give us a fair
+chance, that is all. And if you&#8217;ll do that, we&#8217;ll give
+you a fair chance.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, why&mdash;you&mdash;you&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; The irate instructor
+knew not for the moment how to proceed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Haskers, I think you had better listen
+to me,&#8221; pursued Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have listened to all I care to hear.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, no, you haven&#8217;t. There is much more&mdash;and
+you had better listen closely&mdash;if you care at
+all for your reputation here at Oak Hall.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span></p>
+<p>The professor stared at the boy and grew a
+trifle pale.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wha&mdash;what do you&mdash;er&mdash;mean by that,
+Lawrence?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hate very much to bring this subject up,
+Mr. Haskers, but you practically compel me to
+do it. If you will only promise to give us a fair
+chance to make up our lessons, I won&#8217;t say a word
+about it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just what do you mean?&#8221; faltered the
+teacher.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know something about your doings in the
+past&mdash;doings which are of no credit to you. If
+you disgrace Ben and me by degrading us in
+classes, we&#8217;ll disgrace you by telling all we know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And what do you know?&#8221; demanded Job
+Haskers, hastily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We know a good deal,&#8221; put in Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All about your dealing with the poor widow,
+Mrs. Breen,&#8221; added the shipowner&#8217;s son. &#8220;How
+you still owe her for board, and how you borrowed
+money to publish a book that was never issued.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who told you that?&#8221; cried Job Haskers,
+stepping back in consternation. &#8220;Who told you
+that I had borrowed money from her, and that I
+owed her for board?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Never mind who told us,&#8221; said Ben. &#8220;We
+know it is true.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you went to that lawyer, eh?&#8221; stormed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span>
+Professor Haskers. &#8220;You got him to threaten
+a suit, didn&#8217;t you? I got his letter only this
+afternoon.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We went to no lawyer,&#8221; answered Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know better! I see it all now! You want
+to get me into trouble&mdash;to disgrace me here!&#8221;
+Job Haskers began to pace the floor. &#8220;It is&mdash;er&mdash;a
+mistake. I meant to pay that lady but it&mdash;er&mdash;slipped
+my mind. And the book has been
+issued, but the publishers have not&mdash;er&mdash;seen fit
+to push it, that is why you and the world at large
+have not heard of it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Haskers, we haven&#8217;t told anybody about
+this,&#8221; went on Phil, pointedly. &#8220;You can settle
+with that lawyer, whoever he may be,&mdash;and we&#8217;ll
+not say a word to anybody&mdash;that is, providing
+you&#8217;ll give us a fair chance in our lessons.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ha! maybe you wish me to pass you without
+an examination,&#8221; cried the teacher, cunningly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, sir!&#8221; answered Phil, stoutly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We simply ask for more time, that is all,&#8221;
+added Ben. &#8220;We don&#8217;t ask any favor. We can
+make up the lessons if you will give us as much
+time as the other teachers would give us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have not told anybody of this&mdash;this&mdash;er&mdash;affair
+of Mrs. Breen?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is all a mistake, but I should not like it to
+get abroad. It would hurt my reputation a great
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span>
+deal. I shall settle the matter in the near future.
+I do not owe that lady as much as the lawyer says
+I do,&mdash;but that is not your affair.&#8221; Job Haskers
+continued to pace the floor. &#8220;Now about your
+lessons,&#8221; he continued, after a pause. &#8220;If I&mdash;er&mdash;thought
+that I had really been too hard on
+you&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; He paused.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You certainly have been hard,&#8221; said Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And if you really need more time&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Give us two weeks more and we&#8217;ll be all
+right,&#8221; put in Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And if&mdash;er&mdash;if I should decide to do that, you
+will&mdash;er&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll make good&mdash;and keep our mouths
+shut,&#8221; finished Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well. I will think it over, young gentlemen,
+and let you know to-morrow morning,
+before class. And in the meantime&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We won&#8217;t say a word to anybody,&#8221; said Ben,
+with a little grin.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So be it;&#8221; and Job Haskers bowed. &#8220;There
+is the supper-bell. You may go now. Come to
+me just before class to-morrow,&#8221; he added; and
+then the two students passed out of the room, and
+the teacher shut the door after them.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VIII_AN_UNUSUAL_COMPACT' id='CHAPTER_VIII_AN_UNUSUAL_COMPACT'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+<h3>AN UNUSUAL COMPACT</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;ll do it&mdash;he is bound to do it!&#8221; cried
+Ben, as he and Phil hurried down to the dining-room.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think so myself, Ben,&#8221; answered the shipowner&#8217;s
+son. But, for some reason, he did not
+seem as joyful over the outcome of the interview
+as might have been expected.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He won&#8217;t dare let this news become public
+property,&#8221; went on the other student. &#8220;He is
+too afraid of public opinion.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ben, he thinks we got that lawyer to take
+the case up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You told him we hadn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But he didn&#8217;t believe it&mdash;I could tell that by
+his manner. And, Ben, do you know, after all,
+this looks to me as if we had, somehow, bribed
+him to be easy on us,&#8221; continued Phil, with added
+concern.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, don&#8217;t bother your head about that, Phil.
+We only asked for what is fair, didn&#8217;t we?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, but&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; And then the shipowner&#8217;s son
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span>
+did not finish, because he did not know what to
+say. In some manner, Phil&#8217;s conscience troubled
+him, and he wondered what Dave and Roger
+would say when they heard of what had occurred.</p>
+<p>During the meal that followed but little was
+said by any of the boys. Once or twice our hero
+looked at Phil, but the latter avoided his gaze. As
+soon as the repast was over, Phil rushed outside,
+followed by Ben; and that was the last seen of
+the pair until it was time to go to bed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They have been up to something, that is certain,&#8221;
+was the comment of the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, we can only wait and see what turns
+up,&#8221; answered Dave, thoughtfully. &#8220;I don&#8217;t
+think I care to ask them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>In the morning, when Dave got up he looked
+over to where Phil was in the habit of sleeping.
+The bed was empty, and the shipowner&#8217;s son was
+gone.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dressed half an hour ago,&#8221; said another of
+the dormitory inmates.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Went off again with Ben, I&#8217;ll wager,&#8221; murmured
+Roger. Ben was in another room, across
+the hallway, that term.</p>
+<p>Dave and Roger had been hard at work the
+evening before, doing their best to make up the
+lessons they had missed while away from the
+school. They doubted if Phil and Ben had studied
+at all. With considerable curiosity they awaited
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span>
+the opening of the morning classes, to see what
+might happen. They felt that something was &#8220;in
+the air.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Just before the last bell rang Phil and Ben appeared,
+their faces wreathed in smiles.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all right, fellows!&#8221; cried the shipowner&#8217;s
+son, merrily. &#8220;It&#8217;s all right!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now we can take our time making up those
+missed lessons,&#8221; added Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You went to old Haskers?&#8221; queried Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We sure did,&#8221; answered the shipowner&#8217;s
+son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And told him about&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; began our hero.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Never mind what we told him, Dave,&#8221; interrupted
+Phil. &#8220;We did tell him that we wanted
+to make up the lessons but couldn&#8217;t do it in the
+time he had allotted. He argued it, at first, but
+now he has agreed to give us the same time Mr.
+Dale did, three weeks.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good!&#8221; exclaimed Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You, or all of us?&#8221; asked our hero.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All of us. I think he&#8217;ll speak to you at
+recess&mdash;he said he would.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What did he say when you&mdash;when you mentioned
+Mrs. Breen?&#8221; asked Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hush, somebody might hear you!&#8221; returned
+Phil, in a whisper. &#8220;We have promised to keep
+that quiet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But the poor woman&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; began Dave.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Will get her money, never fear. A lawyer
+has already written about it, and old Haskers
+says he will pay up. He claims it is all a mistake.
+But he doesn&#8217;t want anybody at Oak Hall to
+get wind of it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was no time to say more, and evidently
+neither Phil nor Ben felt in the humor to discuss
+the affair. The early morning lesson proceeded
+as usual, but it was noticed that Professor Haskers
+was much subdued in his manner towards
+the students.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Porter and Morr, I wish to speak to you at
+recess,&#8221; said he, coming down to where the two
+lads sat. &#8220;Kindly remain here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When the other students had left the classroom
+the instructor came to our hero and his
+chum and motioned for them to follow him to
+a private room close by.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wish to speak to you about the lessons you
+are to make up,&#8221; said Job Haskers, after clearing
+his throat several times. &#8220;I understand that you
+want more time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We would like to have more time, yes,&#8221; answered
+Dave, briefly, and looking the teacher full
+in the face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can you do the lessons in three weeks?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, Mr. Haskers,&#8221; said Dave, and Roger
+nodded his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you can take that much time. But, remember,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span>
+I shall expect you to&mdash;to&mdash;er&mdash;to make
+up the lessons.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, sir,&#8221; came from both students.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you need more time&mdash;or any assistance&mdash;possibly
+I can arrange it,&#8221; went on Job Haskers,
+eagerly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you, if you give me three weeks I am
+sure I can make up the lessons to your satisfaction,
+Mr. Haskers,&#8221; came from our hero.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And so can I,&#8221; added the senator&#8217;s son.
+&#8220;Anyway, I&#8217;ll try my level best.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well, then, we will let it stand that way.&#8221;
+There was a pause and the instructor bit his lip
+several times. &#8220;By the way, I&mdash;er&mdash;understand
+that there is a very unpleasant rumor going around
+concerning me,&#8221; he proceeded. &#8220;It is all a mistake
+which I shall try to clear up without delay.
+I trust that you will not attempt to&mdash;er&mdash;to circulate
+that rumor any further.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Haskers, do you mean about that affair
+with Mrs. Breen?&#8221; demanded Dave, bluntly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. I have already explained to Lawrence
+and Basswood that it is a mistake, and that the
+widow will be paid all that is due her. But if
+this should&mdash;er&mdash;be mentioned here&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; The
+teacher stopped short and looked sharply at Dave
+and Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Haskers, let us understand each other,&#8221;
+answered Dave, quickly. &#8220;I have no desire whatever
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span>
+to get you or anybody else into trouble. Nor
+do I want to ask you for any favors. I think
+we are justly entitled to more time in which to
+make up those lessons, and now that you have
+granted that time, I shall do my best to make good.
+As for that Mrs. Breen affair, I think that poor
+old lady ought to have her money. I understand
+some lawyer is going to try to collect it for her.
+Well, if you settle the matter I shall feel very
+glad; and you can rest assured that I will not say
+a word about the matter to anybody in this school,
+or anywhere else.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&mdash;er&mdash;you give me your word on that,
+Porter?&#8221; demanded the instructor, eagerly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you, Morr?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, sir,&#8221; answered the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who else is there who knows about this&mdash;er&mdash;unpleasant
+affair?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Phil Lawrence and Ben Basswood,&#8221; answered
+Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No other students?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not that I know of.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well, then.&#8221; Job Haskers drew a breath
+of relief. &#8220;See that you keep your word. And
+about the lessons&mdash;if three weeks are not long
+enough, I may&mdash;er&mdash;be able to give you a little
+more time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That time will be enough,&#8221; replied Dave.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll make it with ease,&#8221; added Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then that is settled, and you may go,&#8221; and
+so speaking, Job Haskers left the room. The two
+boys followed him, and went out on the campus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How did you make out?&#8221; questioned Phil, as
+he ran up to them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We got our time,&#8221; answered Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But let me tell you one thing,&#8221; said Dave.
+&#8220;After this Haskers is going to hate us worse
+than ever.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see why,&#8221; declared the shipowner&#8217;s
+son. &#8220;I think we are letting him off mighty
+easy.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He feels as if he had been forced into doing
+what we want,&#8221; went on Dave. &#8220;I think he looks
+at it as if you had used that Mrs. Breen incident
+as a club over him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, it was a club in one sense, Dave.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know it, Phil, and, although I am glad we
+have won out and gotten that extra time, still I am
+sorry that you and Ben went to him as you did.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph! did you think I was going to sit still
+and be put back into a lower class?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe it might have been better if you had
+gone to Doctor Clay.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think so,&#8221; replied Phil, shortly; and
+then the school-bell rang again and all the boys
+had to go to their next classes.</p>
+<p>In spite of the cloud that thus hung over the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span>
+affair, every one of the chums was glad of the
+extra time in which to make up the lost lessons.
+Not one of them had to grind away as hard as before,
+and Dave took a little time off, in which
+to send a letter to his father and another to
+Jessie.</p>
+<p>The next day was warm and pleasant and, after
+school-hours, Roger proposed to Dave that they
+take a walk up the woods road back of the school.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, a walk in the woods will do us
+good,&#8221; was the answer. &#8220;Shall we ask some of
+the others?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you wish,&#8221; and in the end Phil went along,
+and also Buster Beggs and Gus Plum.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My, but I had a run-in with old Haskers
+this afternoon,&#8221; said the stout youth. &#8220;I came
+close to carrying the matter to the doctor.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What was it about?&#8221; questioned Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, nothing at all, to my way of thinking. I
+went to the library to get a book and he accused
+me of wasting my class time. He was very ugly.
+I won&#8217;t stand for much more of it,&#8221; grumbled
+Buster.</p>
+<p>Dave said no more, but he and Roger exchanged
+glances. Evidently the irate instructor
+was going to &#8220;take it out of somebody,&#8221; as the
+saying goes.</p>
+<p>The boys walked on and on, along the road,
+until Oak Hall was left far behind. Soon Buster
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span>
+forgot his troubles, and the crowd were chatting
+gayly of many things.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Call for candidates for the baseball team
+next Saturday,&#8221; announced Gus Plum. &#8220;I hope
+we get up a team this year that knocks the spots
+out of Rockville Military Academy and all the
+other institutions we cross bats with.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you going to try for the nine this term,
+Gus?&#8221; questioned Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure! Why not? You&#8217;ll try, won&#8217;t you?&#8221;
+went on the big youth, in surprise.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I&#8217;ve decided not to go into athletics this
+term, Gus. I want to give all my time to my
+studies.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, but the nine needs you, Dave!&#8221; put in
+Buster. &#8220;I heard some of the fellows talking
+about it only yesterday. They had you slated
+for your old position.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, if Gus wants to play, he can fill the
+box,&#8221; answered Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But we need more than one pitcher,&#8221; insisted
+Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There are plenty of new students coming
+along. I hear Thomas is a good one, and so is
+Ennis.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not going to play, either,&#8221; said Roger.
+&#8220;I want to graduate with all the honors possible.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How about you, Phil?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&mdash;I think I&#8217;ll play,&#8221; answered the shipowner&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span>
+son, rather lamely. &#8220;I&#8217;ll see about it
+later.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I don&#8217;t want to neglect my studies,&#8221;
+said Gus Plum. &#8220;But I have done some hard
+work this winter and so I am pretty well ahead.
+I didn&#8217;t lose time going to Cave Island, you
+know,&#8221; he added, with a smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, it was worth it&mdash;losing that time,&#8221; answered
+Dave. &#8220;It saved Mr. Wadsworth from
+ruin, and that&#8217;s a good deal.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If the baseball nine&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; commenced Buster,
+and then broke off short. &#8220;What was that?&#8221;
+he demanded, as a cry from a distance broke on
+the ears of all.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a woman&#8217;s voice!&#8221; cried Dave, quickly.
+&#8220;She is calling for help! Come on and see what
+is the matter!&#8221; And he started off on a run,
+with his school chums at his heels.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82' name='page_82'></a>82</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IX_THE_KING_OF_SUMATRA' id='CHAPTER_IX_THE_KING_OF_SUMATRA'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+<h3>THE KING OF SUMATRA</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The boys had been traveling along a broad
+highway that ran to a town on the other side of
+the woods. The trees were thick and so were the
+bushes, with here and there a big rock, covered
+with the dead vines of the summer previous.</p>
+<p>At one point some distance ahead was an old
+stone house, standing where another road ran in
+the direction of the river. This house had not
+been inhabited for years, and the doors and windows
+were gone, and the falling of the chimney
+had smashed in a large portion of the sloping
+roof.</p>
+<p>It was from in front of the old house that
+the cries for assistance came, and now the boys
+heard two voices, both somewhat girlish in
+tones.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, let me go! Please, let me go!&#8221; came,
+wildly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have no right to touch us!&#8221; was added,
+in another voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the matter?&#8221; called out Dave, as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span>
+loudly as he could. But in his mind there had
+already flashed an inkling of what was going on.
+For some time past the wild man of that locality
+had not shown himself. Now, perhaps, he was
+again at his old tricks.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, make him go away!&#8221; screamed a girlish
+voice, and then, as our hero made a turn of
+the road, he caught sight of two girls standing
+near the old stone house. Back of them was another
+figure, that of a tall, powerful man, but
+this figure disappeared as if by magic, behind the
+ancient building.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, Miss Rockwell!&#8221; exclaimed Dave, as
+he recognized a young lady from town whom he
+knew well. &#8220;And you, too, Miss Feversham!
+What is the matter?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That man&mdash;the wild man!&#8221; panted Vera
+Rockwell. &#8220;He&mdash;he&mdash;stopped us!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He wanted our purses!&#8221; added Mary Feversham,
+the other young lady.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where is he?&#8221; asked Roger and Phil, in a
+breath.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He just ran behind the house&mdash;I saw him,&#8221;
+answered Dave. &#8220;Did he hurt you any?&#8221; he
+went on, anxiously, for he and Vera and Mary
+were good friends.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, but he&mdash;he scared us so!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us go after him!&#8221; put in Phil, quickly.
+He had taken Mary Feversham out a number of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span>
+times and the two were well acquainted. &#8220;Come
+on!&#8221; and he started around the house.</p>
+<p>All of the others were not slow to follow. Behind
+the building they came upon a mass of weeds
+and bushes and in their midst the remains of an
+old well, long since caved in. What had once
+been a path led to the side road before mentioned.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the way he must have gone&mdash;down the
+side road!&#8221; cried the shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Supposing we see if we can catch him?&#8221;
+suggested Dave. &#8220;But somebody ought to go
+back, and stay with the girls,&#8221; he added thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll go back,&#8221; answered Phil. He was only
+too glad of a chance to talk to Mary, not having
+seen her for a long time.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If that fellow comes back, whistle for us,&#8221;
+advised Roger.</p>
+<p>Dave was already on the side road with Buster
+and Gus beside him, and the senator&#8217;s son quickly
+followed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t go too fast or I&mdash;I can&#8217;t ke&mdash;keep up
+with you!&#8221; panted Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you see anything of him, Dave?&#8221; queried
+Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not yet, but there is a turn just ahead. When
+we make that we&#8217;ll be able to see almost to the
+river.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span></p>
+<p>All of the students sped on, the stout lad doing
+his best to keep up with the others. They
+reached the turn with Dave a step or two in
+advance.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There he is!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I see him! Say, he&#8217;s wild-looking enough!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He is making for the river!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We ought to be able to catch him. We are
+four to one.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dave and Roger pressed forward with increased
+speed and poor Buster fell somewhat behind.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m coming as fa&mdash;fast as I ca&mdash;can!&#8221;
+blurted out the fat youth. &#8220;Go on&mdash;I&#8217;ll get there
+sooner or later!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Pick up a stick, if you see one,&#8221; cried Dave,
+to Roger and Gus. &#8220;We may have a hot fight on
+our hands. That man ought to be in jail, or in
+an asylum.&#8221;</p>
+<p>As they sped along, the three kept their eyes
+open and each presently armed himself with a fair-sized
+club. The wild man was running like a deer,
+pausing occasionally to turn and brandish his long
+arms at them savagely. They could see that his
+clothing was in tatters and that his hair and beard
+were long and unkempt.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hi! stop!&#8221; called out Dave, although he had
+but little hope of causing the man to halt. &#8220;We
+want to talk to you.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Go back! Beware! Go back, or it will be
+the worse for you!&#8221; called the wild man. &#8220;Leave
+the King of Sumatra alone!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The King of Sumatra?&#8221; repeated Roger.
+&#8220;Say, he&#8217;s crazy sure enough, to imagine himself
+that!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boys continued after the wild man and
+urged him to stop. But instead of heeding them,
+he ran on the faster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s an athlete, when it comes to running,&#8221;
+remarked Dave, as he tried in vain to get closer
+to the man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They say crazy people are always strong,&#8221;
+answered the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve go&mdash;got to gi&mdash;give up!&#8221; panted Gus,
+and came to a halt. &#8220;Go&mdash;got a pa&mdash;pain in my
+side!&#8221; And he put his hand over his hip.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, we&#8217;ll manage alone!&#8221; cried Roger.
+&#8220;I don&#8217;t think we can catch that fellow anyway,&#8221;
+he added, half under his breath.</p>
+<p>Another turn of the woodland road brought the
+Leming River into plain view, at a point where
+the stream was both wide and deep. The wild
+man kept sprinting along and it was impossible
+for the boys to draw any closer to him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shall we threaten to shoot him if he won&#8217;t
+stop?&#8221; asked Roger. Neither of the lads carried
+firearms.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_2' id='linki_2'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-002.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 319px; height: 500px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 319px;'>
+<span style='font-variant:small-caps'>&#8220;Stop!&#8221; cried Dave.</span>&mdash;<i>Page 87.</i><br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;No, he might do some shooting on his own
+account,&mdash;if he is armed. Come on, he may fall,
+or something like that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Inside of three minutes more the wild man
+gained the shore of the river and disappeared
+around a point of rocks and brushwood.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Be careful, Dave,&#8221; warned Roger. &#8220;He
+may spring out at you with a club.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got my eyes open,&#8221; was the ready reply.</p>
+<p>Both advanced with caution, and soon came up
+to the nearest of the rocks. With clubs ready for
+use, the two youths continued to move forward.
+Then they came to a sudden halt. The wild man
+was no longer in sight. What had become of
+him?</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe he ran into the woods,&#8221; suggested
+Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps, but&mdash;hark!&#8221; And our hero held
+up his hand. From a distance came a scraping
+sound, like something sliding over a rock.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look!&#8221; called out the senator&#8217;s son. &#8220;He&#8217;s
+got a boat! There he goes!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dave turned in the direction pointed out by his
+chum. Both saw a small rowboat sweep out from
+under some brushwood. In it stood the wild
+man, using an oar as a pole on the rocks.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Stop!&#8221; cried Dave. &#8220;Stop, or you may be
+sorry for it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You can&#8217;t catch the King of Sumatra!&#8221;
+yelled the wild man, and flourished his arms and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span>
+made a hideous face at them. Then he sat down
+on the middle seat of the craft, placed the oars in
+the rowlocks, and commenced to row rapidly
+down the stream.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, that&#8217;s the end of the chase,&#8221; remarked
+Dave, in some disgust.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s right, since we haven&#8217;t any boat,&#8221; returned
+Roger. &#8220;Wonder where he got that
+craft? I don&#8217;t think he bought it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It isn&#8217;t likely. Probably he saw it somewhere
+along the river and simply appropriated it.&#8221; And
+this proved to be true.</p>
+<p>The boys watched the wild man until a bend of
+the stream hid rower and craft from view. Then
+they turned back in the direction of the old stone
+house.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you get him?&#8221; demanded Buster, who
+was waiting with Gus at the point where he had
+dropped out of the race.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; answered Roger, and told why.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He sure is a cute one,&#8221; went on the stout
+youth. &#8220;Say, if they don&#8217;t catch him soon, he&#8217;ll
+have this whole neighborhood scared to death.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The students soon reached the old house.
+Here they found the two girls and Phil, the latter
+with a heavy stick in his hand, ready for any
+emergency. The girls had calmed down a little,
+but were still much agitated.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We were to come home in my uncle&#8217;s carriage,&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span>
+said Mary Feversham. &#8220;But the horse
+got a lame foot and so we decided to walk. We
+had heard of the wild man, but did not think we
+would meet him. Oh, it was dreadful!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He didn&#8217;t hurt you, did he?&#8221; asked Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, no, but he frightened us so! He danced
+around us and caught us by the arms, and he
+wanted us to give him money! Oh, it was dreadful!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He ought to be in an asylum,&#8221; said Dave.
+And then he and Roger related how the wild man
+had escaped.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I sha&#8217;n&#8217;t go out alone again,&#8221; said Vera
+Rockwell. &#8220;That is, not until that man is captured.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll take you both home,&#8221; said Phil,
+promptly, looking at Mary.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But we don&#8217;t want to keep you from what
+you were going to do,&#8221; said Vera.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, we were only out for a walk,&#8221; replied
+Dave. &#8220;We&#8217;ll walk to town with you. Maybe
+we&#8217;ll hear something more of this strange fellow.&#8221;</p>
+<p>All turned back on the road that led close to
+Oak Hall, and after discussing the wild man from
+various points of view, the conversation turned
+to other matters. The girls told of what they had
+been doing during the past holidays and asked the
+boys about themselves.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I heard that that horrid Jasniff is under arrest,&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span>
+said Vera to Dave. &#8220;I am glad of it. It
+is a pity that Merwell got away.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps,&#8221; answered our hero. &#8220;But, somehow,
+I sometimes think that Link Merwell will
+turn over a new leaf.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Vera looked back, to make sure that none of the
+others were near.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just like Mr. Plum, I suppose you mean,&#8221;
+she whispered. &#8220;Oh, it was splendid, what you
+did for him, Dave!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I didn&#8217;t do much for Gus.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;My brother thinks you did. He heard the
+whole story. It was brave and noble of you, it
+was indeed!&#8221; And Vera&#8217;s face showed her earnestness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, Gus has turned out a nice fellow. I
+wish Merwell would turn out as good.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But he helped to take those jewels.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is true&mdash;and that will always be a black
+mark against him,&#8221; said Dave, soberly.</p>
+<p>Soon all reached the outskirts of Oakdale and
+there, at one of the corners, the boys left the girls.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Pretty late!&#8221; cried Gus Plum, consulting the
+watch he carried. &#8220;We&#8217;ll have to hike back
+lively, if we don&#8217;t want to be marked up for
+tardiness.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We can get an excuse, if we tell about the
+wild man,&#8221; said Buster. &#8220;I&#8217;ve hurried all I&#8217;m
+going to.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll certainly have a yarn to spin when we
+get back to the school,&#8221; was Phil&#8217;s comment.</p>
+<p>At the entrance to the campus the boys, who
+were a little late, met the first assistant to Doctor
+Clay. As my old readers know Mr. Dale was
+as pleasant as Job Haskers was disagreeable.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Had a fine walk, boys?&#8221; he asked, with a
+smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We had an adventure,&#8221; answered Dave, and
+then he and his chums told what it was.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well! well! that wild man again,&#8221; mused the
+instructor. &#8220;This is getting truly serious. I was
+hoping he would leave this neighborhood. And
+so he calls himself the King of Sumatra? That
+is strange.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It certainly is strange,&#8221; answered Dave.</p>
+<p>But how strange, our hero was still to find out.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_X_NAT_POOLE_WANTS_TO_KNOW' id='CHAPTER_X_NAT_POOLE_WANTS_TO_KNOW'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+<h3>NAT POOLE WANTS TO KNOW</h3>
+</div>
+<p>That evening Dave was on his way to the
+school library, to consult a certain work of reference,
+when he ran into another student who suddenly
+grasped him by the shoulder. It was rather
+dark where the pair confronted each other, and
+for the instant our hero did not recognize the
+fellow.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you want?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I want to speak to you for a minute, Dave
+Porter,&#8221; said the other, in a voice that trembled
+a trifle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, it&#8217;s you, Nat,&#8221; answered Dave, as he
+recognized the son of the Crumville money-lender.
+&#8220;What do you want?&#8221; He rather
+imagined that the youth wished to pick another
+quarrel with him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&mdash;I want to talk in private with you,&#8221; returned
+Nat, and looked around, to see if anybody
+else was near.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What about?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You were out walking this afternoon and met
+that wild man, so I heard.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;That is true.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You tried to catch him, didn&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, Roger Morr, Buster Beggs, Gus Plum,
+and I did our best to collar him, but he was
+too fast for us. He ran down to the river, got
+into a rowboat, and rowed away.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So I heard. And I heard something else,&#8221;
+continued the boy from Crumville. &#8220;When you
+called to the man to stop he answered back, didn&#8217;t
+he?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you please tell me what he said?&#8221; And
+Nat&#8217;s voice had an eager ring in it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He told us to beware and go back, or we&#8217;d
+get into trouble.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Didn&#8217;t he say something more than that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, yes, a great deal more.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He called himself something, didn&#8217;t he?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. Look here, Nat, what is this to you?
+Why are you so interested?&#8221; queried Dave, for
+he could easily perceive that the other youth was
+more than ordinarily anxious to know the particulars
+of what had occurred.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&mdash;I&mdash;want to&mdash;er&mdash;know, that&#8217;s all. Did
+he call himself anything?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes; he thinks he is the King of Sumatra.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He called himself that?&#8221; asked Nat, with increased
+excitement.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, two or three times. But see here,
+Nat&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you please tell me how he looked? Was
+he tall and rather thin?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And what kind of hair did he have?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Brownish-red, as near as I could make out,
+and very long. And he had rather a long beard
+and a large nose,&#8221; went on our hero.</p>
+<p>At this brief but accurate description of the
+wild man, Nat Poole paled a trifle and uttered
+something of a gasp.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Whe&mdash;where did he go?&#8221; he faltered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He rowed down the river just as fast as he
+could. I don&#8217;t know how far he went, for the
+bend hid him from view,&#8221; answered our hero.
+&#8220;Say, Nat, do you think you know that man?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why&mdash;er&mdash;know him? Of course I don&#8217;t
+know him,&#8221; was the stammered-out reply. &#8220;But
+I&mdash;I think&mdash;maybe&mdash;I&#8217;ve met him.&#8221; And then,
+to avoid further questioning, Nat Poole hurried
+away. Our hero could do nothing but stare
+after him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is mighty queer,&#8221; mused Dave, as he
+turned into the library to consult the reference
+book. &#8220;If Nat doesn&#8217;t know the man, why was
+he so anxious? He acted scared to death when
+I said the fellow called himself the King of
+Sumatra.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span></p>
+<p>Dave remained in the school library for a half
+an hour and then joined Phil, Roger, and the
+others in Dormitory Number Twelve. He found
+the students discussing a talk Roger had had with
+Nat Poole only a few minutes before.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nat called me out in the hallway,&#8221; said the
+senator&#8217;s son. &#8220;He wanted to know all about
+that wild man, and he wanted to make dead certain
+that he had called himself the King of
+Sumatra.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is certainly queer&mdash;on top of what happened
+to me,&#8221; said Dave, and told of the interview
+he had had.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, this is a puzzle,&#8221; declared Phil, slowly.
+&#8220;What do you make of it, Dave?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think Nat imagines he knows the wild
+man.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the way it looks to me,&#8221; added the
+senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, you don&#8217;t suppose that wild man has
+anything to do with the fellows Nat used to
+train with&mdash;Jasniff, Merwell, and that crowd?&#8221;
+questioned Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s possible, but I don&#8217;t think so,&#8221; returned
+our hero. &#8220;He is surely a crazy individual, and
+as nobody around here seems to know him, he
+must be a stranger to these parts.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But what would make Nat so interested?&#8221;
+asked little Chip Macklin.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Give it up,&#8221; answered Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe he has something to tell, but won&#8217;t tell
+it to us,&#8221; ventured Phil. &#8220;He may go right to
+the doctor.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But if Nat Poole went to the master of Oak
+Hall, or to anybody else at that institution, the
+boys did not hear of it. He asked no more questions
+about the wild man, and when any of our
+friends came near him he immediately walked
+away, thus avoiding an interview.</p>
+<p>The proposed meeting of the athletic committee
+of Oak Hall was held on Saturday afternoon in
+the gymnasium and was well attended. An even
+twenty names had been put up for the regular
+baseball nine of the institution. Of these names,
+fifteen belonged to old students and five were
+those of newcomers to Oak Hall. As he had said
+he would do, Gus Plum had handed in his name,
+and so had Sam Day and some of our other
+friends. But Dave, Phil, and Roger were conspicuous
+by their absence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;See here, Porter, you&#8217;re going to play, aren&#8217;t
+you?&#8221; asked the former manager.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; answered Dave, quietly but firmly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why not?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, in the first place, I have too many back
+lessons to make up, and in the second place, I hope
+to graduate this coming June, and I want to make
+a record for myself, if possible.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;But you can do that and play on the nine,
+too,&#8221; urged the manager.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think so. I&#8217;d like to play,&#8221; continued
+our hero, wistfully, &#8220;but I don&#8217;t see how I
+can.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;This isn&#8217;t fair, Porter. We really need you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, it isn&#8217;t as bad as that,&#8221; returned Dave,
+with a faint smile. &#8220;You&#8217;ve got Gus Plum to
+pitch, and some of the others. There are plenty
+of good ball-players here this term.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know about that,&#8221; answered the manager,
+with a grave shake of his head. &#8220;I wish
+you&#8217;d come in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not this year,&#8221; said Dave; and then the two
+separated.</p>
+<p>Phil and Roger were likewise urged to try for
+the nine, but they followed Dave&#8217;s example.
+Then a tentative nine was formed, with Gus Plum
+as pitcher, and also a &#8220;scrub&#8221; nine, with one of
+the newcomers to Oak Hall in the box. Practice
+was to start on Wednesday afternoon of the
+following week.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Too bad we couldn&#8217;t take part,&#8221; sighed the
+shipowner&#8217;s son. &#8220;I&#8217;d like to wallop the Rockville
+Military Academy fellows just once more!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, we can&#8217;t have everything,&#8221; answered
+Dave. &#8220;I want to graduate with the highest possible
+honors, and that means plenty of hard
+boning.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;And a fellow can&#8217;t bone and play ball, too,&#8221;
+added Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We might&mdash;if old Haskers would be easy
+on us,&#8221; murmured the shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now, see here, Phil,&#8221; said Dave, almost
+sternly. &#8220;Don&#8217;t ask Haskers for any more favors.
+He has done all that can reasonably be
+expected of him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, just as you say,&#8221; grumbled Phil.
+But his manner showed that he was not altogether
+satisfied.</p>
+<p>A week went by, and Dave and his chums applied
+themselves diligently to their studies. During
+that time nothing more was heard of the wild
+man, and the excitement concerning that strange
+individual again died down. But the folks living
+in the vicinity of the woods back of Oak Hall
+were on their guard, and it was seldom that
+women and children went out alone.</p>
+<p>The boys were doing very well in their studies,
+and Dave received warm words of encouragement
+from Andrew Dale. He had made up nearly all
+the back lessons imposed upon him by Job Haskers,
+and that dictatorial teacher could not help
+but be satisfied over the showing made. Roger
+was also doing well, and poor Phil was the only
+one who was backward, although not enough to
+cause alarm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll get there, but it comes hard,&#8221; said the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span>
+shipowner&#8217;s son. &#8220;I should have asked old Haskers
+for more time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you do it,&#8221; answered Dave. &#8220;Come,
+I&#8217;ll help you all I can.&#8221; Which he did.</p>
+<p>One day there came a letter to our hero which
+gave him great satisfaction. He read it carefully,
+and then hastened off to communicate the
+news to Phil, Roger, and Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a letter from my Uncle Dunston,&#8221; he
+explained to his chums. &#8220;If you will remember,
+he said he would hire a lawyer to take up
+that Mrs. Breen case against Professor Haskers.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What does he say?&#8221; asked Roger, quickly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will read it to you,&#8221; answered Dave, and
+read the following:</p>
+<p style='margin-left:1.0em; margin-right:1.0em; '>&#8220;You will be glad to learn that Mr. Loveland,
+one of our lawyers, has gotten a settlement for
+Mrs. Breen out of your teacher, Mr. Haskers.
+He had quite a time of it, Haskers declaring that
+he did not owe as much as the widow said he did.
+The lawyer said he would sue for the full amount,
+and then Haskers came to see him. Mr. Loveland
+says the teacher wanted to learn who had
+hired him to stir the matter up, and mentioned
+some students&#8217; names. But the lawyer gave him
+no satisfaction at all, and at last Haskers paid up
+in full, took his receipt, and got out. I instructed
+Mr. Loveland to put his charges for services on
+our bill, so Mrs. Breen will get the entire amount
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span>
+collected. I am going to take it to her in person,
+and see to it that it is wisely invested for her
+benefit.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good!&#8221; cried the senator&#8217;s son. &#8220;That will
+help the old lady a great deal.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, I&#8217;ll bet old Haskers was sore when he
+forked over that money,&#8221; was Ben&#8217;s comment.
+&#8220;No wonder he&#8217;s been looking like a thundercloud
+lately.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, and he&#8217;d let out on us&mdash;if he dared,&#8221;
+said Phil. &#8220;But he doesn&#8217;t dare.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be too sure of that, Phil,&#8221; said Dave,
+seriously. &#8220;There is no telling what he will do&mdash;later
+on, when he thinks this affair has blown
+over.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph! I am not afraid of him,&#8221; declared
+Phil, recklessly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If he tries any of his games we&#8217;ll expose him,&#8221;
+added Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Better go slow,&#8221; advised Roger. He, too,
+felt that Job Haskers might become very vindictive.</p>
+<p>Spring was now at hand, and a week later came
+the first baseball game of the season. It was a
+contest with Esmore Academy from Daytonville
+and held on the Oak Hall grounds. Quite a
+crowd was present, including some of the town
+folks. Gus Plum was in the pitcher&#8217;s box for the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span>
+Hall, and Sam Day was on first base, and Chip
+Macklin on third.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hope we win!&#8221; cried Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hope you do,&#8221; answered Vera Rockwell,
+who was present with some other girls. &#8220;But
+why are you not playing?&#8221; she went on.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not this term,&#8221; said our hero, with a smile,
+and then he spoke of his studies.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose it is noble of you to give up this
+way,&#8221; she said. &#8220;But&mdash;I&#8217;d like to see you play.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The contest proved a well-fought one, and was
+won by Oak Hall by a score of eight runs to five.
+At the conclusion there was a great cheering for
+the victors.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This means bonfires to-night!&#8221; cried Roger,
+as the gathering broke up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, and a grand good time!&#8221; added Buster
+Beggs.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XI_BONFIRE_NIGHT_AT_THE_HALL' id='CHAPTER_XI_BONFIRE_NIGHT_AT_THE_HALL'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+<h3>BONFIRE NIGHT AT THE HALL</h3>
+</div>
+<p>It was certainly a night long to be remembered
+in the annals of Oak Hall,&mdash;and for more
+reasons than one.</p>
+<p>At the start, several bonfires were lit along the
+bank of the river, and around these the students
+congregated, to dance and sing songs, and &#8220;cut
+up&#8221; generally. None of the teachers were present,
+and it was given out that the lads might
+enjoy themselves within reasonable bounds until
+ten o&#8217;clock.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s form a grand march!&#8221; cried Gus Plum.
+&#8220;Every man with a torch!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, but don&#8217;t set anything on fire,&#8221; cautioned
+Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, that puts me in mind of a story,&#8221; came
+from Shadow. &#8220;A fellow went into a powder
+shop to buy some ammunition. He was smoking a
+pipe, and the proprietor&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Whoop! Hurrah for Shadow!&#8221; yelled somebody
+from the rear, and the next instant the
+story-teller of the Hall found himself up on a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span>
+pile of barrels which had not yet been set on
+fire.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now then, tell your yarns to everybody!&#8221;
+came the cry.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Speak loud, Shadow!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Give us all the details.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tell us the story about the old man and the
+elephant.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, give us that about the old maid and the
+mouse.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us hear about the fellow who was shipwrecked
+on the Rocky Mountains.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Or about how the fellow who couldn&#8217;t swim
+fell into a flour barrel.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, what do you take me for?&#8221; roared
+Shadow. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know any story about the
+Rocky Mountains, or a flour barrel either. If you
+want to hear&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure we do!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the very yarn we&#8217;ve been waiting
+for!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, Shadow, won&#8217;t you please tell it into a
+phonograph, so I can grind it out to my grandfather
+when I get home?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that the story that starts on a foggy night,
+at noon?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, this one starts on a dusty day in the middle
+of the Atlantic.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, if you fellows want me to tell a story, say
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span>
+so!&#8221; grumbled Shadow. &#8220;Otherwise I&#8217;m going
+to get down.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No! no! Tell your best yarn, Shadow.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, then. Once two men went into a
+shoe store&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wow! That&#8217;s fifty years old!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I heard that when a child, at my grandson&#8217;s
+knee.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tell us something about smoke, Shadow!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And fire. I love to hear about a fire. It&#8217;s
+so warm and&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hi! let me get down! Do you want to burn
+me up?&#8221; yelled the story-teller of the school,
+suddenly, as, chancing to glance down, he saw
+that the barrels were on fire. &#8220;Let me down, I
+say!&#8221; And he made a leap from the barrels
+into the midst of the crowd.</p>
+<p>Shadow landed on the shoulders of Nat Poole,
+and both went down and rolled over. In a spirit
+of play some of the students near by covered the
+rolling pair with shavings and straw. Shadow
+took this in good part and merely laughed as he
+arose, but the money-lender&#8217;s son was angry.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hi, who threw those dirty shavings all over
+me?&#8221; he bawled. &#8220;I don&#8217;t like it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t mind a little bath like that, Nat!&#8221;
+called one of the students.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But I do mind it. The shavings are full of
+dirt, and so is the straw. The dirt is all over me.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104' name='page_104'></a>104</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Never mind, you can have a free bath, Nat,&#8221;
+said another.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll lend you a cake of soap,&#8221; added a third.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t want any of your soap!&#8221; growled the
+money-lender&#8217;s son. &#8220;Say, the whole crowd of
+you make me sick!&#8221; he added, and walked off, in
+great disgust.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Phew! but he&#8217;s touchy,&#8221; was the comment of
+one of the students. &#8220;I guess he thinks he&#8217;s better
+than the rest of us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s give him another dose,&#8221; came the suggestion,
+from the rear of the crowd.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shavings?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, and straw, too. Put some down his
+neck!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Right you are!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Fully a dozen students quickly provided themselves
+with shavings and straw, both far from
+clean, and made after Nat, who was walking
+up the river-front in the direction of the boathouse.</p>
+<p>Before the money-lender&#8217;s son could do anything
+to defend himself, he found himself seized
+from behind and hurled to the ground.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now then, give it to him good!&#8221; cried a
+voice, and in a twinkling a shower of shavings,
+straw, and dirt descended upon poor Nat, covering
+him from head to foot.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hi! let up!&#8221; spluttered the victim, trying to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span>
+dodge the avalanche. But instead of heeding his
+pleadings the other students proceeded to ram a
+quantity of the stuff into his ears and down his
+collar. Nat squirmed and yelled, but it did little
+good.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now then, you are initiated into the Order
+of Straw and Shavings!&#8221; cried one merry student.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just you wait, I&#8217;ll get square, see if I don&#8217;t,&#8221;
+howled Nat, as he arose. Then he commenced to
+twist his neck, to free himself from the ticklish
+straw and shavings.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come on and have a good time, old sport!&#8221;
+howled one of his tormentors; and then off the
+crowd ran in the direction of the bonfires, leaving
+Nat more disgusted than ever.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll fix them, just wait and see if I don&#8217;t!&#8221;
+stormed the money-lender&#8217;s son to himself, and
+then hurried to the Hall, to clean up and make
+himself comfortable.</p>
+<p>In the meantime the march around the campus
+had begun, each student carrying a torch of some
+kind. There was a great singing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Be careful of the fire,&#8221; warned Mr. Dale, as
+he came out. &#8220;Doctor Clay says you must be
+careful.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll take care!&#8221; was the cry.</p>
+<p>The marching at an end, some of the boys ran
+for the stables and presently returned with Jackson
+Lemond, the driver of the school carryall,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span>
+commonly called Horsehair, because of the hairs
+which clung to his clothing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come on, Horsehair, join us in having a
+good time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Give us a speech, Horsehair!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tell us all you know about the Wars of the
+Roses.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Or how Hannibal crossed the Delaware and
+defeated the Turks at the Alamo.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t make no speech,&#8221; pleaded the carryall
+driver. &#8220;Just you let me go, please!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you can&#8217;t make a speech, sing,&#8221; suggested
+another. &#8220;Give us Yankee Doodle in the key
+of J minor.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Or that beautiful lullaby entitled, &#8216;You
+Never Miss Your Purse Until You Have to Walk
+Home.&#8217; Give us that in nine flats, will you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I tell you I can&#8217;t make a speech and I can&#8217;t
+sing!&#8221; shouted out the driver for the school, desperately.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How sad! Can&#8217;t speechify and can&#8217;t sing!
+All right, then, let it go, and give us a
+dance.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the talk! A real Japanese jig in five-quarter
+time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a rush, and in a twinkling poor
+Horsehair was boosted to the top of a big packing-case,
+that had been hauled to the spot as fuel
+for one of the bonfires.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;The stage!&#8221; announced one of the students,
+with a wave of his hand. &#8220;The World-Renowned
+Horsehairsky will perform his celebrated Dance
+of the Hop Scotch. Get your opera glasses
+ready.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the admission fee?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Two pins and a big green apple.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t dance&mdash;I ain&#8217;t never danced in my
+life!&#8221; pleaded the victim. &#8220;You let me go.
+I&#8217;ve got to take care o&#8217; my hosses.&#8221;</p>
+<p>While he was speaking Buster Beggs had come
+up behind Horsehair and placed something attached
+to a dark string on the box, between the
+driver&#8217;s feet. It was an imitation snake, made of
+rubber and colored up to look very natural.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh my, look at the snake!&#8221; yelled several,
+in pretended alarm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where? where?&#8221; yelled Horsehair.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There, right between your feet! He&#8217;s going
+to bite you on the leg!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Take care, that&#8217;s a rattler sure!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If he bites you, Horsehair, you&#8217;ll be a dead
+man!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Take him off! Take him off!&#8221; bawled the
+carryall driver, and in terror he made a wild leap
+from the packing-box and landed directly on the
+shoulders of two of the students. Then he
+dropped to the ground, rolled over, got up, and
+ran as fast as his legs could carry him in the direction
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span>
+of the stables. A wild laugh followed him,
+but to this he paid no attention.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, we are certainly having a night of it,&#8221;
+remarked Dave, after the fun had quieted down
+for a moment. He spoke to Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where is Phil?&#8221; asked the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Went off with Ben, I think.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where to?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s queer how much they keep together
+lately; isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; continued Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t know. Of course that affair
+with Haskers may have something to do with it,&#8221;
+answered our hero, slowly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wish Haskers would leave this school,
+Dave.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, it won&#8217;t make much difference to us, if
+we graduate, whether he stays or not.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know that. But, somehow, I don&#8217;t think
+he is a good man to have here, even if he is a
+learned instructor. He never enters into the
+school spirit, as Mr. Dale does.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, we can&#8217;t all be alike.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would you keep him, if you were in Doctor
+Clay&#8217;s shoes?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hardly think so. Certainly not if I could
+find another teacher equally good.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boys walked on until they found themselves
+at the last bonfire of the line, close
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span>
+to where the school grounds came to an end.
+Here was a hedge, and beyond were the woods
+reaching up from the river.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nobody down by this bonfire,&#8221; remarked
+Dave. &#8220;Say, this is careless work,&#8221; he added.
+&#8220;The wind might shift and set the woods on
+fire.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t think they&#8217;d start a fire so far from
+the others,&#8221; answered his chum.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us kick it into the water,&#8221; suggested our
+hero, and this they started to do, when, unexpectedly,
+a voice hailed them, and they saw a student
+sitting in a tree that grew in the hedge which
+separated the campus from the woods.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let that fire alone!&#8221; the youth called, angrily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, it&#8217;s Nat Poole!&#8221; exclaimed Roger, in
+a low voice. &#8220;Whatever is he doing in that
+tree?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am sure I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; returned Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is he alone?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He seems to be.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you hear what I say?&#8221; went on the
+money-lender&#8217;s son. &#8220;Leave that fire alone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you build it?&#8221; asked Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I did, and I want you to leave it alone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, Nat, if you say so,&#8221; answered
+Roger. &#8220;We thought it had been abandoned and
+that it might set fire to the woods.&#8221;</p>
+<p>To this Nat Poole did not reply. Plainly he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span>
+was annoyed at being discovered in his present
+position. Dave and Roger looked around, to see
+if anybody else was in the vicinity, and then,
+turning, walked in the direction of the other bonfires.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you make of that, Dave?&#8221; asked
+the senator&#8217;s son, presently.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It looked to me as if Nat was waiting or
+watching for somebody, Roger.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So it did. The question is, Who was it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. But I&#8217;ve got something of an
+idea.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Some of the students?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No. That wild man.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XII_PLANS_FOR_A_SPREAD' id='CHAPTER_XII_PLANS_FOR_A_SPREAD'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+<h3>PLANS FOR A SPREAD</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;That wild man?&#8221; exclaimed the senator&#8217;s
+son, stopping short to stare at Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How do you make that out?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because I think Nat is interested in the fellow,
+although just how I won&#8217;t pretend to say.
+But you&#8217;ll remember how excited he got when he
+found out that the wild man called himself the
+King of Sumatra.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I see. You think he knows the fellow
+and thought that the bonfire might attract him to
+the place.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. I&#8217;ve heard it said that crazy folks were
+sometimes attracted by the sight of fire. Maybe
+Nat has heard the same and wants to see if it will
+work in the case of this man.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shall we go back and see what happens?&#8221;
+suggested Roger.</p>
+<p>Dave mused for a moment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would it be just right to play the spy,
+Roger?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, this isn&#8217;t playing the spy in the ordinary
+sense of the term, Dave. That wild man
+ought to be locked up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But it may not be the wild man he is looking
+for.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, let us go back a little while, anyway,&#8221;
+urged the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>They retraced their steps until within fifty feet
+of the bonfire and then walked to the shelter of
+the hedge. They thought they had not been seen,
+but they were mistaken.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph! so you think you are going to spy
+on me, after all!&#8221; cried a voice, and Nat Poole
+came towards them, with a deep frown on his
+face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s rather queer you are in the tree,&#8221; answered
+Roger, somewhat sharply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s my affair, not yours, Roger Morr!&#8221;
+roared the money-lender&#8217;s son. Then, without
+another word, he walked to the bonfire, kicked
+the blazing sticks into the river, and strode off
+in the direction of the Hall.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s good and mad,&#8221; was Roger&#8217;s comment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And we didn&#8217;t learn anything, after all,&#8221;
+added our hero.</p>
+<p>Dave and his chum rejoined the merry throng
+at the other bonfires. But the celebration in
+honor of the baseball victory was practically at
+an end, and a little later the students retired, to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span>
+skylark a little in the dormitories, and then settle
+down for the night.</p>
+<p>A week passed, and Dave stuck to his studies
+as persistently as ever. During that time he sent
+off several letters, and received a number in return,
+including one from Jessie, which he treasured
+very highly and which he did not show to his
+chums.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here is news of Link Merwell,&#8221; said Luke
+Watson, one day, as he came along with a letter.
+&#8220;It&#8217;s from a friend of mine who knows Merwell.
+He says he saw Link in Quebec, Canada, at one
+of the little French hotels in the lower town.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What was Merwell doing?&#8221; questioned
+Dave, with interest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nothing much, so my friend writes. He says
+Link was dressed in a blue suit and wore blue
+glasses, and he thought his hair was dyed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Evidently doing what he could to disguise
+himself,&#8221; was Phil&#8217;s comment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My friend writes that he saw Merwell only
+one evening. The next day he was missing. He
+made inquiries and says he was at the hotel under
+the name of V. A. Smith, of Albany, New York.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He does not dare to travel around under his
+own name,&#8221; remarked Shadow. &#8220;Say, that puts
+me in mind of a story,&#8221; he went on, brightening
+up. &#8220;Once a chap changed his name, because&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, cut it out,&#8221; interrupted Phil. &#8220;We want
+to hear about Merwell.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;There isn&#8217;t any more to tell,&#8221; said Luke.
+&#8220;My friend tried to find out where he had gone
+but couldn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He must be having a lonely time of it&mdash;trying
+to keep out of the hands of the law,&#8221; murmured
+Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And maybe he hasn&#8217;t much money,&#8221; said
+Buster. &#8220;His father may have shut down on
+him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Gus Plum listened to all this conversation without
+saying a word. But down in his heart the
+former bully of Oak Hall was glad that he had
+cut away from Merwell and Jasniff, and turned
+over a new leaf, and he resolved then and there
+that, come what might, he would never again turn
+aside from the path of right and honor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, why don&#8217;t you listen to my story?&#8221;
+pleaded Shadow, and then related a somewhat
+rambling tale of a man who had changed his
+name and, later on, lost some property because
+of it.</p>
+<p>Another day slipped by and it was one of particular
+interest to Dave and Roger, for in the morning
+they made up the last of the back lessons
+imposed upon them by Job Haskers. They had
+done exceedingly well, but the harsh teacher gave
+them little credit. Phil and Ben had still three
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span>
+days&#8217; work, but Professor Haskers said nothing
+of this.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He doesn&#8217;t dare,&#8221; declared the shipowner&#8217;s
+son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s right,&#8221; chuckled Ben. &#8220;We could
+give him a good black eye before this whole
+school if we wanted to.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dave had already finished up the back lessons
+for the other teachers, so he was now free to
+spend his time on what was ahead of him. He
+was as enthusiastic as ever to make a record for
+himself, and pitched in with a will, and his enthusiasm
+was caught by Roger, who also resolved to
+do his best.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Whoop! hurrah! What do you think of
+this?&#8221; came from Phil, late one afternoon, after
+the mail had been distributed. &#8220;Somebody hold
+me down! I guess I&#8217;m going to fly! Or maybe
+I&#8217;m only dreaming!&#8221; And he began to caper
+around gayly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is it all about, Phil?&#8221; asked Dave.
+&#8220;Hit your funny-bone?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Money, boys, money! That&#8217;s what it is
+about,&#8221; replied the shipowner&#8217;s son. &#8220;I&#8217;ve got
+five thousand dollars, all my own!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Five thousand dollars!&#8221; gasped Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All your own?&#8221; queried Gus Plum.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where did you get it?&#8221; asked another.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, it&#8217;s this way,&#8221; answered Phil, when he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span>
+could calm down a little. &#8220;About two years ago
+a great-uncle of mine died, leaving considerable
+money. He was interested in various enterprises
+and his death brought on legal complications and
+some litigation. He left his money to a lot of
+heirs, including myself. My father and I never
+thought we&#8217;d get anything&mdash;thought the lawyers
+and courts would swallow it all. But now it seems
+that it has been settled, and yours truly gets five
+thousand dollars in cash.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When do you get it, Phil, right away?&#8221; asked
+Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&mdash;er&mdash;I, of course, don&#8217;t get it until I
+am of age. It&#8217;s to go in the bank.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Won&#8217;t you get any of it until then?&#8221; asked
+Shadow. &#8220;Your dad might let you have a little,
+just to celebrate&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s just it&mdash;just what he has done!&#8221; cried
+Phil. &#8220;I&#8217;ve got&#8211;&#8211; But wait,&#8221; cried the shipowner&#8217;s
+son, interrupting himself. &#8220;I&#8217;ll plan this
+thing out. You shall all be my guests later on,&#8221;
+he added, mysteriously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you give a spread?&#8221; asked Chip
+Macklin.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t ask questions, only wait,&#8221; returned
+Phil. And that was all he would say on the point,
+although he talked freely about his inheritance.</p>
+<p>The next morning Phil and Ben were seen in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span>
+earnest conversation, and that afternoon the two
+boys left the school as soon as they could get
+away, bound on an errand to Oakdale.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We ought to get a dandy spread for a dollar
+or a dollar and a half a head,&#8221; said Phil, as they
+hurried along. &#8220;And twelve at a dollar and a
+half will be only eighteen dollars.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The music will cost something,&#8221; said Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I&#8217;m counting on two pieces, a harp and
+a violin, for ten dollars. That&#8217;s the price Professor
+Smuller charges.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boys were bound for the Oakdale Union
+House, a new hotel which had just been opened
+by a man named Jason Sparr. It was a nice
+resort, without a bar, and catered to the better
+class of people, including the students at Oak
+Hall and at the Military Academy.</p>
+<p>The boys found the hotel proprietor glad to
+see them, and willing to set any kind of a spread
+that they were able to pay for. Trade was not
+yet brisk, and Jason Sparr said he would do his
+best to serve them. He was a smooth, oily man,
+and a fellow who wanted all that was coming to
+him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can set you an elegant table for eighteen
+dollars for twelve,&#8221; said he. &#8220;I&#8217;ll give you oysters,
+fish, two kinds of meat, several vegetables,
+salad, ice-cream, coffee, and also nuts, cake, olives,
+celery, and other fixings.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the talk!&#8221; cried Phil, enthusiastically.
+&#8220;Just make a nice spread of it, and you can have
+all our trade in the future.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll be well pleased,&#8221; answered Jason
+Sparr.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can we have a private dining-room?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To be sure&mdash;the blue room over yonder,&#8221; and
+the hotel man showed the boys the apartment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I want some flowers, too,&#8221; said Phil. &#8220;You
+can put two dollars&#8217; worth of roses on the
+table.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well&mdash;that will make an even twenty
+dollars.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When do you want me to pay?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Such spreads are usually paid for in advance,&#8221;
+answered Jason Sparr, shrewdly. He did
+not intend to take any chances with schoolboys.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, here is your money,&#8221; answered the
+shipowner&#8217;s son, and brought forth one of the
+two crisp twenty-dollar bills his father had mailed
+to him, with the good news of his fortune.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tell him about the music,&#8221; suggested Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, yes, I thought I&#8217;d have Professor
+Smuller furnish some music&mdash;harp and violin.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fine! They can sit in the alcove, and we&#8217;ll
+put some of our palms around them,&#8221; returned
+Jason Sparr.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Remember, this is for next Saturday night,
+seven o&#8217;clock sharp,&#8221; said Phil.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got it down,&#8221; returned the hotel proprietor,
+as he wrote in his book.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And don&#8217;t say anything to anybody about it.
+I want to surprise my friends.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well, mum&#8217;s the word,&#8221; and the hotel
+man looked very wise and knowing.</p>
+<p>Leaving the place, Phil and Ben sought out the
+home of Professor Smuller, a violinist, who, with
+a friend who played the harp, often furnished
+music for dances and other occasions.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, yes, I can furnish music,&#8221; said the
+violinist. &#8220;Just tell me what you want.&#8221; Business
+was slow and he was glad to get any sort of
+an engagement.</p>
+<p>The matter was explained, and the professor
+promised to be on hand and bring the harpist
+with him. He said he could play anything the
+students desired, including the well-known school
+songs. He would fill the engagement for the boys
+for eight dollars, although his regular price was
+ten. But he would have to have cash in advance.</p>
+<p>Again Phil paid out his money, and then, the
+business concluded, he and Ben left the professor&#8217;s
+home and hurried along the road leading to Oak
+Hall.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have you made up your list yet?&#8221; asked
+Ben, when nearing the school.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not quite. I&#8217;ll have Dave and Roger and
+Shadow and Buster, of course. I&#8217;ll have to leave
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span>
+out some fellows, but that can&#8217;t be helped. I
+can&#8217;t afford a spread for the whole school.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course you can&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think I&#8217;ll have Luke and Sam, and maybe
+Gus and Chip.&#8221;</p>
+<p>As the boys drew closer to the school Ben had
+to stop to fix his shoe. Both sat down on some
+rocks, at a turn in the road. They were about
+to go on again when somebody made the turn
+of the road, coming from the town. It was Nat
+Poole.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello! you been to town?&#8221; cried Ben, good-naturedly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; answered the money-lender&#8217;s son.
+&#8220;Haven&#8217;t I a right to go if I want to?&#8221; he
+added, and then hurried on ahead of them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Rather peppery,&#8221; mused Ben. &#8220;Say, Phil,
+there is one fellow you won&#8217;t invite, and I know it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Right you are, Ben,&#8221; was the ready answer.
+&#8220;All I ask of Nat Poole is, that he leave me
+alone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Nat was not to leave Phil alone, as events
+were quickly to prove.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIII_THE_CABIN_ON_THE_ISLAND' id='CHAPTER_XIII_THE_CABIN_ON_THE_ISLAND'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+<h3>THE CABIN ON THE ISLAND</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Dave, come on out for a row. You haven&#8217;t
+been on the river this year.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was Gus Plum who spoke. He was out in
+one of the craft belonging to Oak Hall, and hailed
+our hero as the latter was strolling along the
+river-bank.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, Gus!&#8221; Dave cried, cheerily. &#8220;I
+don&#8217;t know but that a try at the oars will do me
+good, after the hard studying I&#8217;ve been doing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are bound to get a high-water mark this
+term, aren&#8217;t you?&#8221; went on Gus Plum, as he
+brought the rowboat up to the dock, so that Dave
+might get in.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d like to graduate with honor, yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What are you going to do after you leave
+here, Dave?&#8221; went on the big youth, as the
+two rowed up the river.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know yet. Have you made up your
+mind?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I think I&#8217;ll go into business, but I am not
+sure.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You won&#8217;t try for college?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No. You see, I don&#8217;t make much of a fist at
+learning, so what&#8217;s the use? But I love business&mdash;buying
+and selling things.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The two boys continued at the oars until the
+vicinity of Oak Hall was left far behind.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If we only had a power-boat we might run
+up to Squirrel Island,&#8221; remarked Gus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps Nat Poole will lend you his motor-boat,&#8221;
+suggested our hero, with a little grin.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph! I&#8217;d not ask him,&#8221; returned the big
+youth, promptly. &#8220;I am done with Nat Poole.
+I want to stick to my new friends.&#8221; And the
+former bully of the school fairly beamed on
+Dave, who had done so much to make him reform.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have you seen the motor-boat this season,
+Gus?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, Nat got it out two days ago. I think
+he is on the river now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boys rowed on, until they came to a bend
+where there was something of a cove. As they
+rounded the point they heard the steady put-put!
+of a gasoline engine not far off.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is Nat&#8217;s craft now!&#8221; cried our hero,
+and pointed ahead.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s all alone,&#8221; was Plum&#8217;s comment. &#8220;He
+can&#8217;t have many friends these days, or he&#8217;d have
+some of them along.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d hate to be without friends, Gus, shouldn&#8217;t
+you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, indeed! But it&#8217;s Nat&#8217;s own fault. If
+he&#8217;d only drop his important airs and be more
+sociable, he&#8217;d get along all right.&#8221;</p>
+<p>On and on rowed the two students. It was
+a clear, balmy day, and they hated to return to
+the school until it was absolutely necessary.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us row around Smith Island,&#8221; suggested
+our hero, mentioning a small place in the middle
+of the stream, so named after a farmer who
+owned it. It was a rocky and somewhat barren
+spot, and seldom visited by anybody but fishermen.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, but we want to beware of the
+rocks,&#8221; cautioned the big youth.</p>
+<p>The rowboat was headed up the stream, and
+soon they came in sight of the island. On one
+side were a number of bushes, overhanging the
+river.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello! look there!&#8221; cried Dave, a few minutes
+later, and pointed to the bushes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you see?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A motor-boat. I think it is Nat Poole&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that so? What brought him here?&#8221; questioned
+Gus, with interest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am sure I don&#8217;t know. But it&#8217;s his boat,
+I am sure of that,&#8221; went on Dave, after another
+look at the craft.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;See anything of Nat?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, the boat is empty.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us row in a little closer and see what he
+is doing,&#8221; suggested Gus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;ll say we were spying on him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph! Haven&#8217;t we as much right as he
+has to visit the island?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then what is the use of keeping away? He
+may be waiting to play some trick, or something
+like that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I think not, Gus. Probably he just
+visited the island out of curiosity. But I&#8217;ll go in
+if you say so.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Slowly, so as to avoid the many rocks in that
+vicinity, the two students brought the rowboat
+close up to the motor-craft. They looked into the
+bushes and along the rocks beyond, but saw nothing
+of Nat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shall we call to him?&#8221; asked Gus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What for? I don&#8217;t want to see him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Neither do I. His boat is tied good and
+fast. He must expect to stay on the island quite
+a while.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The two boys rowed on, past the motor-boat.
+Then, as they turned a point of rocks, Dave
+gave a start.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, of all things!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is it, Dave?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Look yonder&mdash;in between those bushes!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, it&#8217;s a rowboat.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Exactly, Gus, and do you see how it is painted,
+drab with blue stripes?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course&mdash;a pretty ugly boat, I think.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gus, that is the very rowboat used by that
+wild man&mdash;the one he was in when he got away
+from us that day!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you really mean it?&#8221; gasped the big boy,
+staring hard at the craft.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I certainly do&mdash;I&#8217;d know that boat in a hundred.
+I never saw another just like it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If that&#8217;s the case, maybe the wild man is on
+the island!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just what I was thinking,&#8221; answered Dave.
+&#8220;And I was thinking, too, that&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; He stopped
+short.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you remember how Nat was so anxious
+to know all about the wild man? And how upset
+he seemed to be when he heard that the fellow
+called himself the King of Sumatra?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I remember that. Do you think he
+came here to find the man?&#8221; demanded Gus,
+quickly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It looks so to me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;My gracious, Dave, I think you are right!
+Say, there is something mysterious about all
+this!&#8221; cried Gus.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Exactly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us go ashore by all means and see what
+Nat is up to,&#8221; urged the big youth.</p>
+<p>Dave was more than willing, now that he had
+discovered the rowboat used by the wild man.
+Perhaps this island was the home of that mysterious
+individual. If so, what was the money-lender&#8217;s
+son doing there? Had he business with
+the strange creature?</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe we&#8217;d better not make any noise,&#8221; suggested
+Gus, as the boat was turned in to a convenient
+landing-place. To this Dave did not
+reply, but they landed as silently as possible.
+Then the rowboat was hauled up out of sight
+between the bushes.</p>
+<p>From the craft used by the wild man a rude
+path ran up from the shore to the rocks beyond.
+A short distance from the shore the boys saw the
+marks of a wet foot, coming from the direction
+where lay the motor-boat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That was made by Nat&mdash;he got his left foot
+wet,&#8221; said Gus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think so myself,&#8221; answered our hero.</p>
+<p>They followed the marks left by the wet foot
+over the rocks. They headed for the upper end
+of the island, where there was a small grove of
+straggly cedar trees. Here the marks faded
+away completely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, we know he came this way, anyhow,&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span>
+remarked Gus. &#8220;He can&#8217;t be very far off, for
+the island isn&#8217;t very big.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I see a rude log cabin!&#8221; exclaimed Dave,
+and pointed through the cedars. &#8220;Maybe that is
+where the wild man lives.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If it is, we want to go slow, Dave. He may
+attack us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But what of Nat, if he is there?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He may know the man and have some influence
+over him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hardly think anybody could have any influence
+over that man. He is as crazy as can be,
+and not to be trusted.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The two youths approached the old log cabin
+slowly, keeping as much as possible in the shelter
+of the trees. Nobody was in sight, nor did any
+sound reach their ears.</p>
+<p>Presently the students found themselves within
+fifty feet of the cabin, the door of which stood
+half open. Each looked at the other.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going ahead,&#8221; said Dave, resolutely. He
+and his companion had provided themselves with
+sticks, and Gus had also picked up two stones.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh! oh! oh!&#8221; came of a sudden, to their
+startled ears. &#8220;Oh dear me!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s Nat!&#8221; ejaculated Dave. &#8220;Something
+has happened to him!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe the wild man attacked him,&#8221; added
+Gus.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll soon see,&#8221; cried Dave, and started forward
+on a run.</p>
+<p>Soon our hero was at the door of the cabin,
+which he pushed wide open. Inside all was dark,
+for it was growing late, and the rude structure
+boasted of but one small window, stuffed with
+cedar boughs to keep out the wind.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nat, where are you?&#8221; cried Dave, as his eyes
+sought to pierce the semi-darkness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who&mdash;who is that calling me?&#8221; came, in surprise,
+from the center of the cabin.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is I&mdash;Dave Porter! Where are you, and
+what happened? Where is the wild man?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m caught fast&mdash;in a trap!&#8221; groaned the
+money-lender&#8217;s son. &#8220;Oh, help me out! My
+ankle is almost broken!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But the wild man&mdash;?&#8221; queried Gus, who was
+close behind our hero.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&mdash;I don&#8217;t know where he is,&#8221; gasped Nat.
+&#8220;Oh, say, won&#8217;t you please help me? My ankle
+is fast in a trap! Oh, how it hurts!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wasn&#8217;t the wild man here?&#8221; asked Dave, as
+he got out his match-box to strike a light.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No&mdash;at least, I haven&#8217;t seen him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dave soon had a match lit, and with it set
+fire to a cedar bough placed in the rude fireplace
+of the cabin. By the glare of this light he and
+Gus looked around them and at their fellow-student.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span></p>
+<p>The cabin was unfurnished excepting for a rude
+bench and a board placed on some piles of stones
+for a table. In the fireplace were a kettle and a
+frying-pan, and on the table the remains of a
+scanty meal of crackers, eggs, and apples. A tin
+pail, half filled with water, was also handy.</p>
+<p>When Dave and Gus turned their attention to
+Nat Poole they had to stare in wonder. Nat sat
+on the floor, nursing a bruised ankle that was
+caught fast between the jaws of an old-fashioned
+steel animal-trap. The trap was chained to the
+floor, and the release chain ran to a corner of
+the fireplace, several feet beyond the sufferer&#8217;s
+reach.</p>
+<p>&#8220;However did this happen?&#8221; asked Gus, although
+he and our hero could easily guess the
+answer to the question.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Help me get loose first,&#8221; groaned poor Nat.
+&#8220;This thing is sawing down to the bone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dave saw the release chain, which was held
+firm by a hook. Stepping over, he unhooked
+it, and then it was an easy matter to pry the jaws
+of the steel-trap apart. As soon as this was done,
+Nat rose slowly to his feet, making a wry face
+as he did so.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll be lame for life&mdash;I know I will!&#8221; he
+groaned. &#8220;Oh dear, how it hurts!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You take care that you don&#8217;t get blood-poisoning
+from it,&#8221; warned Gus. &#8220;When you
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span>
+get home wash it well, and put some peroxide
+of hydrogen, or something like that on it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Blood-poisoning! Oh dear!&#8221; and Nat gave
+another groan.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shall we help you back to your boat?&#8221; asked
+Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you will.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where is the wild man?&#8221; questioned Gus,
+looking around.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know, and I don&#8217;t care&mdash;just now,&#8221;
+answered Nat Poole.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIV_THE_BANDANNA_HANDKERCHIEF' id='CHAPTER_XIV_THE_BANDANNA_HANDKERCHIEF'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+<h3>THE BANDANNA HANDKERCHIEF</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Nat Poole could hardly walk on the injured
+leg, so Dave and Gus supported him as the three
+left the rude cabin and headed for the shore of the
+island.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you know where the wild man is?&#8221; repeated
+Gus, who had not been satisfied by the
+reply given to the question before.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do not,&#8221; snapped the money-lender&#8217;s son,
+with a touch of his former tartness. &#8220;I haven&#8217;t
+seen him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But you know that cabin is where he lives,&#8221;
+put in our hero.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I thought so&mdash;but I wasn&#8217;t sure of it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you see him come ashore, Nat?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No&mdash;that is, not to-day. I saw him land here
+yesterday.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And that is what brought you here to-day?&#8221;
+remarked Gus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, if you must know,&#8221; was the somewhat
+cold answer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;See here, Nat, do you know this wild man?&#8221;
+asked Dave, abruptly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Me? Know him? How should I know
+him?&#8221; demanded the money-lender&#8217;s son, but his
+apparent astonishment did not, somehow, ring
+nor look true.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is what I wanted to find out.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know him&mdash;at least, I don&#8217;t think I
+do. I&#8217;ve never seen him close enough to make
+sure. Maybe he&#8217;s some fellow who belongs
+around here. I wanted to find out about him&mdash;just
+as everybody else wants to find out, that&#8217;s all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Want to have him caught and placed in an
+asylum?&#8221; asked Gus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not my business to place him anywhere,&#8221;
+cried Nat, hastily. &#8220;For all we know, he may
+be harmless.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not when he stops young ladies on the road
+and catches folks in steel-traps,&#8221; answered our
+hero, with a faint smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, that&#8217;s right, too,&#8221; grumbled the money-lender&#8217;s
+son. &#8220;Maybe he ought to be in an
+asylum.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think he is on this island now,&#8221; went on
+Dave. &#8220;His rowboat is here, anyway.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, I&#8217;ll tell you what we can do!&#8221; cried Gus.
+&#8220;Take his boat with us! Then he can&#8217;t get
+away, and we can send the authorities over here
+to get him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s an idea, Gus!&#8221; cried Dave. &#8220;We&#8217;ll
+do it.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Would that be fair to the man?&#8221; asked Nat.
+&#8220;He&mdash;er&mdash;he might starve to death&mdash;or try to
+swim to shore and get drowned.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He can&#8217;t starve to death in one night, and I
+don&#8217;t think he&#8217;ll drown himself. The authorities
+can come over here early in the morning and
+round him up, if he is here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&mdash;er&mdash;I don&#8217;t think much of your plan,&#8221;
+murmured Nat, and seemed much disturbed.</p>
+<p>In about a quarter of an hour the boys reached
+the island shore, at the spot where Nat&#8217;s motor-boat
+was tied up. They helped him get in and
+start up the engine. He had been told how
+they had come to the island.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you want to, you can tie your boat
+fast to the stern and ride back with me,&#8221; he
+said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, Nat, we&#8217;ll do it,&#8221; answered Dave.
+&#8220;It is getting rather late and it&#8217;s a pretty stiff
+row to the school.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The motor-craft was started up and sent along
+in the direction where the boys had left the Oak
+Hall rowboat. Their course took them past the
+spot where the wild man&#8217;s boat had been tied up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, look, it&#8217;s gone!&#8221; cried Gus, standing
+up and pointing to the place.</p>
+<p>&#8220;True enough,&#8221; answered our hero. &#8220;He
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span>
+must have gone off in it while we were up to the
+cabin.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He can&#8217;t be very far away, Dave.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boys looked up and down the river, but
+could catch no trace of the missing rowboat or
+the wild man. In the meantime, the motor-craft
+was moving forward, where the other boat had
+been beached among the bushes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is gone, too!&#8221; ejaculated Dave. &#8220;He
+has taken our boat!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, do you really think so?&#8221; asked Gus.
+He felt that he was responsible for the craft, as
+he had taken it from the school boathouse.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I certainly do think so,&#8221; said Dave. &#8220;It
+was a neat trick to play.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a wonder he didn&#8217;t take the motor-boat,
+too.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe he didn&#8217;t know how to run the boat
+and it was too heavy to start without the engine.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess you are right!&#8221; came suddenly from
+Nat. &#8220;Look here!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He had stooped down to pick something up
+from the grating on the motor-boat&#8217;s bottom. If
+was a torn and dirty bandanna handkerchief.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The wild man&#8217;s!&#8221; cried Dave. &#8220;I remember
+it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am glad he didn&#8217;t get away with my boat,&#8221;
+returned the money-lender&#8217;s son, drawing a deep
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span>
+breath. &#8220;I&#8217;ll keep this handkerchief to remember
+him by.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is it marked in any way?&#8221; questioned our
+hero. &#8220;Perhaps it has his name or initials on
+it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t think so,&#8221; returned Nat. &#8220;Let
+us hurry up and get back to the school. If we
+are late, old Haskers will be after us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Go on and run the boat as fast as you please,
+Nat,&#8221; answered Dave. &#8220;But I want to look at
+that handkerchief.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Rather unwillingly, the money-lender&#8217;s son
+passed the bandanna over. It was now growing
+so dark that Dave could see but little.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wait, I&#8217;ll light a match,&#8221; suggested Gus, and
+did so, and by the protected but flickering flare
+our hero looked the handkerchief over. In one
+corner there was a faint stamping.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Looks like &#8216;Rossmore Sanitarium&#8217; to me,&#8221;
+said Dave, slowly. &#8220;Or it may be &#8216;Bossmore&#8217;
+or &#8216;Crossmore.&#8217; The beginning is too faded to
+be sure.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bossmore Sanitarium?&#8221; queried Nat, and
+then he became silent and thoughtful. A little
+later he asked for the bandanna and placed it in
+his pocket.</p>
+<p>The run in the motor-boat to the school dock
+did not take long. As soon as Nat&#8217;s craft was
+properly housed, Dave and Gus assisted the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span>
+money-lender&#8217;s son up the walk and across the
+campus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose I&#8217;ve got to report the loss of the
+rowboat,&#8221; said Gus, ruefully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It wasn&#8217;t your fault, Gus,&#8221; answered Dave.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ll go with you to Doctor Clay.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t go with my lame foot,&#8221; put in Nat,
+and he hobbled up to his dormitory, eyed by several
+curious students, who wanted to know how
+he had gotten hurt.</p>
+<p>The boys found the master of Oak Hall getting
+ready for supper. He looked at them inquiringly
+as they entered his study, in answer to
+his invitation.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well! well!&#8221; he exclaimed, after listening
+to their story. &#8220;This is certainly odd! I trust
+Poole was not seriously hurt.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think he was more scared than hurt,&#8221; answered
+Dave. &#8220;The trap scratched his ankle,
+that&#8217;s all. I am sure it is not sprained or broken.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But the rowboat&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; put in Gus. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t
+mean&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do not worry about that, Plum. It was not
+your fault. I am glad the wild man did not harm
+you. I think you got off well. After this you
+must be careful about how you go out after this remarkable
+creature.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The master of the school then asked for more
+particulars of the occurrence, and said he would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span>
+notify the town authorities about the loss of the
+rowboat, and ask that a general hunt take place
+for the wild man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They ought to be able to round him up sooner
+or later,&#8221; he added.</p>
+<p>There was considerable excitement in the school
+when it was learned that the wild man had been
+heard of again. The boys looked for the strange
+individual and so did the town authorities and
+many farmers, but nothing came of the search.
+Nat was called on to exhibit the bandanna handkerchief
+and did so. Nobody could make out the
+first part of the name on it, for the handkerchief
+showed a small hole where the letters
+should be.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is queer,&#8221; said Dave, to Roger and
+Phil, when he heard of this. &#8220;That handkerchief
+did not have a hole there when I looked at it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe Nat put the hole there,&#8221; returned the
+senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why would he do that?&#8221; questioned Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So that nobody would know what the name
+of the sanitarium really was. I believe with
+Dave that Nat knows the man, or knows about
+him, and is trying to keep something a secret.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hum! Maybe you are right,&#8221; mused the
+shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>Phil had perfected all his arrangements for
+his spread at the hotel, and his guests for that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span>
+occasion had been duly invited and all had accepted
+the invitation. It had been arranged with
+Mr. Dale that the boys should drive to the hotel
+in the school carryall, and Horsehair was to have
+his supper in town and, later on, bring them
+home. No secret was made of the affair, for this
+was not necessary.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am only sorry for one thing,&#8221; said Phil to
+Dave. &#8220;That is that I can&#8217;t have the whole
+school there. But that would go beyond my
+purse.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, you&#8217;ll have enough, Phil, to insure a
+good time,&#8221; answered our hero.</p>
+<p>The night was clear, with numberless stars glittering
+in the heavens, when the carryall drove
+around to the Hall door and the boys piled in.
+All were in the best of humor, and they left the
+campus in a burst of song.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been saving up for this!&#8221; cried Ben.
+&#8220;Haven&#8217;t eaten a mouthful for two days!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, that puts me in mind of a story,&#8221; cried
+Shadow. &#8220;Once a poor street-boy was invited
+to a Sunday-school picnic. The ladies fed him
+all he could hold and then some. At last, when
+he couldn&#8217;t eat another mouthful, and saw some
+cake and pie and ice-cream going to waste, what
+do you suppose he said?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Give it up, Shadow.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He said, &#8216;Say, missus, please save it fer me,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span>
+won&#8217;t yer? I won&#8217;t eat fer a week, honest, an&#8217;
+then I&#8217;ll come an&#8217; finish it all up fer yer!&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good for the street-boy!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, Phil, you won&#8217;t have to save anything
+for me! I&#8217;ll eat my share right now!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been in training for this feed!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shove the horses along, Horsehair; we don&#8217;t
+want the soup to get cold.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m a-shovin&#8217; &#8217;em along,&#8221; answered the carryall
+driver. &#8220;We&#8217;ll git there in plenty o&#8217; time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, Phil, as far as I am concerned, you can
+have this affair pulled off once a month,&#8221; remarked
+Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Make it once a week,&#8221; piped in Chip Macklin.
+And then Luke Watson commenced to sing a
+popular negro ditty and all joined lustily in the
+chorus.</p>
+<p>On and on rattled the carryall until the lights
+of Oakdale shone in the distance. The boys
+continued to sing, while one or two blew freely on
+the tin horns they carried. Here and there somebody
+would come rushing to a window, or door,
+to learn what was doing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s them Oak Hall boys!&#8221; cried one old
+farmer. &#8220;My, but they do have high times!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So they do,&#8221; returned his wife. &#8220;But they
+are good boys,&#8221; she added, for some of them
+had once aided her in capturing a runaway bull.</p>
+<p>With a grand flourish the carryall swept around
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span>
+the last corner and came to a halt in front of the
+hotel. Phil had hoped to see some extra lights
+lit and was somewhat disappointed to see only
+the regular lantern burning.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I told him to light up freely and he said he
+would,&#8221; he whispered to Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe he thought you meant the dining-room,
+Phil.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The students piled out of the carryall and
+waited for Phil, as host, to lead the way into the
+hotel. All marched up the steps and into the
+broad hallway. There they were confronted by
+the hotel proprietor, who came to meet them in
+his shirtsleeves. He looked completely bewildered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, we are here for that supper, Mr.
+Sparr!&#8221; cried Phil. &#8220;I hope you are all ready
+for us!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The hotel man looked at the boys in amazement.
+His jaw dropped. Then he gasped out
+the words:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ll be jiggered!&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XV_AT_THE_HOTEL' id='CHAPTER_XV_AT_THE_HOTEL'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+<h3>AT THE HOTEL</h3>
+</div>
+<p>At once Dave and all the other students who
+had come to the hotel with Phil, expecting a fine
+spread, saw that something was wrong. They
+looked questioningly at the shipowner&#8217;s son and
+at the hotel proprietor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the matter?&#8221; demanded Phil,
+quickly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Matter?&#8221; repeated Jason Sparr. &#8220;That&#8217;s
+just exactly what I&#8217;d like to know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&mdash;you are ready for us, aren&#8217;t you?&#8221;
+went on Phil, with a sudden catch in his voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why should I be ready, when you called the
+whole thing off?&#8221; growled the hotel man. &#8220;Fine
+way to do, I must say,&#8221; he continued, with strong
+anger in his voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Called the whole thing off?&#8221; repeated Phil.
+&#8220;Me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, you!&#8221; shouted Jason Sparr. &#8220;And after
+we had everything in fine shape, too! Say, don&#8217;t
+you think my stuff is too good to send to the Old
+Ladies&#8217; Home?&#8221; he demanded.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;There must be some mistake here, Mr.
+Sparr,&#8221; put in our hero. &#8220;Phil didn&#8217;t call this
+spread off. We are here for it, as you can see.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But he did call it off&mdash;this noon,&#8221; returned
+the hotel proprietor. &#8220;And he wasn&#8217;t a bit nice
+about it, either. When I asked him what I should
+do with the extras I had ordered he told me
+to do as I pleased&mdash;send &#8217;em to the Old Ladies&#8217;
+Home, or throw &#8217;em away! He didn&#8217;t act a bit
+nice.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, you chump, you!&#8221; shouted Phil, growing
+suddenly angry. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t send you any
+word at all about calling it off. I&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you call me a chump, you young rascal!&#8221;
+shouted the hotel man, in equal heat. &#8220;I
+got your message over the telephone&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I never sent any,&#8221; interrupted Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It must be a trick,&#8221; cried Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who played it?&#8221; queried another student.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe this is the work of some of the Military
+Academy fellows.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Like as not.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But how did they learn that Phil was going
+to give the spread?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Give it up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe some of our own fellows did it&mdash;some
+who didn&#8217;t get an invitation to attend,&#8221; suggested
+Chip.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would any one be so mean?&#8221; asked Buster.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Some of them might be,&#8221; murmured Gus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t send you any word,&#8221; went on Phil,
+in greater anger than ever.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I got word, and so did Professor
+Smuller. He was mad, too, because he lost another
+job taking yours.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t you make sure the word was sent
+by Mr. Lawrence?&#8221; demanded Ben. &#8220;You
+could have done that easily enough.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t think that was necessary. This fellow
+said&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I tell you I didn&#8217;t send word!&#8221; shouted Phil,
+growing more angry every instant. &#8220;You might
+have known it was a trick.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course, he might have known,&#8221; added
+Ben. He lowered his voice. &#8220;Say, Phil, if he
+doesn&#8217;t give us the supper make him give your
+money back.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure he&#8217;s got to give me the money back,&#8221;
+cried the shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;See here, you can&#8217;t bulldoze me!&#8221; cried the
+hotel proprietor. &#8220;I&#8217;ve had trouble enough as it
+is. I got ready for this spread and then you
+called it off, and you were mighty sassy about it,
+too. I&#8217;ve lost a lot of money.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A wordy war followed, lasting the best part
+of a half an hour. Through this it was learned
+that the hotel man had prepared for the spread,
+and so had the professor of music. Just after
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span>
+noon telephone messages had come in, calling the
+whole affair off. Some hot words had passed over
+the wire, and the hotel man was considerably
+ruffled. The party talking to Jason Sparr had
+said that when the spread did come off it would
+be held elsewhere&mdash;intimating that a better place
+than his hotel could be found.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all some trick, to get my business away
+from me!&#8221; stormed the hotel man. &#8220;I won&#8217;t
+stand for it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t send the messages, and I either want
+the spread or I want my money back,&#8221; declared
+Phil, stubbornly. And then more words followed,
+until it looked as if there might be a fight. Finally,
+in a rage, Jason Sparr ordered the students
+from his place.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, we&#8217;ll go, but you haven&#8217;t heard
+the end of this!&#8221; cried Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll catch it, for treating us so meanly,&#8221;
+added Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you threaten me, or I&#8217;ll have the law
+on you!&#8221; roared Jason Sparr.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps I&#8217;ll call on the law myself,&#8221; answered
+Phil, and then, unable to control himself,
+he shook his fist at the hotel man. Then all the
+boys filed out of the place, some bystanders looking
+on in wonder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, what do you think of this!&#8221; cried Gus,
+when outside.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Phil, I wouldn&#8217;t say anything more just now&mdash;you
+are too excited,&#8221; said Dave, catching his
+chum by the arm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, but that fellow is as mean as&mdash;as dirt!&#8221;
+answered the shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He hasn&#8217;t any right to keep Phil&#8217;s money,&#8221;
+said one student.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then the feast is called off, is it?&#8221; said Buster,
+with something like a groan in his voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And somebody is going to have the laugh on
+us!&#8221; added Shadow. &#8220;Say, this puts me in mind
+of a story,&#8221; he added, brightening. &#8220;Once some
+boys were going&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, stow it, Shadow!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;This is no time for stories!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d rather go down to the cemetery and
+weep.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nobody is going to have the laugh on me,&#8221;
+cried Phil. &#8220;We&#8217;ll get something somewhere.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Right you are!&#8221; cried Dave. &#8220;I&#8217;ve got it!&#8221;
+he added. &#8220;Let us drive over to Rockville and
+get something at the hotel there. I know the proprietor
+and he&#8217;s a nice man.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Better telephone to him first and make sure,&#8221;
+suggested Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll do it,&#8221; said Phil.</p>
+<p>The carryall was brought around again and all
+piled in and drove down to a drug store where
+there was a telephone booth. Into the booth went
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span>
+Phil, to communicate with the hotel in Rockville.
+He came out smiling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all fixed up and I guess we&#8217;ll have something
+this time,&#8221; he said. &#8220;But just wait; I&#8217;ll fix
+that mean Jason Sparr, see if I don&#8217;t!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s quite a drive to Rockville,&#8221; protested
+Horsehair, when they told the driver what was
+wanted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Never mind, it will do the horses good,&#8221;
+cried Roger. &#8220;They are getting too fat standing
+still.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, Phil,&#8221; whispered Dave. &#8220;If you
+haven&#8217;t got money enough along, I can let you
+have some.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good,&#8221; was the whispered return. &#8220;I was
+going to speak of that, as soon as I got a chance.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The affair at the Oakdale hotel had put something
+of a damper on the crowd, and all the talk
+was of how Jason Sparr had acted and who had
+been mean enough to play such a trick.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe it was Nat Poole,&#8221; said Chip.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What makes you think that?&#8221; asked Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, he is mean enough for anything.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If Nat did this I&#8217;ll&mdash;I&#8217;ll mash him!&#8221; cried
+Phil, with energy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can&#8217;t you find out?&#8221; asked Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll try&mdash;but most likely the fellow who did it
+took care to cover up his tracks. Sparr didn&#8217;t
+know where the messages came from.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span></p>
+<p>On and on rolled the carryall, until the lights
+of Rockville appeared in the distance. By this
+time all of the students were decidedly hungry.
+They rolled up to the little hotel and those with
+horns gave a couple of shrill blasts.</p>
+<p>This time there was a warm welcome by the
+host. He came out, bowing and smiling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did the best I could for you, on such short
+notice,&#8221; he said, as they entered. &#8220;Next time, if
+you&#8217;ll only give me a little more time&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all right, let&#8217;s have what you&#8217;ve got,&#8221;
+cried Buster. He was hungry enough to eat anything.</p>
+<p>They were ushered into what was usually the
+private dining-room of the little hostelry. The
+table had been spread out and was tastefully
+decorated with paper chrysanthemums, made by
+the hotel man&#8217;s daughter. A parlor-lamp and
+several others shed light on the scene.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This looks good!&#8221; murmured Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wait till you see what we get to eat,&#8221; answered
+Sam. &#8220;It may be slim&mdash;on such short
+notice.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But he was agreeably mistaken, the spread was
+all that could be desired. There were oysters on
+the half-shell, tomato soup, fried chicken, mashed
+potatoes, lettuce salad, olives, and also coffee, pie,
+and various cookies. It was served in home style,
+by the hotel man&#8217;s daughter and a hired girl.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, this is fine!&#8221; cried Buster, smacking his
+lips.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Better, maybe, than if we had stayed at the
+other place,&#8221; added Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Only we haven&#8217;t got the music,&#8221; said Phil.
+He was glad that matters had taken such a nice
+turn, but still angry over what had gone before.</p>
+<p>As they had already lost so much time, the boys
+did not dare linger too long over the spread.
+Horsehair was given something to eat in another
+room, and then they set out on the return. Songs
+were sung and jokes cracked, and Shadow was
+permitted to tell half a dozen of his best stories.
+Yet, with it all, the edge had been taken off the
+celebration, and Phil knew this as well as anybody,
+and was correspondingly chagrined.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll make that man square up with me, see
+if I don&#8217;t,&#8221; he said to Dave, as they arrived at
+the school. &#8220;I&#8217;m not going to lose all that
+money.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, be careful of what you do, Phil,&#8221;
+warned our hero. &#8220;Don&#8217;t get into a fight.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The next day the shipowner&#8217;s son sent out two
+sharp letters, one to Jason Sparr and the other to
+Professor Smuller. He stated that he was not
+responsible for the trip-up that had taken place,
+and demanded his money be returned to him,
+otherwise he would put the matter in the hands of
+the law.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span></p>
+<p>To these letters came speedy replies. The
+musical professor said he was sorry a mistake had
+been made, and he returned the amount paid to
+him, and he further stated that if he could discover
+who had played the trick he would make
+that party settle up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s decent of him,&#8221; said Phil. &#8220;I am
+going to send him back five dollars for his trouble.&#8221;
+And this he did, much to Professor Smuller&#8217;s
+satisfaction.</p>
+<p>The letter from Jason Sparr was entirely different.
+He berated Phil for the stand taken,
+and stated that he would pay back nothing. He
+added that he had learned how the crowd had
+gone to Rockville to dine, and said he was satisfied
+that it was all a trick to get patronage away
+from his hotel. He added that he had had trouble
+enough with people from Oak Hall school
+and he wanted no more of it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess I&#8217;ll have to sue him,&#8221; growled Phil,
+on showing the letter to Dave and Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;d bother,&#8221; answered Dave.
+&#8220;Put it down to Experience, and let it go at
+that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you sued him it would cost as much as
+you&#8217;d get, and more,&#8221; added the senator&#8217;s
+son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph! I don&#8217;t feel like swallowing it,&#8221;
+growled Phil. &#8220;I&#8217;ll get it out of him somehow.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;He must have lost something&mdash;if he got
+ready for the spread,&#8221; said Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t think he lost much. He&#8217;s a close
+one&mdash;to my way of thinking,&#8221; responded the shipowner&#8217;s
+son.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVI_THE_BLOWING_UP_OF_THE_BRIDGE' id='CHAPTER_XVI_THE_BLOWING_UP_OF_THE_BRIDGE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+<h3>THE BLOWING UP OF THE BRIDGE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Say, this is something fierce, Dave!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I agree with you, Roger. I don&#8217;t see how we
+are going to do such a long lesson.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Old Haskers is getting worse and worse,&#8221;
+growled Phil. &#8220;I think we ought to report it
+to Doctor Clay.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just what I think,&#8221; came from Ben. &#8220;He
+keeps piling it on harder and harder. I think
+he is trying to break us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Break us?&#8221; queried our hero, looking up
+from his book.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, make us miss entirely, you know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why should he want us to do that?&#8221; asked
+Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then we wouldn&#8217;t be able to graduate this
+coming June.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would he be mean enough to do that?&#8221;
+asked Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think he would be mean enough for anything,&#8221;
+responded Phil. &#8220;Oh, I am not going
+to stand it!&#8221; he cried.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span></p>
+<p>The boys had just come upstairs, after an extra
+hard session in their Latin class. All were
+aroused over the treatment received at the hands
+of Job Haskers. He had been harsh and dictatorial
+to the last degree, and several times it
+had looked as if there might be an outbreak.</p>
+<p>The next day the outbreak came. Phil sprang
+up in class and denounced the unreasonable
+teacher, and Ben followed. Then Dave and
+Roger took a hand, and so did Buster and several
+others.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sit down! Sit down!&#8221; cried Job Haskers,
+growing white in the face. &#8220;Sit down, and keep
+quiet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I won&#8217;t keep quiet,&#8221; answered the shipowner&#8217;s
+son. &#8220;You are treating us unfairly,
+Mr. Haskers, and I won&#8217;t stand for it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Neither will I,&#8221; added Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sit down, I tell you!&#8221; stormed the instructor.</p>
+<p>But none of the students obeyed him, and in a
+minute more the room was in an uproar. One of
+the under-teachers heard it, and quickly sent for
+Doctor Clay.</p>
+<p>As the master of Oak Hall strode into the
+classroom there was a pause. He mounted the
+platform and put up his hand, and soon all became
+quiet.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Young gentlemen, be seated,&#8221; he said, in his
+strict but kindly fashion, and instantly every student
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span>
+sat down. Then he turned to the teacher.
+&#8220;Mr. Haskers, what is the trouble?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The trouble is that certain students will not
+learn their lessons,&#8221; answered Job Haskers,
+sourly. &#8220;I had to take them to task for it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who are those students?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Lawrence, Basswood, Porter, Morr,
+Beggs&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That will do for the present. Lawrence,
+stand up,&#8221; ordered Doctor Clay.</p>
+<p>Phil did as requested, and the eyes of the entire
+class were fastened on the shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now, Lawrence, what have you to say for
+yourself?&#8221; went on the doctor.</p>
+<p>In a plain, straightforward manner, Phil told
+his side of the story. Several times Job Haskers
+wanted to interrupt him, but Doctor Clay would
+not permit this. Then Ben was questioned, and
+after that the master of the school turned to Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is your complaint the same, Porter?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, sir.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And yours, Morr?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, sir.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What have you to say, Beggs?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The same. The lessons lately have been altogether
+too hard&mdash;we simply can&#8217;t get through
+them. We never had such long lessons before.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have given them only the regular lessons,&#8221;
+put in Job Haskers.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Ahem! Let us go over them and see what
+can be done,&#8221; responded the doctor. &#8220;If the
+students are willing to work we do not want to
+overburden them, Mr. Haskers.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A discussion lasting over a quarter of an hour
+followed, and in the end the lessons were cut
+down, much to the satisfaction of the whole class,
+who felt like cheering the head of the school.
+The only person who was not satisfied was Job
+Haskers. He was invited to go out with the doctor
+to his private office, and came back some time
+later, looking anything but happy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll wager he got a calling down!&#8221; whispered
+Phil to Dave. &#8220;I hope he did.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He was right about the &#8220;calling down,&#8221; as he
+expressed it. The master of Oak Hall had
+spoken very plainly to the instructor, and given
+Job Haskers to understand that he must get along
+better with the boys in the future, and treat them
+with more consideration, or he would be asked to
+resign from the staff of the school.</p>
+<p>Several days slipped by and during that time
+Dave paid close attention to his lessons. He had
+also a theme to write on &#8220;The Future of Our
+Country,&#8221; and he devoted considerable time to
+this, hoping it would receive at least honorable
+mention, even if it did not win the prize offered
+for the best production.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come on down to town!&#8221; cried Roger, one
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span>
+afternoon, as he rushed in, &#8220;Big excitement on!
+Going to blow the railroad up!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Blow the railroad up?&#8221; queried our hero.
+&#8220;What sort of a joke is this, Roger?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No joke, at all. You know the old stone
+bridge over the creek?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, the railroad wants to get rid of it and
+do it quickly, so they can build another, so the
+contractors are going to blow the old bridge up
+with dynamite at half-past four o&#8217;clock.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s go!&#8221; burst out Phil. &#8220;It will be a
+great sight&mdash;to see that old bridge go up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Right you are!&#8221; cried Ben.</p>
+<p>All the boys were enthusiastic, and in the end
+fully fifty students got permission to go down to
+Oakdale to see the old stone bridge destroyed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;None of you must go very close,&#8221; warned
+Doctor Clay, &#8220;for dynamite is powerful stuff&mdash;eight
+times more powerful than gunpowder.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll keep away, don&#8217;t fear about that,&#8221; answered
+several.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dynamite isn&#8217;t to be fooled with,&#8221; added
+Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, that puts me in mind of a story!&#8221; cried
+Shadow. &#8220;A Dutch laborer working on the railroad
+was much annoyed by the other laborers
+coming along and knocking his stiff old derby hat
+over his eyes. At last he got good and mad and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156' name='page_156'></a>156</span>
+when he saw a chance, he stole a stick of dynamite
+from the shanty where it was kept. He stuck
+the dynamite in his hat and then went around to
+the other laborers. &#8216;Now, chust hit dot hat vonce
+again of you dare!&#8217; he said.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And nobody dared,&#8221; added Roger, as a general
+laugh went up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I once saw a fellow take a stick of dynamite
+and burn it like a torch,&#8221; remarked Ben. &#8220;It
+gave me a cold chill to see him do it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And it didn&#8217;t explode?&#8221; queried Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No. But I heard afterwards that if he had
+struck it ever so lightly, it might have blown us
+all as high as a kite.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It sure is great stuff,&#8221; remarked Phil.
+&#8220;Say,&#8221; he went on suddenly, &#8220;I wish they were
+going to blow up old Sparr&#8217;s hotel instead of the
+bridge.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So do I,&#8221; added Ben. &#8220;He&#8217;s about as mean
+as they make &#8217;em.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That man ought certainly to have something
+done to him,&#8221; was Roger&#8217;s comment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, he won&#8217;t make a success of his hotel
+if he treats everybody as he treated Phil,&#8221; said
+Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He doesn&#8217;t deserve any success,&#8221; growled the
+shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>When the students arrived in the vicinity of
+the old bridge they found a large crowd assembled,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157' name='page_157'></a>157</span>
+including many acquaintances from Rockville
+Military Academy, and people from the
+town. Red flags had been placed around, and nobody
+was allowed to get very close to the old
+structure.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is where they have the dynamite
+stored,&#8221; said Phil, pointing to a shanty not far
+away. &#8220;See the sign?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a good spot to steer clear of,&#8221; returned
+Dave, with a grin.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m not afraid of the stuff,&#8221; answered
+the shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>In the crowd of men and boys the students became
+more or less separated. There was a great
+thrill when the word was passed that everything
+was in readiness for the blowing up of the old
+bridge.</p>
+<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s going!&#8221; cried Roger to Dave.</p>
+<p>Boom! came the dull, heavy roar, and the
+boys saw the stones of the old bridge flying upward
+in all directions. The ground shook all
+around them, and the water from the creek was
+splashed on high. A great cloud of smoke and
+dust filled the air. Then came silence, followed
+by a wild cheering from the younger element.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly a great sight,&#8221; was Dave&#8217;s comment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Too bad it didn&#8217;t last longer,&#8221; sighed Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It wasn&#8217;t quite as big as I thought it would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158' name='page_158'></a>158</span>
+be,&#8221; said Luke. &#8220;I thought some of the stones
+would fly about a mile high.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good enough for a free exhibition,&#8221; put in
+Gus. &#8220;Beats fireworks all hollow.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boys walked down to the ruins of the old
+bridge and hung around for the best part of a
+half an hour. Then, in groups of five or six, they
+walked to town, to look around there before returning
+to Oak Hall. Dave and his chums passed
+Jason Sparr&#8217;s hotel. He was on the veranda and
+scowled at them, and Phil and some of the others
+scowled in return.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have you done anything about that Sparr
+matter yet, Phil?&#8221; asked one of the lads.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No; but I will soon, you wait and see,&#8221; was
+the growled-out reply.</p>
+<p>On the main street of the town some of the
+boys separated, to do a little shopping, and then
+some walked to the school, while others got in
+the carryall that happened to be at hand. As a
+consequence some of the students did not get back
+to Oak Hall until some time after the supper
+hour.</p>
+<p>Dave was alone when he entered the dining-hall
+and he was surprised to see that neither Phil
+nor Roger was present. Ben was also absent and
+likewise Shadow.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Didn&#8217;t some of them come in with you?&#8221; he
+asked of Buster.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Gus and Luke did,&#8221; was the reply. &#8220;I don&#8217;t
+know where the others are.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The meal was almost at an end when Phil,
+Ben, and Roger made their appearance. They
+had but little to say, but Dave could see that
+something was wrong.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Had another wrangle with Jason Sparr,&#8221; explained
+Phil, after the meal. &#8220;He followed me
+to one of the stores, and I told him just what I
+thought of him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And he threatened to have Phil arrested for
+defamation of character,&#8221; added Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But he didn&#8217;t dare to do it,&#8221; declared the
+shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Better let him alone,&#8221; advised Dave.
+&#8220;You&#8217;ll gain nothing by keeping in hot water
+over it, Phil.&#8221;</p>
+<p>That night all of the boys had to study hard,
+and consequently they retired to their dormitories
+early. The only exception was Polly Vane,
+who had to go to Oakdale to meet a relative who
+would stop off but who was going away again on
+the midnight train.</p>
+<p>The boys studied until ten o&#8217;clock and then retired.
+Dave was completely tired out and his
+head had hardly touched the pillow when he was
+sound asleep.</p>
+<p>He was awakened about two hours later by
+the sounds of excited talking. He opened his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span>
+eyes to behold Polly Vane standing in the dormitory
+fully dressed, while Phil was sitting on the
+edge of the bed, and Ben and Roger and some
+others were just rousing up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s going on?&#8221; Dave asked, sleepily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A whole lot, if what Polly says is true,&#8221; answered
+the shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But it is true, upon my word!&#8221; cried the girlish
+student. &#8220;I heard the explosion myself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What explosion?&#8221; asked several.</p>
+<p>&#8220;An explosion in Oakdale, to-night,&#8221; answered
+Polly. &#8220;Somebody tried to dynamite Jason
+Sparr&#8217;s hotel!&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVII_A_SERIOUS_ACCUSATION' id='CHAPTER_XVII_A_SERIOUS_ACCUSATION'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+<h3>A SERIOUS ACCUSATION</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Instantly there was great excitement in the
+dormitory, and all of the students crowded
+around Polly, to learn what he might have to
+say.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was this way, don&#8217;t you know,&#8221; said the
+scholarly youth. &#8220;I went to Oakdale to see my
+uncle, who stopped off on his trip from Portland
+to St. Louis. He wanted to ask me about
+some family matters, and he didn&#8217;t have time
+to come to the Hall. I went down in the
+buggy&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, never mind that, Polly, tell about the
+explosion,&#8221; interrupted Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I had just seen my uncle to the midnight
+train and was getting into the buggy to come
+back when I heard a low boom! coming from
+the direction of Sparr&#8217;s hotel. The station-master
+and I were the only people around, and
+I asked him what the noise meant, but he said he
+didn&#8217;t know. Then he jumped into the buggy
+with me to find out. We drove to the hotel, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span>
+there was excitement enough, I can tell you. The
+girls and women folks were screaming wildly
+and Mr. Sparr and some men were running
+around, not knowing what to do. Soon a crowd
+began to collect, and then we found out that a
+wing of the building&mdash;where the dining-room is&mdash;had
+been blown up. Some men from the railroad
+said it had been done by dynamite&mdash;the kind
+used for blowing up that old bridge.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Was anybody hurt?&#8221; asked Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nobody but an old man who was sleeping in
+the house next to the addition. He got so scared
+he jumped from an upper window and sprained
+his ankle. Oh, that dining-room is a sight, I can
+tell you! One end is completely gone&mdash;the wall
+away from the main house&mdash;and all the tables
+and chairs and ornaments smashed! And the roof
+is full of holes!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How was it done?&#8221; questioned Gus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The dynamite was placed at the side of the
+dining-room foundation, according to the railroad
+men, and it was set off by some sort of clockwork,&#8221;
+answered Polly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And who did it?&#8221; asked Shadow.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They don&#8217;t know, yet. But Sparr suspects
+Phil. That is why I woke him up as soon as I
+came in,&#8221; continued the girlish student.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Suspects me!&#8221; exclaimed the shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. He says you are the only one who
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span>
+would do such a thing&mdash;you and the crowd who
+have been backing you up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I never!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe he means me, too,&#8221; murmured Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He does, and all the others in the crowd, too.
+He thinks it&#8217;s a plot to get square because he
+wouldn&#8217;t give Phil his dinner money back.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I had nothing to do with it,&#8221; declared Phil,
+stoutly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nor I,&#8221; added Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I am sure I wasn&#8217;t in it,&#8221; said Dave.
+&#8220;I didn&#8217;t dream of such a thing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nor did I,&#8221; added Roger and some others.</p>
+<p>The news soon spread through several dormitories,
+and the boys discussed the startling happening
+in whispers. Phil was greatly disturbed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t do it, but I know he&#8217;ll try to fasten
+it on me,&#8221; he told Dave. He did not add that
+he had written to his father about the affair of
+the feast and his parent had sent a warning letter
+back, ordering his son to have nothing more to
+do with Jason Sparr.</p>
+<p>The next morning the news was all over the
+school. Nat Poole heard of it, and he and some
+of his cronies declared it as their opinion that
+Phil and some others were to blame. This
+brought on a fistic encounter between Ben and
+the money-lender&#8217;s son, and the latter got a black
+eye in consequence.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You sha&#8217;n&#8217;t say I did it&mdash;or had anything
+to do with it,&#8221; said Ben, when Nat backed away,
+having had enough of the battle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph! just wait till the law has its say!&#8221;
+retorted Nat. &#8220;Then maybe you&#8217;ll get what is
+coming to you!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Some of the boys wanted to go to town&mdash;to see
+the damaged hotel&mdash;but Doctor Clay would not
+permit this. In the meantime the wreckage was
+being cleared away, and the authorities and Jason
+Sparr were doing their best to locate the author
+or authors of the crime.</p>
+<p>Then came a great surprise, in the shape of a
+letter delivered in a mysterious way to the hotel-keeper.
+He was seated in the hotel office in the
+evening, talking to one of the town constables,
+when a missive was hurled at him through an
+open window. He dodged at first, fearing more
+dynamite, but when he saw it was only a letter, he
+picked it up and turned it over. It was addressed
+to him and marked &#8220;Private and Personal.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wonder what this is?&#8221; he mused, and walked
+over to the light to read the letter. It was written
+on a single sheet of paper, in lead pencil, and
+evidently in a disguised hand. It contained but
+a few lines, as follows:</p>
+<p style='margin-left:1.0em; margin-right:1.0em; '>&#8220;If you want to catch the fellows who blew up
+your hotel have these boys of Oak Hall school arrested
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span>
+at once, Philip Lawrence, Benj. Basswood,
+David Porter, Roger Morr, and Joseph Beggs.
+They were together when it was done, and one or
+more of them surely did it.</p>
+<p style='margin-left:1.0em; margin-right:1.0em; text-align:right'>&#8220;One Who Knows.&#8221;<br /></p>
+<p>The hotel-keeper read this letter several times
+and then stuffed it into his pocket. Then he went
+into the next room and drew from a drawer several
+things wrapped up in a newspaper.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am going down to see the squire,&#8221; he said,
+to the constable. &#8220;You can come along, if you
+want to.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What was in the letter?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The names of the rascals who blew up my
+hotel.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What! You don&#8217;t mean it, Jason!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I do.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who sent the letter?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a secret. But come on, we&#8217;ll talk it
+over with Squire Thompson. Ain&#8217;t no time to
+waste.&#8221; And then the hotel man went off to interview
+the leading legal light of the town.</p>
+<p>The conference at the squire&#8217;s office lasted the
+best part of two hours. At this Jason Sparr produced
+the contents of the package, several things
+picked up near the hotel at the time of the explosion&mdash;a
+tan glove, somewhat worn, two iron
+rings, an empty paper box marked, &#8220;L.&#8221; in one
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span>
+corner, a whip handle, and a clock-like contrivance
+which had been used to set off the dynamite. He
+told of his trouble with Phil and his chums, of the
+threats made, and produced the letter received
+so mysteriously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Looks kind of plain to me, Squire,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;Don&#8217;t you think so?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It isn&#8217;t for me to say,&#8221; replied the squire, cautiously.
+&#8220;But if you want to swear out warrants
+for those boys&#8217; arrest&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t I justified?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure you are,&#8221; put in the constable, who happened
+to be the squire&#8217;s brother-in-law. &#8220;I
+wouldn&#8217;t waste no time on it.&#8221; He thought he
+saw in this a job for himself, with some fat
+fees.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you have them arrested, you&#8217;ve got to
+prove your case,&#8221; said Squire Thompson, slowly.
+&#8220;It&#8217;s a serious business, Sparr.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But this letter says they are guilty.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Lock &#8217;em up and make &#8217;em confess!&#8221; broke
+in the constable. &#8220;Give &#8217;em the third degree!&#8221;
+he added. He had read something of how city
+criminals were occasionally treated and he wished
+to air his knowledge.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll do it!&#8221; cried Jason Spar. &#8220;I&#8217;ll show
+&#8217;em they can&#8217;t insult me and take away my trade
+and then try to blow up my hotel! I&#8217;ll have &#8217;em
+all locked up! Then we can examine &#8217;em one by
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span>
+one, and get &#8217;em tangled up and make &#8217;em confess.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After much trouble, the warrants for the arrest
+of Phil, Ben, Dave, Roger, and Buster were made
+out. The constable wanted to serve them at
+once, but it was decided at the last moment to
+wait until the next morning, to see if any new
+evidence regarding the crime might be forthcoming.</p>
+<p>The constable went home, sworn to secrecy,
+but he had to tell his wife and her sister of the
+affair, and the news got to the ears of a man who
+boarded with them. This fellow, who was named
+Andy Prime, chanced to know Dave quite well,
+our hero having once done him a favor. Early
+in the morning Prime drove past the school, and
+seeing Dave on the campus, hailed him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come over here, I want to tell you something,
+Porter,&#8221; said Prime, mysteriously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you want?&#8221; asked Dave, good-naturedly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ride a bit with me, will you? I don&#8217;t want
+nobody to hear us,&#8221; went on the man, lowering
+his voice.</p>
+<p>Wondering what was coming, Dave got up on
+the seat of the man&#8217;s wagon and they drove to
+the far end of the Oak Hall grounds. There
+Andy Prime told of all he had learned.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Please don&#8217;t say I told ye!&#8221; he pleaded. &#8220;It
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span>
+might git me in trouble. But you did me a good
+turn onct an&#8217; I ain&#8217;t forgot it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you, Prime, I won&#8217;t tell who told me,&#8221;
+answered Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thet old skinflint o&#8217; a Sparr deserved to have
+his buildin&#8217; blown up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps. But we didn&#8217;t do it, I can assure
+you of that. If Mr. Sparr has us arrested, he&#8217;ll
+get in hot water,&#8221; answered our hero; and then
+he got out of the wagon and Andy Prime
+drove on.</p>
+<p>Dave at once carried the news to those immediately
+concerned. All were very indignant, and
+some were scared.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, I won&#8217;t stand for being arrested!&#8221; cried
+Phil, in horror. &#8220;It&#8217;s too much of a disgrace!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;My folks would never get over it,&#8221; added
+Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It would just about kill my mother, if I was
+locked up,&#8221; came from Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ll stand it if I have to,&#8221; said Roger.
+&#8220;But I&#8217;ll make that fellow suffer for it later!&#8221;
+he added, bitterly.</p>
+<p>All thoughts of going to school that morning
+were abandoned by the five boys. They talked the
+situation over, and determined to go down the
+road and await the arrival of the constable, Andy
+Prime having said that Hickson would come by
+ten o&#8217;clock.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;This is awful!&#8221; gasped Phil, shaking his
+head dolefully. &#8220;Say, Dave, I can&#8217;t stand it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wait until we hear what the constable has to
+say.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He won&#8217;t say anything&mdash;he&#8217;ll just drag us
+to the Oakdale lockup!&#8221; put in Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wonder what my dad will say to that, when
+he hears of it?&#8221; murmured Roger. &#8220;The newspapers
+are bound to make a spread of it. &#8216;Son of
+a U. S. Senator Jailed for Blowing Up a Hotel!&#8217;
+or something like that. Oh, it makes me sick!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Plainly the majority of the students were very
+nervous. The only one who kept calm was Dave,
+and even he was much disturbed. All walked
+along the road, keeping a sharp eye out for the
+appearance of Paul Hickson.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here he comes!&#8221; cried Phil, as a covered
+wagon came along the road, driven by the keeper
+of the Oakdale jail. On the front seat beside the
+driver were the constable and Jason Sparr.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hi, you boys!&#8221; shouted the constable, as the
+wagon came closer. &#8220;I want to see you!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you want?&#8221; demanded Dave, stepping
+to the front.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We want you, for one!&#8221; cried the hotel-keeper.
+&#8220;Be careful, Hickson, that none of &#8217;em
+get away!&#8221; he added.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know one from tudder,&#8221; said the constable,
+doubtfully.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;This is just the bunch we are after, unless I
+am mistaken,&#8221; went on the hotel man. &#8220;That is
+Lawrence there, and Basswood, and this is Porter,
+and I think that is Morr,&#8221; and he pointed to
+the various students.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good enough. Boys, in the name of the law,
+I call on you to halt,&#8221; declared the constable,
+pompously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Sparr, what does this mean?&#8221; demanded
+Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It means that I am going to have the whole
+bunch of you arrested!&#8221; shouted the hotel man,
+harshly. &#8220;You blew up my hotel, and I can
+prove it! I&#8217;ve got the evidence against every
+one of you! I am going to have you arrested
+right now and sent to prison!&#8221; And he shook his
+fist at the boys.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The evidence against us?&#8221; faltered Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, sir, the plain, clear evidence,&#8221; went on
+the hotel-keeper, dramatically. &#8220;I&#8217;ve got you
+just where I want you. I am going to send every
+one of you to prison for five or ten years!&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVIII_THE_MEETING_ON_THE_ROAD' id='CHAPTER_XVIII_THE_MEETING_ON_THE_ROAD'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+<h3>THE MEETING ON THE ROAD</h3>
+</div>
+<p>There was an intense silence, following the
+announcement of Jason Sparr that he intended to
+send Dave and his chums to prison for attempting
+to blow up the hotel. In the meantime the hotel
+man and the constable got down from the seat of
+the covered wagon.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got the warrants fer the arrest, boys,&#8221;
+said Constable Hickson, somewhat importantly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Sparr, I&#8217;d like a word with you,&#8221; said
+Dave, as calmly as he could speak under the circumstances.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t got no more to say than I&#8217;ve said,&#8221;
+returned Jason Sparr, stubbornly. &#8220;You done
+it, and I can prove it! The constable is going
+to do his duty and arrest you!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dave, I&mdash;I won&#8217;t stand for it!&#8221; whispered
+Phil, hoarsely. &#8220;It&#8217;s terrible! I&mdash;I can&#8217;t stand
+it!&#8221; And he began to back away.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hi, there! stop!&#8221; yelled the hotel man.
+&#8220;Stop him, Hickson! Don&#8217;t let him get away!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You sha&#8217;n&#8217;t arrest me for nothing!&#8221; cried the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172' name='page_172'></a>172</span>
+shipowner&#8217;s son, and like a flash he turned around
+and started off on a run.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come back here, Phil!&#8221; called out Dave.
+&#8220;Come back! You are making a mistake by running
+away!&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Phil did not hear, nor did Ben and Buster,
+who had also taken to their heels. Roger ran a
+few steps, then halted, and came back to our hero&#8217;s
+side.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are right, Dave,&#8221; he said. &#8220;It&#8217;s best
+to face the music.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Phil, Ben, and Buster had turned towards Oak
+Hall. Phil was in the lead, but the others soon
+caught up to him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wha&mdash;what are you go&mdash;going to d&mdash;do?&#8221;
+panted Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not going to let them arrest me!&#8221; answered
+Phil. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t do it, and I&#8217;m not going
+to jail.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us hide until we can get our folks to
+help us,&#8221; suggested Buster. The thought of going
+to a lockup filled him with dread.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going to notify my folks, too,&#8221; said
+Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The trouble is, I don&#8217;t know where my folks
+are just now,&#8221; came from the shipowner&#8217;s son.
+&#8220;My father went on a trip on one of his vessels
+and mother is visiting relatives.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boys had kept on running on the road.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173' name='page_173'></a>173</span>
+But now, as they saw the constable after them,
+they turned and dashed into a side-path leading
+to the river.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A motor-boat!&#8221; cried Ben, a few seconds
+later.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s the Kingsley boat,&#8221; added Buster. &#8220;I
+know Tom will let us use it&mdash;he said I could do
+it once. Let us go across in it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>All leaped on board, and Ben started up the
+engine while Buster took the wheel. There came
+a put! put! as the fly-wheel was turned over, and
+the little craft, which belonged to a boy living
+on the river-bank, headed out into the Leming
+River.</p>
+<p>In the meantime, while Constable Hickson was
+running after the fugitives, Jason Sparr and the
+driver of the covered wagon confronted Dave and
+Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you try to run!&#8221; bawled the hotel-keeper.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m armed,&#8221; added the keeper of the town
+lockup, suggestively.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t intend to run, Mr. Sparr,&#8221; answered
+Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why should we run, since we have done nothing
+wrong?&#8221; added the senator&#8217;s son. He tried
+to follow Dave&#8217;s example and remain calm, but
+he was tremendously disturbed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did those three fellows do it alone?&#8221; queried
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174' name='page_174'></a>174</span>
+the hotel man, eagerly. &#8220;If they did, you had
+better confess to it, and clear yourselves.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;None of us are guilty,&#8221; answered Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know better.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You do not. Since we didn&#8217;t do it, Mr. Sparr,
+I don&#8217;t see how you can prove that we did,&mdash;unless
+you have manufactured some evidence
+against us,&#8221; went on our hero, pointedly, a new
+idea coming into his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t manufactured no evidence!&#8221; bawled
+Jason Sparr. &#8220;Didn&#8217;t that young rascal of a
+Lawrence say he&#8217;d get square with me, and didn&#8217;t
+all of you say the same? Wasn&#8217;t you down to the
+blowing up of the bridge, right where they had
+all that dynamite stored? Wasn&#8217;t some of the
+dynamite sticks stolen? Didn&#8217;t you fellows come
+right by the hotel afterwards? Wasn&#8217;t the
+blowing up done by clockwork, made to go
+off hours after it was set? You can&#8217;t tell
+me! You are guilty. Besides, I got other evidence&mdash;I
+got a letter,&#8221; added the hotel-keeper,
+shrewdly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A letter? About us?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Jason Sparr nodded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Saying we were guilty?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who wrote it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Never mind that. You&#8217;re guilty, and you
+know it. Just wait till Hickson comes back with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span>
+them others and I&#8217;ll show you a thing or two,&#8221;
+continued the hotel man, harshly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Sparr, I said I wanted to talk to you,
+and I do want to,&#8221; said Dave, after a pause.
+&#8220;You will find it to your advantage to listen
+to me. You have got this whole thing settled in
+your own mind, but you are dead wrong. You
+intend to have us locked up for something we
+didn&#8217;t do. To have us locked up will blacken our
+characters and blacken the reputation of Oak
+Hall. My folks are respectable people, and so
+are the folks of the other boys. Do you think
+they will stand for this sort of thing? And do you
+think Doctor Clay will stand for it? If you do,
+you are greatly mistaken. If you have us arrested
+on this charge, which is absolutely false, I&#8217;ll get
+my folks to sue you for false imprisonment and
+defamation of character, and I know the other
+fellows will do the same. And you can rest assured
+that the charges against you will be pushed
+to the limits of the law.&#8221;</p>
+<p>At this plain talk Jason Sparr&#8217;s jaw dropped.
+Several times he was on the point of interrupting,
+but thought better of it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, now&mdash;er&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; he stammered when
+Dave had finished.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My father is a United States senator,&#8221; said
+Roger. &#8220;You don&#8217;t suppose he will let a matter
+like this pass unnoticed? If you do anything to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span>
+besmirch our family name, you&#8217;ll take the consequences.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your father is a United States senator?&#8221; faltered
+Jason Sparr.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He is, and Dave&#8217;s father is a rich man, and
+so is Phil Lawrence&#8217;s father. Of course, our
+money has nothing to do with it, excepting that it
+will enable us to stand up for our rights in the
+courts, and get able lawyers to defend us. We
+are innocent of all wrongdoing. If anybody is
+in the wrong it is you, for you cheated Phil Lawrence
+out of the money he advanced to you for
+that spread we were to have at your hotel.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Cheated him!&#8221; cried the hotel-keeper.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is what it amounted to, for you took his
+money and gave him nothing in return.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He called the spread off&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He did not, and we can prove it,&#8221; said Dave,
+following up what he thought looked like an advantage.
+&#8220;Why, if he wanted to do it, Phil could
+have you locked up for swindling.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What, me? Locked up?&#8221; cried the hotel
+man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly. Why not? It&#8217;s as reasonable as
+your charge against us&mdash;more reasonable, in fact,
+for you kept his money and gave him nothing in
+return,&#8221; went on our hero, warmly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, now what do you know about that?&#8221;
+grumbled Jason Sparr, turning to the driver of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span>
+the covered wagon. But the lockup man merely
+shrugged his shoulders. Privately he was of the
+opinion that the boys were not such rascals as had
+been pictured.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If those fellows wasn&#8217;t guilty, why did they
+run away?&#8221; continued Jason Sparr, after an awkward
+pause.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because you scared them,&#8221; responded Roger.
+&#8220;I would have run away myself if it hadn&#8217;t been
+for Dave.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph!&#8221;</p>
+<p>All looked along the road. Constable Hickson
+had disappeared, having followed the runaways
+down to the river. Presently he came back,
+out of breath from his exertions.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you get &#8217;em?&#8221; queried the hotel-keeper,
+eagerly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, they got away in a motor-boat.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A motor-boat!&#8221; repeated Dave and Roger,
+and looked at each other in astonishment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, went up the river out of sight,&#8221; said
+Paul Hickson. &#8220;Too bad! But we&#8217;ve got two of
+&#8217;em, anyway,&#8221; he added, looking at our hero and
+the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wanted Lawrence more than I did the
+others,&#8221; grumbled Jason Sparr. He was doing
+some deep thinking and his face showed that he
+was much disturbed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Sparr, just remember what I said,&#8221; remarked
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span>
+Dave, pointedly. &#8220;If you go ahead, take
+my word for it, it will cost you dear.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, Hickson, we&#8217;ll drop this matter for
+the present,&#8221; said the hotel-keeper, in a low
+tone.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Drop it?&#8221; ejaculated the constable. &#8220;Ain&#8217;t
+you goin&#8217; to have these two took up?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not just now. I&mdash;er&mdash;I want to get more
+evidence first, if I can. We can get them any
+time we want them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But who is going to pay me for my trouble?
+I&#8217;ve got them warrants to serve right in my
+pocket, and&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll fix that up with you,&#8221; answered the hotel
+man, in a whisper. &#8220;Come on. We can come
+back later.&#8221; And then the hotel man said something
+to the driver of the wagon. The latter
+merely nodded and got back to his seat. Jason
+Sparr climbed up beside him, and the constable
+slowly followed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t understand&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; went on the constable;
+but Jason Sparr merely pinched his arm,
+and he stopped short.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just remember, this ain&#8217;t settled yet!&#8221; cried
+the hotel-keeper, to Dave and Roger. &#8220;I&#8217;m going
+to look into it a bit deeper before I make a move,
+that&#8217;s all. I know some of you done it, and
+I&#8217;ll have you in prison for it yet, see if I don&#8217;t!&#8221;
+And he shook his head grimly; and then the covered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span>
+wagon was turned around, and the three
+men drove off in the direction of Oakdale.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Dave, do you think they&#8217;ll come back?&#8221;
+cried Roger, when the men were out of hearing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is no telling what they will do, Roger.
+But you can make up your mind to one thing&mdash;Sparr
+won&#8217;t come back until he has more evidence
+than he has at present.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But how can he get evidence? Surely you
+don&#8217;t think Phil and the others guilty, even if they
+did run away.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I think Phil and the others are as innocent
+as we are. But I can&#8217;t understand some
+things. Somebody used that dynamite and somebody
+wrote a letter to Sparr about us. The question
+is, Who was it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Could it be Nat Poole?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think Nat would be bad enough to
+try to blow up a hotel.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It certainly was an awful thing to do.&#8221;
+Roger drew a long breath. &#8220;What shall we do
+now, go back to school?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We might as well. If we don&#8217;t, old Haskers
+will be after us again.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you think Phil and the others will come
+back?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why not? As soon as they have time to
+think it over they&#8217;ll realize it is best to face the
+music,&#8221; answered Dave.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span></p>
+<p>He and Roger returned to Oak Hall. They
+had missed one class, but fortunately that was one
+presided over by Mr. Dale, and he readily excused
+them when they said they had had some
+personal matters of importance to attend to, and
+would explain later.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is bound to come out, sooner or later,&#8221;
+said Dave to his chum. &#8220;So we might as well
+take Doctor Clay and Mr. Dale into our confidence.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose you are right,&#8221; answered the senator&#8217;s
+son. Nevertheless, he heaved a deep sigh,
+as he thought of what might be the outcome of
+the trouble. What if, after all, Jason Sparr
+should concoct some sort of evidence against them
+and send them all to prison?</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIX_LOOKING_FOR_THE_RUNAWAYS' id='CHAPTER_XIX_LOOKING_FOR_THE_RUNAWAYS'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+<h3>LOOKING FOR THE RUNAWAYS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>When Dave and Roger went to the midday
+meal in the dining-room they looked all over for
+Phil, Ben, and Buster, but the three were not in
+sight.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dave, they haven&#8217;t come back yet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So I see,&#8221; returned our hero, and he was
+much disturbed. He ate sparingly, and the senator&#8217;s
+son also had but little appetite for the
+meal.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, what&#8217;s become of those chaps?&#8221; questioned
+Shadow.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll tell you later,&#8221; answered Dave. &#8220;Don&#8217;t
+say anything now&mdash;and tell the others to keep
+quiet, too.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But such a happening could not be kept quiet,
+and soon it was whispered around that Phil, Ben,
+and Buster were missing. This presently got to
+the ears of Andrew Dale, and the head assistant
+teacher sought out Dave for an explanation.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I understand you went out with Lawrence,
+Basswood, and Beggs this morning, Porter,&#8221; said
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span>
+the teacher. &#8220;They are not yet back. Do you
+know where they went?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;They went off in a motor-boat, that is all I
+know about that part of it, Mr. Dale. Roger
+Morr and I would like to speak to you and Doctor
+Clay in private. It is very important,&#8221; went on
+our hero.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well. Come at once to the office and I
+will call the doctor.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A little later found the two youths in the office
+with Doctor Clay and his head assistant. There,
+as briefly as he could, Dave told his story, and
+Roger corroborated what was said. The head of
+the school was deeply interested and not a little
+alarmed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This is certainly serious,&#8221; he declared, with
+a grave shake of his head. &#8220;It reflects not only
+on you but on this school. I must look into this
+at once.&#8221; And then he asked many questions, and
+Andrew Dale did the same.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Running away makes it look bad for Lawrence,
+Beggs, and Basswood,&#8221; remarked Mr.
+Dale. &#8220;They should have stood their ground, as
+Morr and Porter did.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That hotel man and the constable probably
+scared them so they did not know what they
+were doing,&#8221; returned Doctor Clay. He turned
+to the boys. &#8220;You have no idea where they
+went?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;No, sir, excepting that they went up the river
+in the Kingsley motor-boat. They know Tom
+Kingsley quite well and he lets them use the boat
+once in a while.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you think you could find them, if I let you
+off to do so?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We could try, sir.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you may go at once. Tell them it was
+very foolish to run away, and urge them to come
+back at once,&#8221; added Doctor Clay.</p>
+<p>A little more conversation followed, and then
+Dave and Roger left the office and started on
+the search for the runaways.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We ought to have a motor-boat ourselves,
+to follow them up the river&mdash;that is, if they went
+any distance,&#8221; said the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We might try to borrow one, Roger.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not Nat Poole&#8217;s&mdash;he wouldn&#8217;t lend it to
+us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The two students walked to the river and
+looked up and down the stream. A rowboat and
+a sailboat were in sight, but that was all.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is Jack Laplow in his sloop,&#8221; cried
+Dave, mentioning a riverman they knew. &#8220;The
+wind is blowing up the stream. Maybe he&#8217;ll take
+us along.&#8221;</p>
+<p>They hailed the riverman, who made a living
+by doing all sorts of jobs on the stream. He did
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span>
+not have much to do just then and readily agreed,
+for a small amount, to take them up the river
+and bring them back.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We want to find some fellows who are in the
+Kingsley motor-boat,&#8221; explained Dave. &#8220;Have
+you seen anything of them?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The riverman had not, but said he would help
+to watch out for the lads. Dave and Roger
+hopped aboard the sloop, and soon the little craft
+was standing up the Leming River, with Jack
+Laplow at the tiller.</p>
+<p>It was a warm, clear day, and had the boys
+not been distressed in mind, they would have
+enjoyed the sail immensely. But as it was, they
+were very sober, so much so in fact that the old
+riverman at length remarked:</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s wrong&mdash;somebody hurt, or are ye
+going to a funeral?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No funeral,&#8221; answered Dave, with a forced
+laugh. &#8220;But we are in a hurry to find those three
+fellows.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I don&#8217;t see no motor-boat yet,&#8221; answered
+Jack Laplow.</p>
+<p>&#8220;One thing is certain: if it went up the river
+it&#8217;s got to come down,&#8221; said Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They may get out and send it back,&#8221; answered
+our hero.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But, Dave, surely you don&#8217;t think&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; But
+Dave put up his hand for silence and nodded in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span>
+the direction of the boatman; and the senator&#8217;s
+son said no more.</p>
+<p>A mile and a half were covered, and they were
+just passing one of the many islands in the river,
+when Jack Laplow gave a shout.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is the motor-boat now!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Boat ahoy!&#8221; shouted Dave, and then, as they
+drew closer, he saw that it was really the Kingsley
+craft. He was chagrined to see that only a man
+was on board, a fellow who was running the boat
+very slowly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where are those boys who were aboard?&#8221;
+demanded our hero, as the motor-boat came
+closer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is this your boat?&#8221; asked the man on board,
+in return.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, but my friends were on that boat.
+Where are they?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Left the boat at Snog&#8217;s Point, and hired
+me to bring her back. I don&#8217;t know much about
+motor-boats, so I&#8217;m running kind o&#8217; slow,&#8221; explained
+the man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Snog&#8217;s Point?&#8221; repeated Roger. &#8220;Where
+were they going?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t ask me, for I don&#8217;t know. They was
+in a tremenjous hurry, I know that. It&#8217;s all right,
+ain&#8217;t it?&#8221; went on the man, quickly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, yes, it was all right,&#8221; answered Dave.
+And then they allowed the man to go on his way.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_3' id='linki_3'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-003.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 320px; height: 498px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 320px;'>
+&#8220;<span style='font-variant:small-caps'>There is the motor-boat now</span>!&#8221;&mdash;<i>Page 186</i>.<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Want to go up to Snog&#8217;s Point?&#8221; asked the
+man of the sloop.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&mdash;and as quickly as you can get there,&#8221;
+replied Dave.</p>
+<p>As the wind was in the right direction, it did
+not take long. The Point was a rocky cliff with
+a stretch of sand at its base. Here the boys
+jumped ashore.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Want me to wait for you?&#8221; asked the riverman.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wait for half an hour,&#8221; said Dave. &#8220;Then,
+if we are not back, you can go back;&#8221; and so it
+was arranged.</p>
+<p>In the sand our hero and Roger could plainly
+see the marks of the motor-boat and many footprints.
+They followed the footprints to a road
+leading through a stretch of woods, and then
+came out on a highway leading to Barrelton.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The town is about half a mile from here.
+Wonder if they went there?&#8221; mused Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe we can learn something at the nearest
+farmhouse,&#8221; suggested Dave.</p>
+<p>They hurried on, and presently reached a farmhouse
+set close to the road, with a barn on the
+other side. At a grindstone a tall, thin boy was
+sharpening a sickle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I saw them fellers,&#8221; he drawled, when
+asked about the runaways. &#8220;They was walking
+to town to beat the cars. I thought they must be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span>
+in one o&#8217; them cross-country races, or something
+like that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come on!&#8221; cried Dave to his chum. Then
+he turned back suddenly. &#8220;Do you know anything
+about the trains from Barrelton?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t many trains from there,&#8221; answered the
+youth at the grindstone.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But do you know what there are?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s a train north jest about due now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And what is next?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A train south a leetle after four o&#8217;clock. An&#8217;
+the freight goes through at seven.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hurry, Roger!&#8221; cried Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you think they&#8217;d take a train, Dave?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know&mdash;I hope not.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The two boys set off on a run, taking it easy
+at first, so as not to get winded. They passed
+a number of farms and presently came in sight
+of Barrelton, so called because of the barrel factory
+located there. From a distance they had
+heard the whistle of a locomotive, and knew that
+the north-bound train had stopped at the station
+and gone on.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is the station!&#8221; cried Dave, pointing
+up the railroad tracks. They continued to run
+and did not stop until they gained the platform.
+Here they met the ticket agent.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The train just went, didn&#8217;t it?&#8221; asked Dave,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span>
+and as the agent nodded, he went on: &#8220;Did three
+young fellows like ourselves get on?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If they did, I didn&#8217;t see &#8217;em,&#8221; answered the
+man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; cried Roger, &#8220;maybe they didn&#8217;t take
+the train, after all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us hope so.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Somewhat out of breath, the two boys tramped
+around Barrelton, looking for Phil and the others,
+and asking about them. But nobody appeared to
+have seen the runaways, and not a trace of them
+was to be found anywhere.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All we can do is to get something to eat and
+take the other train for Oakdale,&#8221; said Roger,
+after they had satisfied themselves that the runaways
+were nowhere in that vicinity. The walking
+around had made him hungry.</p>
+<p>They procured some pie and milk at a little
+stand near the station, and shortly after four
+o&#8217;clock took the way train for Oakdale and walked
+to the school. They went directly to the doctor&#8217;s
+office. The master of Oak Hall listened patiently
+to what they had to tell.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am sorry you did not find them,&#8221; he said,
+gravely. &#8220;It was very foolish of them to run
+away, very. I trust they will come back of their
+own accord soon.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you see Mr. Sparr about the matter?&#8221;
+asked Dave.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, Porter. And I wish you and Morr to
+go with me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The interview took place that evening, the boys
+and the doctor driving down to the hotel after
+supper. Jason Sparr treated the master of the
+Hall politely but said very little.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When I make my next move I&#8217;ll have a lawyer,&#8221;
+he said. &#8220;I know somebody tried to blow
+up my hotel, and I think it was some of your boys&mdash;that
+Lawrence boy especially. But I ain&#8217;t going
+to have &#8217;em arrested until I can prove it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well,&#8221; answered Doctor Clay. &#8220;And
+in the meantime, you had better keep quiet, or
+you may have a suit for damages on hand.&#8221;</p>
+<p>On the day following there was something of a
+sensation. The weekly newspaper issued in a
+nearby town came out with a thrilling account of
+the dynamiting of the dining-room of the hotel.
+In the account appeared the following:</p>
+<p style='margin-left:1.0em; margin-right:1.0em; '>&#8220;There is strong evidence pointing to the fact
+that the outrageous deed was perpetrated by some
+schoolboys who held a grudge against Mr. Sparr.
+They are known to have been present at the blowing
+up of the old stone bridge, and were seen near
+the shanty where the sticks of dynamite were kept,
+and one boy of the town says he saw a young man
+coming from the shanty with something in his
+hand. Mr. Sparr has the authorities at work and
+is piling up his evidence, and the arrest of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span>
+rascally schoolboys may be hourly expected. It is
+said that some of the boys have run away, but the
+authorities have an idea where they can be located.
+The town committee is thinking of offering
+a reward for the capture and conviction of
+the rascals. For the safety of our citizens, the
+Weekly Globe-Leader hopes the evil-doers will
+soon be apprehended.&#8221;</p>
+<p>No names were mentioned in this account, but
+everybody in Oakdale and vicinity knew that the
+boys of Oak Hall were alluded to, and there was
+much talk over what might be done. Doctor Clay
+felt the disgrace keenly, and Dave and Roger were
+equally affected.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What are we going to do, Dave?&#8221; asked
+the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; returned our hero. &#8220;But
+we&#8217;ve got to do something, that&#8217;s certain.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XX_THE_WILD_MAN_AGAIN' id='CHAPTER_XX_THE_WILD_MAN_AGAIN'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+<h3>THE WILD MAN AGAIN</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Roger, I have an idea!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is it, Dave?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I may be mistaken, but I&#8217;ve been thinking
+that perhaps that wild man did the blowing up
+at the hotel.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What makes you think that?&#8221; questioned the
+senator&#8217;s son, putting down the book he had been
+trying to study.</p>
+<p>A day had passed after the events recorded
+in the last chapter, and so far no word had come
+in concerning Phil and the other runaways. Doctor
+Clay had sent for a private detective to assist
+in locating them and also to try, if possible, to
+clear up the mystery concerning the hotel affair.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, in the first place, it would be just like
+a crazy man to do such a thing, wouldn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;In the second place, I have heard that the
+wild man was seen around when the bridge was
+blown up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that so? Who saw him?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191' name='page_191'></a>191</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Tyson, the farmer who lives near the
+bridge.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t he try to capture the fellow?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He did, but in the excitement of the blowing
+up the wild man slipped him. And that isn&#8217;t all.
+Mr. Tyson saw him coming from the vicinity of
+that shanty where the dynamite was kept.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, that is certainly interesting!&#8221; cried the
+senator&#8217;s son. &#8220;When did you learn all this?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Less than an hour ago. Mr. Tyson brought
+some vegetables to the school and I had a talk
+with him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did he think the wild man blew up the
+hotel?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, he didn&#8217;t connect the two.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hum! What do you think of doing about
+it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hardly know. I wish we could round up the
+wild man.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Plenty of folks wish that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think he hangs out somewhere along the
+river, or on one of the islands.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe Nat Poole knows.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hardly think so&mdash;although I am sure Nat
+wants to find the fellow&mdash;why, I can&#8217;t imagine.&#8221;</p>
+<p>During those trying days, Job Haskers was as
+harsh and dictatorial to Dave and Roger as ever,
+and several times he passed sneering remarks
+about those who were missing.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192' name='page_192'></a>192</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You may think as you please, Doctor Clay,&#8221;
+said he to the master of the Hall. &#8220;I feel sure
+in my mind that Lawrence and those other boys
+are guilty. I do not think Mr. Sparr would
+accuse them if he was not pretty sure of his
+ground.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, he has not dared to have those warrants
+served,&#8221; replied the doctor, dryly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because he is afraid there will be a great
+deal of money used in the case to fight him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Haskers, do you stand up for Mr. Sparr?
+I thought you had had some difficulty yourself
+with him once?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That was but a small affair. I think he is perfectly
+honest and that he wants to do what is
+right.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Possibly. But he did not treat Lawrence
+very fairly in the matter of that dinner that was
+ordered.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That was a mistake, and Mr. Sparr lost as
+much as he got. Yes, I think those boys guilty,
+and in the end you will find out that I am right,&#8221;
+added Job Haskers as he went off, smiling grimly
+to himself, as if it was a pleasure to him to have
+the boys thus accused.</p>
+<p>The next morning came another surprise. On
+getting up Dave noticed that something was missing
+from the dormitory. Phil&#8217;s suit-case was gone,
+likewise a portion of his clothing, and also the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span>
+valises of Ben and Buster, and part of their outfits.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, this beats the Dutch!&#8221; exclaimed
+Roger, on learning the news. &#8220;Who took them,
+do you suppose?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t ask me, Roger.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe they came themselves and got them,&#8221;
+suggested Sam.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If they did, wouldn&#8217;t we hear them?&#8221; asked
+Gus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Talk about a mysterious disappearance,&#8221;
+cried Shadow. &#8220;Say, this puts me in mind of a
+story. Once some fellows&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, stow it, Shadow!&#8221; cried the senator&#8217;s
+son. &#8220;Let&#8217;s get busy and try to find out what
+this means. Maybe they are back at the school.&#8221;</p>
+<p>All of the boys dressed hastily and took a
+look around. But they could find no trace of the
+runaways. Yet the traveling-bags and the clothing
+were certainly gone.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If I didn&#8217;t know better, I&#8217;d say the place was
+haunted!&#8221; cried Luke.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, don&#8217;t say that!&#8221; exclaimed Polly Vane,
+looking scared. &#8220;I don&#8217;t wish to see any ghosts.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Doctor Clay was informed of what had occurred,
+and he had another search conducted.
+But it was all to no purpose&mdash;the things were
+missing, and that was all there was to it.</p>
+<p>It may well be imagined that with so much
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span>
+going on it was next to impossible for Dave and
+Roger to study. Yet they did their best, not wishing
+to drop behind again as they had during the
+trip to Cave Island. Job Haskers did not let up
+on them, and many a time they wished he would
+leave Oak Hall and that they might never see
+him again.</p>
+<p>One afternoon Roger came to Dave in great
+haste and beckoned for him to come outside.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think we had better follow Nat Poole,&#8221; said
+the senator&#8217;s son. &#8220;I think there is something
+in the wind.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What makes you think that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nat has been packing a valise and he has put
+in the strangest things&mdash;some clothing, some bottles
+of medicine, some rope, and a thing that looks
+like a crown made of brass.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A crown made of brass? Oh, Roger, maybe
+that wild man&mdash;who calls himself the King of
+Sumatra&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the idea, Dave, I see you&#8217;ve caught
+on. Come on, before Nat gets away from us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Our hero needed no further urging, and soon
+he and Roger were on their way to the gymnasium,
+where the senator&#8217;s son had, by pure accident,
+seen Nat Poole packing the things mentioned
+in his handbag.</p>
+<p>As they approached, they saw the money-lender&#8217;s
+son trundle out a bicycle he owned and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195' name='page_195'></a>195</span>
+mount it, swinging his valise over his shoulder by
+a strap. He looked back to see if he was being
+observed, but Dave and Roger were on guard
+and quickly dove out of sight behind some bushes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll have to follow on our own wheels,&#8221;
+said Dave.</p>
+<p>Their old bicycles were still in the gymnasium.
+They were not in very good condition, but the
+tires were air-tight and that was enough. Without
+delay, they trundled the machines out, and
+leaping into the saddles, pedaled after Nat.</p>
+<p>The course of the money-lender&#8217;s son was
+along the river road, and he followed this for
+the best part of a mile. Then he branched off
+on a side-road leading to what were known as the
+Chester Hills. It was hard work pushing the machine
+up the hills, but Nat kept at it steadily, and
+Dave and Roger followed. Strange to say, the
+money-lender&#8217;s son did not once look back after
+leaving the school. Evidently he was of the
+opinion that nobody had observed his departure,
+or, if so, had taken no particular notice of it.</p>
+<p>From the top of one of the hills, Nat struck
+off on another side-road, leading to a little valley.
+Here was a brook, and at a point where
+it widened out, a small and really beautiful island.
+In the center of the island a cabin had been built
+by some sportsman, and a rustic bridge connected
+the resort with the shore.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196' name='page_196'></a>196</span></p>
+<p>Reaching the rustic bridge, Nat dismounted,
+and with his valise still over his shoulder, walked
+towards the cabin. As he did this Dave and
+Roger came quite close and they, too, dismounted,
+keeping in the shelter of some trees near by.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Stop! I command you, in the name of the
+King of Sumatra, to stop!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The call came from the cabin, and a second
+later the wild man appeared. He was clad in
+a blue pair of trousers and over his shoulder was
+thrown a big red blanket. On his head rested
+a crown made of a tin pail cut into sharp
+points.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I salute you, King of Sumatra!&#8221; called out
+Nat, making a low bow.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ha! it is my servant that speaks,&#8221; said the
+wild man. &#8220;Bow low, bow, I tell you!&#8221; and he
+flourished a wooden sword that he held in one
+hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is the wild man, sure enough!&#8221; whispered
+Roger, in great excitement.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And evidently he has been expecting Nat,&#8221;
+returned Dave. &#8220;Let us get closer and see what
+is up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>They advanced with care until they were behind
+a tree at the very foot of the rustic bridge.
+In the meantime Nat had gone forward, bowing
+low at every step.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have brought you something, my king!&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span>
+cried the money-lender&#8217;s son. &#8220;Something of
+great importance to you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is it?&#8221; demanded the wild man, his
+curiosity excited.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A new crown. It is of gold, a beautiful
+crown.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ha! ha! that is well! The King of Sumatra
+needs a new crown!&#8221; cried the wild man, strutting
+up and down in front of the cabin. &#8220;Give
+it to me, that I may see if it fits.&#8221; And he held
+out his empty hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us go into the cabin, and you can sit in
+your chair of state while I place it on your head,&#8221;
+said Nat, in a soothing, persuasive voice. &#8220;You
+will like it, I know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you bring your army with you?&#8221; demanded
+the wild man, suspiciously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I am all alone&mdash;the army is at Oakdale,&#8221;
+answered Nat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Again &#8217;tis well. Come in, and I will sit on
+the throne,&#8221; and with a sweeping gesture of welcome,
+the wild man stepped back into the cabin,
+and Nat Poole followed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now, what do you make of this?&#8221; whispered
+Roger, looking at Dave in wonder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have an idea, Roger,&#8221; answered our hero.
+&#8220;Nat knows that man; in fact, he is well acquainted
+with him. I think he is going to try to
+make him a prisoner.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;A prisoner? Oh, I see; for the glory of it,
+eh?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, to get him back to some sanitarium as
+quietly as possible. I think Nat would like to do
+it without anybody around here being the wiser.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh! Then maybe the fellow is some relative
+of the Pooles.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Possibly, or a close friend. But come on,
+let us see what happens. We ought to try to capture
+the man ourselves.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To be sure. But I don&#8217;t see how we are
+going to do it. We are unarmed, and they say
+crazy folks are fearfully strong.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll have to watch our chances.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The cabin had a window as well as a door,
+and to the former the two boys crawled. Peering
+through a vine that grew over the opening, they
+saw that the wild man had seated himself on a
+rude bench which he called his throne. It was
+covered with a tattered carpet and some cabalistic
+signs in blue chalk. Nat had placed his valise
+on the ground and was opening it. He brought
+out the crown and also the rope, but took care to
+conceal the latter under his coat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now you must close your eyes and sit perfectly
+still while I place the crown on your head,&#8221;
+said the money-lender&#8217;s son. &#8220;I will have to do
+it from behind, for that is the way they do it in
+England and Germany.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Do they do it in Russia that way, too?&#8221; demanded
+the wild man, and his eyes took on a
+glowing look as he gazed at the brass crown.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then let it be so.&#8221; And the wild man sat
+back on the bench and closed his eyes, and stroked
+his straggly beard.</p>
+<p>Quickly Nat stepped behind the man, and while
+he fumbled with the crown with one hand, he
+brought out the rope with the other. He was
+greatly excited and his hands trembled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now sit perfectly still while I count fifty,&#8221;
+said the money-lender&#8217;s son. &#8220;Then when
+I&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>He did not finish, for at that instant the wild
+man let out a sudden yell and leaped to his feet.
+He ran to the doorway; and the next moment
+came face to face with Dave and Roger.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXI_SOMETHING_OF_A_CLEW' id='CHAPTER_XXI_SOMETHING_OF_A_CLEW'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+<h3>SOMETHING OF A CLEW</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Ha! ha! you are the army sent to capture
+me, are you? But I am not to be captured! Take
+the cannons away! Bring up the artillery! Forward
+the light brigade! Victory for the King of
+Sumatra! Oh, if only I had a company of trained
+monkeys I would show you how to fight!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Thus speaking, the wild man danced around
+before Dave and Roger, swinging his wooden
+sword close to their heads. Indeed, our hero
+had to dodge back, to keep from being hit.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello, you here?&#8221; cried Nat, coming from
+the cabin. &#8220;You followed me, did you?&#8221; He
+scowled deeply. &#8220;It&#8217;s just like you, Dave
+Porter!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nobody shall follow the King of Sumatra!&#8221;
+went on the wild man, with a cunning look at the
+three students. &#8220;Away! Out of my sight!&#8221; he
+yelled.</p>
+<p>He dashed past Dave and Roger, moving towards
+the rustic bridge. Our hero caught him by
+the arm, but received a blow in the face that staggered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span>
+him. Roger also tried to catch the man,
+but he was too quick, and a second later was on
+the bridge.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come back!&#8221; bawled Nat. &#8220;Come back,
+Uncle Wilbur! Don&#8217;t you know me? Come
+back, please! We won&#8217;t hurt you!&#8221; And then
+he set off after the wild man, who was running
+along the road beyond the bridge.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dave, did you hear that?&#8221; gasped the senator&#8217;s
+son. &#8220;He called the wild man Uncle Wilbur!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I heard him,&#8221; returned our hero. &#8220;No
+wonder he has been after him, Roger. Come on,
+let us see if we can&#8217;t catch him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The chums started after the wild man and the
+money-lender&#8217;s son. The way was along the road,
+but presently the wild man turned into a stretch
+of woods. He could run like a trained athlete,
+and easily outdistanced Nat, who kept calling
+after him.</p>
+<p>When Dave and Roger came up they found
+the money-lender&#8217;s son leaning against a tree,
+out of breath and much disgusted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Couldn&#8217;t get him, eh?&#8221; queried Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, you fellows scared him off,&#8221; growled the
+money-lender&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am sorry if we did that,&#8221; said Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You had no right to butt in,&#8221; grumbled Nat.
+&#8220;What did you follow me for, anyway?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Because we thought you were after the wild
+man, that&#8217;s why,&#8221; answered Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Humph!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So he is your Uncle Wilbur,&#8221; went on our
+hero, after a pause, and he turned a look of
+sympathy at Nat as he spoke.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who told you that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You called him Uncle Wilbur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&mdash;I guess you are mistaken,&#8221; stammered
+Nat, growing red in the face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, we heard you as plain as day,&#8221; put in
+the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You haven&#8217;t any right to pry into my affairs,
+Roger Morr! You nor Dave Porter either!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps not,&#8221; answered Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look here, Nat, if we can help you we&#8217;ll do
+it,&#8221; came from Dave. &#8220;I suppose, if that man is
+your uncle, you wish to get him back to the&mdash;er&mdash;the
+sanitarium as quickly and as quietly as possible;
+is that so?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wouldn&#8217;t you want to do that, if he was
+your uncle?&#8221; asked the money-lender&#8217;s son, flushing
+deeply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly. But it looks, now, as if you couldn&#8217;t
+do it alone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I might have done it, if you hadn&#8217;t come up
+and queered my game.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He didn&#8217;t see us until he ran out of the
+cabin,&#8221; said Roger. &#8220;He just got a wild streak
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span>
+on, that&#8217;s all. I don&#8217;t think you could have managed
+him alone. He wouldn&#8217;t let you tie him up
+with that rope.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, he&#8217;s gone, that&#8217;s sure,&#8221; grumbled Nat.
+&#8220;I&#8217;m going back to the cabin for my valise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He may come back,&#8221; suggested Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think so. But I&#8217;ll wait and see. I
+hung around once for him&mdash;on that island&mdash;but
+he never came back. It isn&#8217;t often he visits
+the same spot twice. That&#8217;s the reason the authorities
+around here haven&#8217;t caught him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is his name, Nat?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wilbur Poole, if you must know. He is my
+father&#8217;s half-brother.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where did he come from?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;From the Blossmore Sanitarium, in New
+York state. It&#8217;s a private place, near Lake Erie.
+He lost a lot of money several years ago in a
+speculation in Sumatra tobacco and that made
+him crazy, and that is why, I suppose, he calls
+himself the King of Sumatra.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you know he was missing when you heard
+of the wild man?&#8221; questioned Dave, with interest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I did not, for the sanitarium people did
+not notify us that he had gotten away. I suppose
+they thought he would stay near the institution
+and that they would be able to get him again. I
+can&#8217;t imagine what brought him away out here,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span>
+excepting that I went to see him once, when he
+was somewhat better, and I told him about Oakdale
+and our school. I knew he called himself
+the King of Sumatra, and that is why I got interested
+in the wild man as soon as I heard you
+mention that name. Then, when the handkerchief
+was found, I was sure the man was my
+uncle.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you put the hole in the handkerchief,&#8221;
+said our hero.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, because&mdash;well, I didn&#8217;t want folks to
+find out from the Blossmore authorities that the
+man was my uncle,&#8221; answered Nat, casting down
+his eyes. &#8220;I thought I might be able to catch
+him and send him back on the quiet. I didn&#8217;t
+want the whole school talking about it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can understand your feelings, Nat,&#8221; said
+our hero, kindly. &#8220;And if I can help you in the
+matter, I&#8217;ll do it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose you&#8217;ll tell everybody he&#8217;s my uncle,&#8221;
+came bitterly from the money-lender&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I won&#8217;t. But I think Doctor Clay ought
+to know it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And what of your folks?&#8221; asked Roger.
+&#8220;Do they know?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I sent my dad a letter about it last week.
+But he is away on business, so I don&#8217;t know
+when he&#8217;ll get it or what he&#8217;ll do. I didn&#8217;t let the
+Blossmore folks know because I don&#8217;t think my
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span>
+uncle ought to go back to that place. He ought to
+be put in an institution where they are more strict,
+so he can&#8217;t get away again.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are right there,&#8221; said Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nat, don&#8217;t you know it is highly dangerous to
+allow that man at large?&#8221; asked the senator&#8217;s
+son, after a pause, during which the three boys
+turned their footsteps towards the island cabin.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t think he is as dangerous as some
+folks imagine,&#8221; was the reply. &#8220;He has never
+actually harmed anybody yet. But he scares &#8217;em.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He may have committed some deeds of which
+you know nothing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>At these suggestive words from the senator&#8217;s
+son Nat turned pale.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean? Have you heard anything,
+Roger?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hate to hurt your feelings any further, Nat,
+but I must be honest with you. Dave and I have
+an idea that he was the one who blew up the
+dining-room of Sparr&#8217;s hotel.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, impossible!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What Roger says is true,&#8221; said Dave, gravely.
+&#8220;I am sorry for you, Nat, but that is the way it
+looks to us. He was seen around the old stone
+bridge when it was blown up, and around the
+shanty where the dynamite was kept, and he has
+been in Oakdale several times, so we have heard.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, he wouldn&#8217;t do such a thing! He
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span>
+couldn&#8217;t!&#8221; cried the money-lender&#8217;s son, in genuine
+distress.</p>
+<p>&#8220;An insane man is liable to do anything, Nat,&#8221;
+said Roger. &#8220;Why, he might have set off that
+dynamite without realizing the consequences. The
+best thing we can do is to organize a regular
+search for him, and round him up as quickly as
+possible.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose that is so,&#8221; groaned Nat. &#8220;But,
+oh, how I do hate the exposure!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mustn&#8217;t take it too hard, Nat,&#8221; said
+Dave. &#8220;Remember, neither you nor your family
+are responsible for his condition of mind.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It did not take the three students long to reach
+the little cabin. While Nat was packing up the
+things he had brought along, Dave and Roger
+looked over the place. The wild man had had
+but few things, none of them worth mentioning.
+There was a newspaper and an old magazine,
+showing that Wilbur Poole occasionally indulged
+in reading.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello, look here!&#8221; cried Roger, as he turned
+the magazine over. &#8220;Well, I declare!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is it?&#8221; asked Dave and Nat, in a
+breath.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here&#8217;s a picture, drawn in blue pencil. It is
+marked Fort, but it looks like Sparr&#8217;s hotel.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And look what it says!&#8221; cried Dave, eying
+the crude drawing. &#8220;&#8216;Powder House to be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span>
+blown up&#8217;! That&#8217;s the dining-room, as plain as
+day!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And down here it says, &#8216;Dynamite will do
+it easily,&#8217; and signed, &#8216;King of Sumatra.&#8217; Dave,
+he did it, and this proves it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It certainly looks that way, Roger.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let me see that drawing!&#8221; burst out Nat,
+and would have snatched it from Roger&#8217;s hand
+had not Dave stopped him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You can look at it, Nat, but you must give it
+back,&#8221; said our hero.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What for? My uncle drew that and I have
+a right to it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I am going to hand this over to Doctor
+Clay and then to the Oakdale authorities. It may
+be needed to clear Phil, Ben, and Buster.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hurrah, Dave, that&#8217;s the talk!&#8221; cried Roger,
+with sudden enthusiasm. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t think of it,
+but that is just what is needed to clear &#8217;em!
+We&#8217;ll knock Jason Sparr&#8217;s accusations into a
+cocked hat!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You let me see that drawing!&#8221; shouted Nat,
+making another grab for it. &#8220;I&#8217;ve got a right
+to it&mdash;if my uncle made it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You can look at it, but you can&#8217;t handle it,&#8221;
+said Dave, and he gave Roger a look that the
+senator&#8217;s son well understood. Both knew that
+the money-lender&#8217;s son could not be trusted with
+such an important bit of evidence.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span></p>
+<p>The drawing was held up, but Nat was not
+permitted to get too close to it. He looked it
+over carelessly and then his lip curled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Huh! I don&#8217;t think my uncle drew it,&#8221; he
+said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And we think he did,&#8221; returned Dave.</p>
+<p>There was a sudden silence after this. Each
+boy was busy with his thoughts. Dave felt particularly
+light-hearted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This ought to clear Phil and the others,&#8221;
+he reasoned. &#8220;And they can come back to school
+without delay and finish the term and graduate.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Having packed up his things, Nat got out his
+bicycle and prepared to ride back to Oak Hall,
+and the others did the same.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Going to give me that drawing?&#8221; asked the
+money-lender&#8217;s son, just as he was ready to start
+off.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, we are going to turn it over to Doctor
+Clay,&#8221; said Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, have your own way,&#8221; growled
+Nat.</p>
+<p>As in coming to the cabin, the money-lender&#8217;s
+son took the lead in the return to Oak Hall.
+Dave and Roger kept close behind and occasionally
+spoke of the happenings in guarded tones.
+When the school was reached all left their bicycles
+in the gymnasium.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Going to Doctor Clay now?&#8221; demanded Nat.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;We might as well,&#8221; said Dave. &#8220;The sooner
+he knows of this, the better for everybody.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Doctor Clay was somewhat surprised to see
+the three boys, dusty and tired-looking, enter his
+private office. He listened with close attention to
+their tale of visiting the cabin and encountering
+the wild man, and looked completely astonished
+on learning that the man was Nat&#8217;s uncle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am sorry for you, Poole,&#8221; said he, kindly.
+&#8220;But such things will happen and you must make
+the best of it. It is not your fault.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then Dave and Roger told of the finding of
+the old magazine with the drawing and writing,
+and Doctor Clay shook his head sorrowfully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Too bad! Too bad!&#8221; he murmured.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But this clears Lawrence, Basswood, and
+Beggs,&#8221; cried Dave. &#8220;And it clears Roger and
+myself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes! yes! so it does, Porter!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you believe it, Doctor Clay!&#8221; cried
+Nat, leaping to his feet. &#8220;It does nothing of
+the sort! That paper is no kind of evidence at
+all!&#8221; And thus speaking, the money-lender&#8217;s son
+glared defiantly at Dave and Roger.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210' name='page_210'></a>210</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXII_AFTER_THE_RUNAWAYS' id='CHAPTER_XXII_AFTER_THE_RUNAWAYS'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+<h3>AFTER THE RUNAWAYS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Why, Nat, what do you mean?&#8221; demanded
+Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean just what I say!&#8221; declared the money-lender&#8217;s
+son. &#8220;This is a frame-up, nothing more!
+I understand it all now, although I didn&#8217;t at
+first.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean by &#8216;a frame-up,&#8217; Poole?&#8221;
+demanded Doctor Clay.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean that they took this magazine and the
+drawing to the cabin, that is what I mean, Doctor
+Clay. They found out somehow that my&mdash;er&mdash;that
+the wild man was there, and they got up this
+scheme to make it look as if he had blown up the
+hotel,&mdash;and they did it just to clear their cronies
+and themselves.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nat, you know that is not true!&#8221; exclaimed
+Roger. &#8220;I found the magazine with the drawing
+on a shelf in the cabin.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that is what you said, but I don&#8217;t believe
+it, Roger Morr. I think you put the magazine
+there yourself&mdash;you or Dave Porter.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211' name='page_211'></a>211</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;We did nothing of the kind,&#8221; cried our hero.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think you did&mdash;and I think Jason Sparr
+will think so, too, when he hears the story. It&#8217;s
+a frame-up, just to clear yourselves and your
+cronies,&#8221; added Nat, with a sneer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nat, you ought to be&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; began Roger, in
+high anger, when Dave stopped him. Our hero
+looked at Doctor Clay.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What Roger says is the absolute truth, Doctor
+Clay,&#8221; said our hero. &#8220;He found that magazine
+on a shelf in the cabin where the wild man
+was staying, and that drawing and the wording
+were on it, just as you see. More than that, we
+can prove that the wild man was around the old
+shanty where the dynamite was kept, and that he
+was seen in Oakdale several times.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dave was interrupted here by Nat, and a wordy
+war lasting several minutes followed. Finally
+Doctor Clay said he would take the magazine and
+keep it, and that he would notify the authorities
+in what locality the wild man might be found, provided
+he had not gone away further than expected.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am inclined to believe the story told by Morr
+and Porter,&#8221; said he somewhat sternly to Nat
+Poole. &#8220;But this matter cannot be cleared up
+until we find your uncle. When captured, the unfortunate
+man will most likely speak of the blowing up
+in some way or another, if he is guilty.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212' name='page_212'></a>212</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think so,&#8221; answered Nat; but his manner
+showed that he was much disturbed. Then
+Dave and Roger were dismissed, and the master
+of the school took Nat with him to Oakdale, to see
+what could be done towards rounding up Wilbur
+Poole in the near future.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, Dave, what is the next move?&#8221; asked
+the senator&#8217;s son, as the two were alone in the
+lavatory, washing up after the long bicycle ride.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wish I could find Phil and the others and
+get them to come back here,&#8221; responded our
+hero. &#8220;It is a great mistake for them to stay
+away.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I believe you&mdash;it looks just as if they were
+guilty. I wonder that they don&#8217;t come back on
+their own account, now they have had a chance
+to think it over.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think they saw that article in the newspaper,
+Roger, and it scared them worse than ever.
+Maybe they imagine the officers of the law are
+waiting to gobble them up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If we only had some trace of them!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got an idea I am going to follow up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What sort of an idea?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I was thinking of that baggage that left here.
+Maybe it was shipped to some point.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll have a job tracing it up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can try it, anyway,&#8221; answered our hero.</p>
+<p>A day slipped by and nothing more was said
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213' name='page_213'></a>213</span>
+about the affair by Doctor Clay or Nat Poole.
+Then Nat left the school, telling some friends he
+was going home for a week&#8217;s rest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Most likely he is after his uncle,&#8221; was Roger&#8217;s
+comment, and Dave agreed with him.</p>
+<p>As soon as he could get the time Dave went
+to Oakdale to see if he could find any trace of the
+baggage belonging to Phil and the others who had
+run away. He made many inquiries but without
+success, and was on the point of returning to the
+school when he happened to think of an old man
+named Dowling, who did some trucking and who
+knew Buster Beggs very well.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll go around to Dowling&#8217;s place,&#8221; said he
+to his chum.</p>
+<p>They found the old man in a little shanty behind
+his house which he called his office. It had
+an old easy-chair and a desk, and on the wall was a
+telephone.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How do you do, boys,&#8221; he said, politely.
+&#8220;What can I do for you? Want some baggage
+shipped?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I came for some information, Mr. Dowling,&#8221;
+said Dave. &#8220;Have you shipped any baggage
+for Buster Beggs lately?&#8221;</p>
+<p>At the mention of the fat student&#8217;s name the
+old expressman started.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you want to know that for?&#8221; he
+demanded.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214' name='page_214'></a>214</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve a very good reason, Mr. Dowling. I
+want to do Beggs a favor.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Reckon you want to find him, eh?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So do some other folks;&#8221; and the old man
+chuckled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, we are his friends, and we want to find
+him for his own good.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who be you, if I may ask?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am Dave Porter, and this is Roger Morr.
+Buster Beggs is our friend, and so are Phil Lawrence
+and Ben Basswood. They ran away and
+it was foolish for them to do it. Now we
+want to find them and get them to come back
+here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was foolish for &#8217;em to run away&mdash;I said
+thet all along,&#8221; murmured the old expressman.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you know where they are?&#8221; put in
+Roger quickly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I don&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But you took their baggage away, didn&#8217;t
+you?&#8221; questioned Dave, for he could see that the
+old man was holding something back.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I allow as how I moved some things for &#8217;em,
+yes,&#8221; was the cautious reply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When they ran away?&#8221; pursued Dave.</p>
+<p>The old expressman nodded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who got those bags from Oak Hall?&#8221; asked
+Roger.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215' name='page_215'></a>215</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Thet&#8217;s a secret,&#8221; and now the old man really
+chuckled, as if he thought it was a good joke.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You did!&#8221; declared Dave, bound to get at
+the truth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I didn&#8217;t. Buster did&mdash;carried &#8217;em down
+on his back, one at a time, in the middle o&#8217; the
+night, an&#8217; nobuddy knew it! Say, they could walk
+off with yer hull school if they wanted to!&#8221; And
+the old expressman chuckled again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You were waiting for him?&#8221; continued Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Might be as I was.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you took the baggage to the depot?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe I did.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And had them checked on railroad tickets?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, Buster went one way, and the bags went
+tudder&mdash;leas&#8217;wise so I was given to understand.
+Maybe he done it to put me off the track,&#8221; continued
+Isaac Dowling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But where did the bags go to?&#8221; demanded
+Dave. &#8220;Come, out with it, Mr. Dowling. I give
+you my word that I am acting for Buster&#8217;s good.
+I wouldn&#8217;t get him into trouble for the world. He
+is my chum, and so are those other boys my
+friends.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, you look honest, boy, so I&#8217;ll tell ye.
+The baggage was sent by express to a place called
+Camptown Falls, in Maine.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Camptown Falls!&#8221; cried Roger. Then he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216' name='page_216'></a>216</span>
+looked at Dave, who nodded, to show that he
+understood.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did Buster say he was going elsewhere?&#8221;
+queried Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He didn&#8217;t say so, exactly. But he mentioned
+Boston, an&#8217; I thought he was goin&#8217; there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He left on the train?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, he didn&#8217;t! He went off in the darkness,
+an&#8217; that&#8217;s the last I see o&#8217; him,&#8221; concluded Isaac
+Dowling, as a hail came for him to come into the
+house.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Camptown Falls,&#8221; said Dave, when he and
+Roger were alone. &#8220;Can they have gone to that
+out-of-the-way spot?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It would be the place Buster would pick out,
+Dave. He has often spoken of going camping up
+there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He must have mentioned Boston just to throw
+old Dowling off the track.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;More than likely. And to think he took those
+bags away while we slept!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wonder where Phil and Ben were at the
+time?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. Maybe they were at that
+camp.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Much excited over what they had learned, Dave
+and the senator&#8217;s son returned to Oak Hall. They
+had expected to interview Doctor Clay and were
+chagrined to learn that he had gone to New York
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217' name='page_217'></a>217</span>
+on important business and would not return for
+two days. Mr. Dale had been left in charge of
+the school.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Roger, do you know what I think of doing?&#8221;
+said our hero. &#8220;I&#8217;ve a good notion to get permission
+to leave the Hall and go after Phil and
+the others. I think I can get them to come
+back.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Want me to go along?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That will hardly be necessary. Besides, I&#8217;d
+like somebody to stay here and watch Nat Poole,
+if he comes back. Do you know, I&#8217;ve a notion that
+Nat knows more about this affair than he would
+like to tell.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He certainly acts that way.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am going to see Mr. Dale.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Our hero had a long talk with the head assistant,
+and the upshot of this was that he got permission
+to go to Maine, to look for the runaways.
+He was to be gone no longer than was absolutely
+necessary.</p>
+<p>It did not take our hero long to prepare for
+the trip. He packed a few things in a suit-case
+and then he was ready. He consulted a map and
+some timetables, and found he could leave Oakdale
+on the first train in the morning, and by making
+two changes, reach Camptown Falls about two
+o&#8217;clock in the afternoon. Nobody but Roger and
+Mr. Dale knew that he was going away.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218' name='page_218'></a>218</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Got money enough, have you, Dave?&#8221; questioned
+the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, Roger.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a wild kind of a spot, so Buster told
+me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am not afraid of that&mdash;if only I can locate
+the boys,&#8221; answered our hero.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How are you going to look for them?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know yet&mdash;I&#8217;ll find out after I get
+there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It must be confessed that Dave slept but little
+that night. His mind was filled with what was
+before him. He felt that he had quite a mission
+to perform, first in locating the runaways and
+then in persuading them to return to Oak Hall
+to face the music.</p>
+<p>He had an early breakfast, Roger eating with
+him, and then the buggy, driven by Horsehair, was
+brought around and he got in, and a minute later
+he was off, the senator&#8217;s son waving him an adieu
+from the porch of the school.</p>
+<p>Dave found the first train he rode on but half
+filled with passengers, and he had a double seat
+to himself. He changed at the Junction, and
+about noon reached Lumberport, where he was to
+take the train on the little side-line for Camptown
+Falls. At Lumberport he got dinner, at a hotel
+frequented by lumbermen. He sat at a long table
+with half a dozen men and listened to their talk
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219' name='page_219'></a>219</span>
+with interest when he heard Camptown Falls mentioned.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, they tell me there is great danger of the
+dam giving way just above Camptown Falls,&#8221; one
+of the men said. &#8220;Doxey reported it hasn&#8217;t been
+safe for a week.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, if that dam gave way it would do a lot
+of damage below the Falls,&#8221; said another.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It certainly would,&#8221; replied a tall lumberman.
+&#8220;It would wipe out some of those camps on
+Moosetail Island. I rather guess the water would
+cover the whole island.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Somebody ought to warn the campers,&#8221; said
+another.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I guess they know it already,&#8221; was the
+answer.</p>
+<p>Dave arose from the table feeling very uneasy.
+He remembered the name, Moosetail Island, now.
+Buster had once mentioned it, stating he had
+camped there and would like to go again. Were
+the runaways there now, and in danger of the dam,
+should it break?</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220' name='page_220'></a>220</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXIII_AT_THE_CAMP' id='CHAPTER_XXIII_AT_THE_CAMP'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+<h3>AT THE CAMP</h3>
+</div>
+<p>At last the train came that was to take our
+hero to the railroad station of Camptown Falls.
+It was merely a flag station, but the conductor
+said he would stop there for any passenger who
+might wish to get off. The railroad was a single-track
+affair, running through the woods and across
+the country stretches, and the train consisted of
+one passenger car and several freights.</p>
+<p>Dave looked at the passengers and counted
+them. There were just an even dozen, and of
+these, ten were men, farmers and those in the
+lumber business. One, a bright young fellow, sat
+near our hero, and Dave resolved to ask him if
+he knew anything about Camptown Falls and the
+summer camps in that vicinity.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I know all about the Falls,&#8221; said the
+young lumberman. &#8220;I work not over three miles
+from there&mdash;at Cropley&#8217;s&mdash;the station this side
+of Camptown. There ain&#8217;t any town, not since
+the Jewell Lumber Company busted up. Some
+folks camp out there, down along the river and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221' name='page_221'></a>221</span>
+on Moosetail Island, but there aren&#8217;t near as
+many as there used to be.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Somebody said the dam above Camptown
+Falls was dangerous?&#8221; said Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think it is myself, and I can&#8217;t understand
+how they allow folks to camp along the river and
+on that island. If that dam ever broke it would
+be good-by to anybody on the island, I&#8217;m thinking.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have you been up to the island lately?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I was there about a week ago.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who were there then, do you know?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A couple of men from Portland and half a
+dozen young fellers from Springfield. There was
+another camp, with some women in it, but I didn&#8217;t
+get around to that, I only heard of it. There are
+half a dozen camps along the right bank of the
+river, but they are on high ground, and if the dam
+broke it isn&#8217;t likely the water would reach &#8217;em,&#8221;
+continued the young lumberman.</p>
+<p>The train rolled along at a rate of twenty miles
+an hour, making stops at stations and crossroads.
+Here and there a person got on or off, and by the
+time Camptown Falls was reached Dave had the
+passenger car almost to himself.</p>
+<p>The train halted for but a minute and our hero
+alighted, suit-case in hand. Much to his surprise,
+not a soul was about the little depot, which looked
+old and dilapidated. There was a stretch of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222' name='page_222'></a>222</span>
+fields beyond the track, and farther on he made
+out the glistening waters of the river, and in the
+center the woodland stretch known as Moosetail
+Island.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, this surely is Lonesome Land!&#8221; Dave
+murmured to himself, as the train rumbled out
+of sight and he was left utterly alone. &#8220;And
+not another train until eight o&#8217;clock to-morrow
+morning! I&#8217;ll have a fine time of it to-night if I
+don&#8217;t meet those fellows, or run across some camp
+where they will take me in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dave looked at the sky and this did not tend
+to increase his good spirits. When he had left
+Oakdale it had been warm and clear; now dark
+clouds were forming overhead and it looked as if
+it might rain before long.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ve got my raincoat and a waterproof
+cap, and that is one comfort,&#8221; he told himself.
+&#8220;But I had better hurry up and see if I can&#8217;t
+find Phil and the others before it gets too dark.
+I wish there was somebody here who could tell
+me where to go.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He looked around for a sign of some habitation.
+Far across the river he saw a column of
+smoke, coming up from among the trees, but that
+was all. The only building in sight was the
+deserted depot.</p>
+<p>There was something of a path leading from
+the depot to the river, and Dave followed this.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223' name='page_223'></a>223</span>
+But soon the path seemed to divide, and the various
+branches became more indistinct at every step,
+especially as it was rapidly growing darker and
+darker.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll strike a straight course for Moosetail
+Island,&#8221; Dave said to himself. &#8220;I&#8217;ll surely find
+some people camping out there, and they may
+be able to tell me about the boys, if they are
+here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>As he approached the river, going down a small
+hill, the way became stony, and he had to walk
+with care, for fear of going into some hole, or
+twisting an ankle. It was hard work, especially
+with the suit-case, and he half wished he had hidden
+the baggage somewhere near the depot.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I was a big chump that I didn&#8217;t bring some
+lunch along,&#8221; he reasoned. And then he had to
+smile at himself, as he remembered how he had
+imagined that he might put up at some hotel in
+Camptown Falls! He had not dreamed that the
+place would prove such a lonely one. It was certainly
+an ideal spot for runaways who wished to
+remain undiscovered.</p>
+<p>Presently Dave found himself at the bank of
+the river, a wide but shallow stream, filled with
+sandbars, rocks, and piles of driftwood. Not a
+great distance off was the end of Moosetail
+Island.</p>
+<p>It was now so dark that our hero could see but
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224' name='page_224'></a>224</span>
+little. As he stood at the edge of the river, he
+heard a patter on the leaves of the trees and knew
+it had begun to rain.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wonder how they get to the island?&#8221; he
+mused. &#8220;They must either use canoes, or else
+wade across, or ford along the stones.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He moved along the river-bank, and soon came
+to a point where the stones in the river seemed to
+stretch in a line from the bank to the island.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess I&#8217;ll try it here,&#8221; he told himself.
+&#8220;But I think I had better leave the suit-case
+behind.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He placed the case in a tree, sheltering it as
+much as possible from the rain, which was now
+coming down at a lively rate. Then, donning his
+raincoat and waterproof cap, he set out over the
+rocks in the river, leaping from one to the next
+and heading for the island.</p>
+<p>It was no easy journey, and when but half-way
+to Moosetail Island Dave slipped and went into
+the stream up to his knees. He floundered around
+for a moment, splashing the water into his face
+and over his coat and cap.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Phew! this is lots of fun!&#8221; was his grim
+comment, as he at length found himself on a flat
+rock, catching his breath. &#8220;Well, I am half-way
+over, anyway.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The remainder of the distance proved easier
+traveling, and ten minutes later our hero stood
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225' name='page_225'></a>225</span>
+on the island. It was now raining steadily, and
+the darkness of the storm had settled everywhere.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess the best thing I can do is to move
+right around the shore of this island,&#8221; he reasoned.
+&#8220;By doing that I am bound to strike one
+of the camps, sooner or later.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He moved along as rapidly as the rocky shore
+of Moosetail Island permitted. He had to proceed
+with care, for there were many dangerous
+pitfalls.</p>
+<p>At length his heart was gladdened by the sight
+of a rude log cabin, set in the trees a little back
+from the water. He hurried to it and found the
+door and window closed. Evidently the spot was
+deserted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nobody here,&#8221; he murmured, and his heart
+sank for the moment, for he could see that the
+camp had not been used for a long time. Then
+he went on, the rain in the meanwhile coming down
+harder than ever. The downfall made him think
+of the dam that was said to be weak. What if the
+present storm should make that structure give
+way?</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wish we were all out of this,&#8221; he murmured.
+&#8220;I wonder if it would do any good to call?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He set up a yell and listened, and then he
+yelled again. From a long distance came an answering
+cry.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226' name='page_226'></a>226</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Hurrah, that&#8217;s somebody, anyway!&#8221; he exclaimed.
+&#8220;I hope it was one of the boys!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He stumbled in the direction of the cry. Then
+he yelled once more, and again came the answering
+call. But now Dave was sure it was a man&#8217;s
+voice, and he was somewhat disappointed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where are you?&#8221; he called out, a moment
+later. &#8220;Where are you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;This way! Come this way!&#8221; was the reply,
+and soon Dave passed through a patch of timber
+and around some rocks and reached a spot where
+there was a tiny cove, with a stretch of fine sand.
+Facing the cove was a neat log cabin with a small
+lean-to, the latter containing a tiny stove.</p>
+<p>A tall, good-natured man stood in the lean-to,
+peering out into the rain. He watched Dave&#8217;s
+approach with interest. He looked to be what he
+was, a camp-cook and general worker.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello!&#8221; he exclaimed, as Dave hurried in
+out of the rain and shook the water from his cap.
+&#8220;I thought you were one of our crowd.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What camp is this?&#8221; questioned our hero,
+eagerly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, it ain&#8217;t no camp in particular,&#8221; answered
+the man, with a grin. &#8220;It&#8217;s jest a camp.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But who is stopping here?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Three young fellers and myself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are their names Beggs, Lawrence, and Basswood?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227' name='page_227'></a>227</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve struck it. Maybe you are a friend
+to &#8217;em?&#8221; went on the man, inquiringly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am, and I have come a long distance to find
+them,&#8221; returned Dave, and his tone of voice
+showed his relief. &#8220;Where are they?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;They left the camp right after dinner an&#8217; they
+ain&#8217;t back yet. When you called I thought it
+was one of &#8217;em, although they didn&#8217;t expect to
+be back much before supper-time. But now it&#8217;s
+rainin&#8217; I guess they&#8217;ll come back sooner.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How long have they been here?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Most a week now, I guess. I didn&#8217;t come
+till day before yesterday. I didn&#8217;t have nothin&#8217;
+to do an&#8217; they give me a job, cookin&#8217; an&#8217; like that,&#8221;
+returned the man.</p>
+<p>He invited Dave to make himself at home, and
+our hero was glad enough to go inside and take off
+the wet raincoat and also his shoes and socks.
+The baggage belonging to Phil and the others
+was in the cabin, and he helped himself to dry
+garments and a dry pair of slippers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We are all school chums,&#8221; he told the man.
+&#8220;My name is Dave Porter.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I heard &#8217;em talkin&#8217; about you!&#8221; cried
+the camp-worker, and then said his own name was
+Jerry Blutt, and that he was from Tegley, just
+across the Canadian border.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We are not far from the border here, are
+we?&#8221; asked our hero.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228' name='page_228'></a>228</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;About six miles, thet&#8217;s all,&#8221; answered Jerry
+Blutt, and this reply gave Dave another idea.
+More than likely Buster and the others had chosen
+this spot so that, if pursued by the officers of the
+law, they could flee into Canada.</p>
+<p>Jerry Blutt said the three lads had spent their
+time in various ways, occasionally going fishing
+and swimming. They had also written some letters
+and gone to the railroad station to mail them
+in the box placed there for that purpose.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have they been having a good time?&#8221; asked
+Dave, curiously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t say as to that, Mr. Porter. They
+did seem mighty worried over something,&#8221; answered
+the camp worker, and from this our hero
+felt certain that the man had not been let into
+the secret of why the runaways were there at all.</p>
+<p>Half an hour went by and it continued to rain
+as hard as ever, while the sky remained dark and
+the wind blew with more or less violence. Time
+and again Dave went to the cabin door, to peer
+out into the storm, but each time he turned back
+disappointed. His chums were not yet in sight.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;ll be surprised to see me,&#8221; he thought.
+&#8220;I wonder if they will listen to reason and go
+back with me? Supposing they refuse to return?
+I&#8217;d hate to go back alone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then he questioned Jerry Blutt about the dam
+above the Falls. The man shrugged his shoulders.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229' name='page_229'></a>229</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;It ain&#8217;t safe, so they tell me,&#8221; he said. &#8220;But
+it&#8217;s been that way a long time, so maybe it won&#8217;t
+break away yet awhile. But I&#8217;d hate to be on
+the river when she does go.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are there any other camps on this island?&#8221;
+went on our hero.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not now. There was some other folks, two
+or three parties, I was told, but they all moved
+out yesterday an&#8217; the day before. Maybe they
+got afraid o&#8217; the dam,&#8221; concluded the camp-worker.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230' name='page_230'></a>230</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXIV_OUT_IN_THE_STORM' id='CHAPTER_XXIV_OUT_IN_THE_STORM'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+<h3>OUT IN THE STORM</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;This is getting to be something fierce!&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was Dave who uttered the words, about five
+o&#8217;clock in the afternoon. He was looking out of
+the door of the cabin, and beside him stood Jerry
+Blutt.</p>
+<p>The storm had kept up without intermission,
+the rain coming down in a perfect torrent, and the
+wind blowing in fitful gusts from the east. It
+was raw and depressing, and our hero could not
+help but shiver as he looked out on the turbulent
+waters of the river.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a pity them fellers ain&#8217;t got back,&#8221; said
+the camp-worker, with a slow shake of his head.
+&#8220;It ain&#8217;t nice to be out in sech a downpour as
+this, an&#8217; with sech a wind! Might a tree blow
+down on &#8217;em!&#8221; And he shook his head again.</p>
+<p>Dave was even more distressed than the man.
+He could not get that dam out of his mind. Such
+a heavy fall of rain would certainly cause a great
+flow of water, and if the structure was weak, most
+anything bad was liable to happen.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231' name='page_231'></a>231</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;As soon as the boys get back I&#8217;ll urge them
+to leave here,&#8221; he told himself. &#8220;If that dam
+breaks we want to be on high ground, where the
+flood can&#8217;t reach us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Pears to me like the river was gittin&#8217; putty
+high,&#8221; remarked Jerry Blutt, a little later, as he
+watched the water in the cove closely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, it would rise some with all this rain
+coming down,&#8221; returned Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So it might,&mdash;but I don&#8217;t know. I wish this
+camp was on the shore, instid o&#8217; this island.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So do I,&#8221; answered Dave, bluntly.</p>
+<p>A fire had been started in the stove and a lantern
+lit, and Jerry Blutt rather reluctantly began
+preparations for the evening meal. But he kept
+peering out of the doorway of the cabin, and
+from the lean-to, and his eyes always rested on
+the river, with its rain-swept, swollen surface.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t like it at all!&#8221; he said, finally. &#8220;I
+wish we had moved over to the shore.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you think it is safe to stay here?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It ain&#8217;t as safe as it might be. If I was
+alone&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; The man stopped short.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What would you do?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hate to say it, but I think I&#8217;d go over to the
+shore, till the storm was over and I knew jest
+how thet dam was a-goin&#8217; to act.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I don&#8217;t blame you,&#8221; answered Dave.
+&#8220;And if you want to go, go ahead.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232' name='page_232'></a>232</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Want me to go alone?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you wish to go, yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But it ain&#8217;t no safer fer you than it is fer me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s so, too. But I want to see those other
+fellows&mdash;in fact, I must see them. If I went to
+the shore I might miss them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You could come back later on.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But I want to warn them of the danger from
+the dam.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You could write a letter and stick it up where
+they couldn&#8217;t help but see it. Then&#8211;&#8211; What&#8217;s
+that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The camp-worker stopped short, as a distant
+cry reached their ears, sounding out above the
+wind. An instant later the cry was repeated.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is Ben Basswood&#8217;s voice!&#8221; cried Dave.
+&#8220;They must be coming back!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Soon another voice sounded out, and our hero
+recognized Buster Beggs&#8217;s tones. He ran to the
+cabin door. All was dark outside, and the rain
+was being driven in sheets by the wind.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello! hello!&#8221; he yelled, and catching up
+the lantern, he swung it out in one direction and
+another. Then he saw two forms approaching
+on the run, each dripping with water.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ben! And Buster!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, if it isn&#8217;t Dave!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where in the world did you come from?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where is Phil?&#8221; demanded our hero.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233' name='page_233'></a>233</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;He is somewhere behind us,&#8221; answered Buster.
+&#8220;Oh, what a time we&#8217;ve had!&#8221; and entering
+the cabin, the fat youth sank down on a bench
+all but exhausted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve had to tramp for over two miles in
+this rain,&#8221; explained Ben. &#8220;And of course we
+had to ford to the island. Say, the current is
+something fierce now! And the water is getting
+higher every minute!&#8221; he added.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you say Phil was behind you?&#8221; demanded
+Dave. He still held the lantern on high.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I thought he was&mdash;sure, he must be,&#8221; answered
+Ben. &#8220;Give him a hail, will you? I&#8217;m
+too tired,&#8221; and he sank on the bench beside Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Phil! Phil!&#8221; yelled our hero, at the top of his
+lungs. &#8220;This way! This way!&#8221; and he swung
+the lantern to the right and left.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you say the river is rising?&#8221; demanded
+Jerry Blutt. &#8220;How high is it? Over the White
+Bar yet?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, the Bar is a foot under water,&#8221; answered
+Ben. &#8220;Oh, this is a great storm!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A foot under water!&#8221; murmured the camp-worker.
+&#8220;Say, we better git out! First thing
+you know this hull island will be under! An&#8217; if
+thet dam breaks&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, the dam!&#8221; gasped Buster. &#8220;I forgot
+about that! They say it isn&#8217;t safe at all! That
+is why all the other campers got out! Yes, we
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234' name='page_234'></a>234</span>
+must leave the island and go to the shore.&#8221; He
+turned to Dave. &#8220;Did you come alone?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, Buster. I&#8217;ll tell you all about it later.
+But now we must find Phil.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I thought he was right behind me,&#8221; came
+from Ben. He looked greatly distressed. &#8220;I
+wonder if anything happened to him? Maybe he
+slipped off the rocks into the river!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We must look for him!&#8221; cried Dave, and
+reached for his coat and cap. &#8220;Show me the
+way you came, Ben.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Ben was nothing loath, and side by side the
+two chums ran outside into the storm, and in the
+direction of the upper end of the island. They
+had gone but a short distance when they reached
+a low spot and here suddenly found themselves in
+water several inches deep.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello, you are taking me into the river!&#8221;
+cried Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This isn&#8217;t the river!&#8221; answered Ben, with a
+gasp. &#8220;Gosh! how the water is rising! This
+was dry when I came over it before!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dry!&#8221; ejaculated our hero. &#8220;Ben, are you
+sure?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Positive! Say, the water is rising to beat
+the band! I guess we had better get out! If we
+don&#8217;t we&#8217;ll have to swim for it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Phil! Phil! Where are you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Standing in water up to his ankles, our hero
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235' name='page_235'></a>235</span>
+called again and again, and Ben joined in the
+cry. The lantern was flashed in all directions.
+But nothing was seen or heard of the missing
+student.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am sure he started to follow us across the
+river,&#8221; said Ben. &#8220;Buster was in front, I came
+next, and Phil was in the rear. I asked him twice
+if he was all right and he said he was. Then it
+blew so hard, and the rain got so heavy, none of
+us said any more. Oh, Dave, what shall we do?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know Ben&mdash;wish I did.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you think he slipped off the rocks and
+was&mdash;was&mdash;drowned?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hope not.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If he was, wouldn&#8217;t it be terrible?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A cry came from behind them, and Buster appeared,
+followed by Jerry Blutt.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where is Phil?&#8221; demanded the stout youth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We don&#8217;t know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The water is terribly high, and Jerry thinks
+we had better move to the shore. He says we
+might be drowned if that dam should break.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you think we ought to find Phil first?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure&mdash;if we can. Maybe he went back, when
+he found out how the water was rising,&#8221; went on
+the stout youth, hopefully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think he&#8217;d desert us,&#8221; answered Ben.
+&#8220;That isn&#8217;t Phil&#8217;s style.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236' name='page_236'></a>236</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re right, Ben,&#8221; said Dave.</p>
+<p>All splashed around in the water for several
+minutes, but without making any discovery of importance.
+The river was now rising more
+rapidly than ever, and the camp-worker showed
+increased nervousness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t no two ways about it&mdash;the dam&#8217;s bust!&#8221;
+he cried, at last. &#8220;I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to git out, an&#8217; I
+advise all o&#8217; you to do the same. If you want
+me to carry anything to shore I&#8217;ll do it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We can&#8217;t carry any trunks in such a hurry,&#8221;
+said Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us carry our suit-cases and bundles,&#8221; said
+Ben.</p>
+<p>With heavy hearts, Dave and the others returned
+to the cabin. The water in the cove had
+now risen so high that it swept the edge of the
+lean-to.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can we get to shore?&#8221; asked Buster. &#8220;We
+haven&#8217;t any boat,&#8221; he added, turning to Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We can if you&#8217;ll hurry,&#8221; replied Jerry Blutt.
+&#8220;Every minit lost makes it jest so much more
+dangerous.&#8221;</p>
+<p>In great haste Ben and Buster and the camp-worker
+gathered together such belongings as they
+could conveniently carry. The other things were
+placed in a trunk and hoisted by ropes into a big
+tree. Then a lantern was tied on a post in front
+of the cabin and to it was fastened a brief note,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237' name='page_237'></a>237</span>
+for Phil&#8217;s benefit, stating they had gone to the
+shore.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I hope he is safe!&#8221; murmured Dave,
+anxiously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So do I,&#8221; added his chums.</p>
+<p>Jerry Blutt led the way along the shore of the
+island and then out into the stream. They had the
+second camp lantern with them, one belonging to
+Jerry. He led the way from rock to rock, and
+they followed in single file, Dave bringing up the
+rear. Ever and anon our hero looked back for
+some sign of Phil, but without avail.</p>
+<p>Once out in the river, all were certain that the
+dam above Camptown Falls had burst. The water
+ran with great rapidity and was filled with dirt
+and d&eacute;bris of various kinds. On the rocks that
+were low they had all they could do to keep their
+footing.</p>
+<p>The most dangerous part of the river had yet
+to be passed&mdash;a section close to the shore, where
+the water was deep and the rocks for fording few.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mind your footin&#8217; here!&#8221; sang out the camp-worker.
+&#8220;An&#8217; if you slip, look out thet you don&#8217;t
+hurt yourselves!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He was splashing along in water up to his
+knees, sometimes on the rocks and then again on
+a sandbar running in that direction. Then he had
+to make a turn, to avoid a deep portion of the
+stream, where the current was rapid.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238' name='page_238'></a>238</span></p>
+<p>Ben was behind the man and Buster was just
+ahead of Dave. As all struggled along, there
+came an extra heavy blast of wind, followed by
+a perfect deluge of rain.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; screamed Buster, an instant later, and
+peering through the rain, Dave saw him suddenly
+throw up his arms and slip from a rock. There
+was a splash, and poor Buster disappeared from
+view.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Buster is in the river!&#8221; yelled our hero, and
+then he leaped for the rock from which the stout
+youth had fallen. He looked down and saw an
+arm and a head come up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Help! hel&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; came from the unfortunate
+one, and then the swift current caught him and
+turned him over, out of sight.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Help!&#8221; yelled Dave, to attract the attention
+of those ahead. And then, as he saw Ben turn
+back, he slipped down on the rock and into the
+swirling river and struck out after Buster.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239' name='page_239'></a>239</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXV_PERILS_OF_THE_FLOOD' id='CHAPTER_XXV_PERILS_OF_THE_FLOOD'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+<h3>PERILS OF THE FLOOD</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Dave! Dave!&#8221; yelled Ben, as he saw our
+hero disappear into the swiftly-flowing river.
+&#8220;Look out, or you&#8217;ll both be drowned!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the trouble?&#8221; yelled Jerry Blutt, as
+he turned back for the first time since leaving the
+island.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Buster slipped in, and Dave went after him,&#8221;
+answered Ben. &#8220;Oh, what shall we do?&#8221; he went
+on, despairingly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here&mdash;we&#8217;ll throw out the rope!&#8221; answered
+the camp-worker, and took from his shoulder a
+rope he carried.</p>
+<p>In the meantime Dave had come up and was
+striking out with might and main for his chum.
+Our hero realized that Buster must be hurt, otherwise
+he would swim to save himself.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Must have struck on his head, when he went
+over,&#8221; he thought, and he was right, poor Buster
+had done just that and now lay half-unconscious
+as the current swept him further and further
+from his friends.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240' name='page_240'></a>240</span></p>
+<p>It was too dark to see much, and Dave had all
+he could do to keep in sight of the unfortunate
+one. But presently the stout youth&#8217;s body struck
+against a rock and was held there, and our hero
+came up and seized the lad by the arm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Buster! Buster!&#8221; he called out. &#8220;What&#8217;s
+wrong? Can&#8217;t you swim?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hel&mdash;help me!&#8221; gasped the fat youth. &#8220;I&mdash;I
+got a knock on the head. I&#8217;m so&mdash;so dizzy I
+do&mdash;don&#8217;t know what I&mdash;I&#8217;m do&mdash;doing!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The current now tore Buster away from the
+rock, and he and Dave floated along on the bosom
+of the river for a distance of fifty yards. It was
+impossible to do much swimming in that madly-rushing
+element and Dave wisely steered for
+shore. He continued to support his friend, who
+seemed unable to do anything for himself.</p>
+<p>At length, when our hero was all but exhausted,
+his feet struck a sandbar. At once he stood up,
+finding himself in water that reached to his
+waist. He caught up Buster and placed the weakened
+lad over his shoulder. In a dim, uncertain
+way he saw the shore loom up in front of him,
+and struck out in that direction.</p>
+<p>It was a short but hard struggle. Twice Dave
+went down, once losing his hold on his chum.
+But he got up each time and went after Buster in
+a hurry. Then he made a final dash, came in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241' name='page_241'></a>241</span>
+contact with some bushes, and hauled himself and
+his burden to temporary safety.</p>
+<p>All was dark around the two boys, and the
+rain came down as pitilessly as ever. But for
+this they did not, just then, care. They had been
+close to death, and now they were safe, and that
+counted for everything.</p>
+<p>Poor Buster had received a severe bump on the
+forehead and had a swelling there of considerable
+size. But the stunning effect was passing, and he
+was able to sit up and peer around him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, what a crack I got, when I fell over!&#8221;
+he murmured, and then he added, gratefully: &#8220;It
+was a fine thing for you to jump in after me,
+Dave!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I couldn&#8217;t stand there and see you
+drown, Buster,&#8221; answered our hero. &#8220;I had to do
+something.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where are the others?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Up the stream&mdash;unless they went overboard,
+too.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then I suppose we ought to walk that
+way.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We will&mdash;after we get our breath and you
+feel strong enough.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe you can call to them?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll try.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dave yelled at the top of his voice, not once but
+several times. Presently an answering hail arose
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242' name='page_242'></a>242</span>
+from a distance, and then Ben came running up,
+followed by Jerry.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dave! Buster! Are you safe?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; answered both.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I am so glad! We were afraid you were
+both drowned! How did it happen?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The two told their story, and then the others
+told how they had thrown out the rope and had
+seen Dave disappear in the darkness after Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I would have jumped in, too, but I didn&#8217;t see
+how I could do any good,&#8221; went on Ben. &#8220;Jerry
+said we had better come ashore and look for you
+down here. So we did that. My! but it&#8217;s a fearful
+flood, isn&#8217;t it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. I wish we knew where Phil was,&#8221; and
+Dave heaved a deep sigh. Had their chum lost
+his life in that rapidly-rising river?</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t no ust to stay here&mdash;gitting wetter an&#8217;
+wetter,&#8221; said the camp-worker, after a pause.
+&#8220;Besides, if that flood gits wuss it is bound to
+come up here. We better git further back&mdash;up
+the hill.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is there any shelter around here? I mean
+on high ground?&#8221; asked Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I know of a cabin up on the hill,&#8221; answered
+Buster. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know if I can find it in
+the rain and darkness, but I can try.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He walked along, through the trees, until he
+reached a footpath running up from the shore.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243' name='page_243'></a>243</span>
+They followed the path for about a hundred
+yards, and then came in sight of a long, low,
+rambling cabin, the home in years gone by of some
+lumbermen. It was in a dilapidated state, with
+doors and windows gone, but it would provide a
+roof over their heads, and that was something.</p>
+<p>Entering, the lantern was hung on a nail,
+and they looked around them. There was a fireplace,
+with some dry sticks handy, and soon they
+had a fire started, which added much to the comfort
+of the surroundings. They hung up the
+majority of their wet garments and sat close to
+the blaze, drying themselves.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If I only knew where to look for Phil, I&#8217;d go
+after him,&#8221; said Dave. &#8220;But to look for him
+in the darkness is like looking for the proverbial
+needle in the haystack.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll have to go out first thing in the morning,&#8221;
+returned Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, as soon as we can see,&#8221; added Buster.</p>
+<p>The boys who had run away were anxious to
+learn what Dave had to say about affairs at Oakdale,
+and in a low voice, while the camp-worker
+was preparing hot coffee and something to eat, he
+related what had happened since their departure.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You made a big mistake to run away,&#8221; he
+said, earnestly. &#8220;Just because you did that, many
+folks feel sure you must be guilty. You ought to
+go right back and face the music.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244' name='page_244'></a>244</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess you are right, Dave,&#8221; answered Ben,
+shamefacedly. &#8220;But when Phil said &#8216;run,&#8217; I
+didn&#8217;t stop to think, but just got out.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And that is what I did, too,&#8221; added the
+stout youth. &#8220;But I don&#8217;t blame Phil any more
+than I blame myself,&#8221; he added, hastily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nor do I,&#8221; said Ben. &#8220;We made a big mistake.
+We should have stood our ground, like
+you and Roger did.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, you come back with me, and we&#8217;ll face
+this to a finish,&#8221; went on our hero. &#8220;But, of
+course, we&#8217;ve got to find Phil first.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Only the camp-worker slept well that night.
+The boys were restless, and several times one or
+another got up, to go to the doorway and
+listen, thinking he had heard a call from Phil.
+But the calls were only imaginary, and morning
+dawned without a sign of the missing one.</p>
+<p>It was still raining, but not so hard as before,
+and by eight o&#8217;clock the clouds broke away and
+the sun commenced to shine. All had an early
+breakfast, from the stores brought along, and
+then the party hurried down to the river.</p>
+<p>That the dam above Camptown Falls had
+broken was plainly evident on all sides. During
+the night the river had risen seven or eight feet,
+bearing on its bosom many trees and bushes, with
+here and there the remains of camps that had been
+located on low ground. Moosetail Island had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245' name='page_245'></a>245</span>
+been swept from end to end, only the higher spots
+escaping the flood. The waters were now going
+down, the rush from the broken dam having
+spent itself.</p>
+<p>The boys gave scant heed to the destruction
+effected by the rain and the broken dam. All
+their thoughts were centered on Phil. What had
+become of their chum? Was he dead or alive?</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wonder if it wouldn&#8217;t be best to get over
+to the island and look around?&#8221; suggested Dave.
+&#8220;Most likely he went there&mdash;thinking you would
+be at the cabin.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But how are we to get to the island?&#8221; asked
+Buster. He had no desire to fall into the turbulent
+stream again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, the water is going down rapidly, Buster.
+I think we can make it by noon.&#8221;</p>
+<p>All walked up and down the river bank, looking
+in vain for some trace of the shipowner&#8217;s son.
+Once they met some people from another camp
+and asked about Phil. But these folks shook
+their heads.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Didn&#8217;t see a soul,&#8221; said one of the men.</p>
+<p>Jerry Blutt had been looking the situation
+over carefully, and he said he thought they could
+get to the island by going up the river a distance.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then the current will help us along, and we
+won&#8217;t have to fight so hard,&#8221; said the camp-worker.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246' name='page_246'></a>246</span>
+He did not like the idea of crossing the
+water, but did not wish to desert the boys.</p>
+<p>On the trip they carried the rope, with Jerry at
+the head and Dave at the rear. All took tight
+hold, so that if one slipped the others might pull
+him up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now, take it easy,&#8221; cautioned the camp man.
+&#8220;This water is runnin&#8217; putty swift, even yet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He had mapped out a course with his eye, and
+proceeded slowly and cautiously. Once away
+from the shore, they felt the full force of the onrushing
+waters and were all but swept from their
+feet. It was well that they were a good distance
+above Moosetail Island, for to reach this spot by
+going straight out in the stream would have been
+impossible.</p>
+<p>It was a long, hard, and dangerous trip, and all
+drew a deep breath of relief when they finally set
+foot on the island. At times they had been in
+water up to their waists and it had looked as if
+they must surely be swept away. Once a tree
+branch, coming swiftly along, had caught Dave
+and literally carried him off his feet for several
+yards.</p>
+<p>They landed at one end of the island, at a point
+where the bushes were still two feet under water.
+The evidences of the flood were on every hand,
+and the water was muddy and filled with broken-away
+brushwood and trees.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247' name='page_247'></a>247</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess we had better strike out for the
+camp,&#8221; said Dave. &#8220;Phil would go there if he
+went anywhere.&#8221;</p>
+<p>As they advanced one or another gave a loud
+call. But no answer came back, and this made
+them look gravely at each other. Was the perilous
+trip to the island to prove a vain one?</p>
+<p>In a quarter of an hour they came in sight of
+the camp. The cove had been blotted out, and
+the water was eddying around the cabin to a depth
+of several inches. Mud was everywhere, inside
+the place and out, and this showed that the flood
+had swept the spot at a height of several feet.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We might have stayed here,&#8221; was Buster&#8217;s
+comment. &#8220;It didn&#8217;t hurt the big tree.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But we didn&#8217;t know how bad it was going to
+be,&#8221; answered Ben. &#8220;It might have washed away
+the whole island.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us go up to the high ground and look for
+Phil,&#8221; suggested Dave. &#8220;Maybe he went to the
+highest spot he could find.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The others agreed, and leaving the camp-worker
+at the cabin, the boys, led by Buster,
+tramped through the wet and mud to a little hill.
+Again they set up their calls, but, as before, no
+answer came back.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t believe he came here,&#8221; said Ben, at
+last. &#8220;If he was here he would surely hear
+us.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248' name='page_248'></a>248</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Unless he was hurt and couldn&#8217;t answer,&#8221; returned
+Dave.</p>
+<p>From the top of the little hill they could see
+both ends of Moosetail Island and also both
+shores of the river. As they gazed about them,
+Dave suddenly gave a shout.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look! look!&#8221; he cried, pointing to the shore
+which they had left but a short while before.
+&#8220;There is somebody waving a handkerchief at
+us!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s Phil!&#8221; returned Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you sure?&#8221; questioned Buster. &#8220;I can
+see it is a man or a boy, but that is all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It looks like Phil,&#8221; said Dave. &#8220;Oh, I hope
+it is!&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249' name='page_249'></a>249</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXVI_BACK_TO_THE_SCHOOL' id='CHAPTER_XXVI_BACK_TO_THE_SCHOOL'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+<h3>BACK TO THE SCHOOL</h3>
+</div>
+<p>They waved frantically to the person on the
+shore, and he waved frantically in return, and at
+last all were convinced that it must really be their
+missing chum.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He must think I am Jerry,&#8221; said Dave.
+&#8220;Won&#8217;t he be surprised to see me!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He will be, unless he was at the cabin last
+night and read the note,&#8221; returned Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The note wasn&#8217;t touched,&#8221; said Ben. &#8220;I
+noticed that it was exactly as we left it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>All gave a parting wave and pointed to the
+shore, and then left the hill. They made their way
+down to the cabin, and told the camp-worker
+what they had seen.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It must be Lawrence,&#8221; said Jerry Blutt.
+&#8220;Maybe he&#8217;ll come over here, instead of waiting
+for us to go to him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gracious, I never thought of that!&#8221; cried
+Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll be like the men in one of Shadow&#8217;s
+stories,&#8221; said Ben. &#8220;One was upstairs in a big
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250' name='page_250'></a>250</span>
+office building and one downstairs. The man upstairs
+went down, and the downstairs man went
+up, and they kept that up until both stopped,
+tired out, one upstairs and one down.&#8221; And
+the others had to smile at the brief yarn.</p>
+<p>All journeyed to the lower shore of the island,
+where they could get a better view of the spot
+where the person they thought was Phil had been.
+They saw the party walking up the river bank,
+looking for a good place to ford. All shouted
+loudly and waved their hands to keep him where
+he was, and he nodded his head deeply, to show
+that he understand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It must be Phil,&#8221; said Dave. &#8220;Oh, how
+thankful I am that he wasn&#8217;t carried away by the
+flood!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boys were impatient to get back to the
+shore, and Jerry Blutt did not blame them. To
+carry any of the stuff over was still out of the question,
+and they did not attempt it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You can come and get it some day, Jerry,&#8221;
+said Buster. &#8220;You can ship it to us by express,
+and we&#8217;ll pay you for your trouble;&#8221; and so it
+was arranged.</p>
+<p>It was as hard to gain the shore as it had been
+to reach the island, and all were well-nigh exhausted
+when they finally left the water, not to
+return again. Phil saw them coming, and when
+he made out Dave he was almost dumfounded.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251' name='page_251'></a>251</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Where in the world did you come from?&#8221;
+he demanded, as he caught our hero by the hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;From Oakdale, Phil.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you run away, too?&#8221; demanded the shipowner&#8217;s
+son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hardly,&#8221; answered Dave, with a grin. &#8220;I
+came to bring you fellows back. But first tell us,
+how did you get out of the flood last night?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I had a fierce time of it. I tried to get
+back to the camp, but stumbled over some tree-roots
+and went down in a hole and hurt my ankle.
+When I got up I couldn&#8217;t see the others, and I
+must have lost my way. Then it began to rain
+and get dark, and I didn&#8217;t know which way to
+turn. I yelled dozens of times, but I didn&#8217;t hear
+any answer. I tried to locate the cabin, but I
+must have been completely turned around, for I
+came out on the shore. Then the flood came
+along, and before I knew it I was floating down
+the river. I hit a tree and clung to that, and
+we drifted a mile or more before the tree got
+stuck on a sandbar. I stayed there, in the rain
+and darkness, until morning and then waded and
+swam ashore. I was so tired out I had to rest for
+awhile, and then I came up here, to try to find out
+something about our crowd. I was thinking of
+getting over to the island again when I saw you
+on the top of the hill. Of course, I thought Dave
+was Jerry.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252' name='page_252'></a>252</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;We were scared to death, thinking you had
+been drowned,&#8221; said Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I came pretty close to it,&#8221; was the serious
+reply. &#8220;No more such flood for me!&#8221;</p>
+<p>All turned towards the cabin where four of
+the party had spent the night, and there Jerry
+was called on to prepare the best meal their limited
+stores afforded. On the river-bank they had
+picked up some fish cast up by the flood, and these
+were broiled, making a welcome addition to the
+meal.</p>
+<p>While the meal was being prepared, and after
+it had been eaten, Dave had a serious talk with
+Phil and the others, and all realized the folly they
+had committed in running away from Oak Hall.
+Phil in particular, was much disturbed and said he
+had been thinking of coming back.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But we saw that article in the newspaper,
+and it scared us,&#8221; went on the shipowner&#8217;s son.
+&#8220;Of course, it didn&#8217;t mention any names, but we
+knew it was meant for us. I know now, just as
+well as the others, that it was a mistake to run
+away.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then, you&#8217;ll go back with me?&#8221; questioned
+Dave, eagerly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you&#8217;ll go back, too, Ben and Buster?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am mighty glad to hear it&mdash;and I feel that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253' name='page_253'></a>253</span>
+this thing will come out all right in the end,&#8221; returned
+Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;By the way, there is one thing I haven&#8217;t told
+you, Dave,&#8221; said Buster, a minute later. &#8220;The
+general excitement drove it clean out of my head.
+We know who it was that spoiled the feast Phil
+got up for the crowd.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You do?&#8221; asked our hero, with interest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. It was Nat Poole. He went to Rockville
+and sent those telephone messages to Jason
+Sparr and that musical professor, calling the whole
+affair off. He did it because he wasn&#8217;t invited to
+take part.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How did you learn this?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I heard it the night I went to the Hall to get
+our baggage. When I was in hiding, waiting for
+a chance to go to the dormitory, I saw Nat Poole
+come in, along with that new student, Will Fasey.
+They had been out somewhere having a good time,
+and Nat was telling Fasey how he had sent the
+telephone messages and queered the feast. I
+would have pitched into him then and there only
+I didn&#8217;t dare expose myself,&#8221; went on the stout
+youth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But he&#8217;ll get what is coming to him from me,
+when I get back to the school,&#8221; put in Phil. &#8220;It
+was a contemptible piece of business, and I want
+everybody to know it. Besides, he has got to pay
+for what I lost by the transaction.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254' name='page_254'></a>254</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;If it wasn&#8217;t for that, maybe we wouldn&#8217;t have
+been suspected of blowing up the hotel,&#8221; said
+Ben. &#8220;Then you really think the wild man did
+it, Dave?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But what of that letter Jason Sparr got, saying
+our crowd was guilty?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know what to make of that, Ben. I
+don&#8217;t think the wild man could write that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would Nat Poole be bad enough to do
+it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe. But it was an awful thing to do.
+I didn&#8217;t think Nat would be as mean as that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boys had dried and pressed their clothing
+as best they could, and put on clean collars, cuffs,
+and neckties, and therefore looked quite presentable
+once more.</p>
+<p>&#8220;As soon as we get to town we can get cleaned
+up a little better,&#8221; said Dave. &#8220;So we won&#8217;t look
+quite like tramps when we return to the Hall.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hate to face Doctor Clay,&#8221; remarked Phil,
+dubiously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So do I,&#8221; added Ben and Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, it has got to be done,&#8221; answered Dave.
+&#8220;So make the best of it. The doctor understands
+the situation, so I don&#8217;t think he&#8217;ll be hard on
+you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hope they have got the wild man, and that
+they prove he blew up the hotel,&#8221; said Phil, wistfully.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255' name='page_255'></a>255</span>
+&#8220;That is the only thing that will really
+clear us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, they are bound to get the wild man sooner
+or later,&#8221; answered Dave, hopefully.</p>
+<p>It was decided to take the one afternoon train
+from Camptown Falls, and at the proper time
+the boys walked to the little depot, Dave with
+his suit-case, and the others with some hand baggage.
+Instructions were left with Jerry Blutt regarding
+the other baggage, and the man was paid
+for his services. He said he was glad that nobody
+had been drowned in the flood, and added
+that he was going up to the broken-away dam later
+on to see how matters looked.</p>
+<p>It was a rather quiet crowd that got aboard the
+train when it came along. The conductor wanted
+to know how they had fared in the flood, and they
+told him. At Lumberport the boys had to wait an
+hour for the next train to Oakdale Junction, and
+they spent the time in getting a good supper, and
+in having their shoes shined, and in brushing up
+generally.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll be glad to get back late at night,&#8221; said
+Phil to Dave. &#8220;I&#8217;d hate to have the whole crowd
+staring at us when we came in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>At the Junction they waited but a few minutes,
+and the run to Oakdale did not take long. They
+were the only ones to get off at the depot, and
+the spot was all but deserted. But they had telegraphed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256' name='page_256'></a>256</span>
+ahead, and Horsehair was on hand, with
+a carriage, to meet them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Glad to see you young gents back, indeed I
+am,&#8221; said the school driver.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Any news, Horsehair?&#8221; asked Dave, as they
+piled into the carriage.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not as I know of.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have they got that wild man yet?&#8221; questioned
+Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, sir. But they seen him&mdash;along the river&mdash;day
+before yesterday. He was sleepin&#8217; in a
+barn. But he got away before the farmer and
+his man could git him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where was that?&#8221; questioned Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Up to the Morrison place.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The Morrison place,&#8221; mused Buster. &#8220;I
+know that family. When I get a chance I am
+going to ask them about this,&#8221; he added.</p>
+<p>When the boys arrived at Oak Hall they found
+Doctor Clay sitting up to receive them. He smiled
+at Dave, but was somewhat cold towards the
+others.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is too late to listen to what you have to say
+to-night,&#8221; said he. &#8220;All of you may report in my
+office directly after our opening exercises in the
+morning.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When the boys went upstairs there were a good
+many exclamations of surprise, and Roger and the
+others wanted to ask innumerable questions. But
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257' name='page_257'></a>257</span>
+a monitor cut all talk short, and Dave and the
+runaways got to bed as quickly as possible.</p>
+<p>All were up early, and Dave, Phil, and the
+others had to tell their story before going down
+to breakfast. Roger and those who had been left
+behind with him listened eagerly to the tale of the
+flood and the other happenings.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess Dave got there just in time,&#8221; said the
+senator&#8217;s son. &#8220;How about it, Buster?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He sure did,&#8221; said the stout lad, and shuddered
+to think how close he had been to drowning.</p>
+<p>It can well be imagined that Phil, Ben, and
+Buster did not have much appetite for breakfast.
+Phil looked around for Nat Poole, but the money-lender&#8217;s
+son had not yet returned to the school.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now, tell me everything,&#8221; said Doctor Clay,
+when the boys at length filed into his office. &#8220;As
+they say in court, we want the truth, the whole
+truth, and nothing but the truth.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And that is what I&#8217;m going to give you, Doctor
+Clay,&#8221; answered Phil. &#8220;I made a big mistake
+in running away, and I am glad Dave came to
+bring us back. I haven&#8217;t done anything wrong,
+and I am here to face the music, as the saying
+goes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And so am I,&#8221; came from Ben and Buster.</p>
+<p>Then the boys told their story in detail, omitting
+nothing, and Dave related how he had gone
+to Camptown Falls, and how the flood had caught
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258' name='page_258'></a>258</span>
+him. In the midst of the narrative came a sharp
+knock on the door.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come in,&#8221; said the doctor, and one of the
+servants entered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A man to see you, sir,&#8221; said the servant.
+&#8220;He says it is very important&mdash;something about
+that wild man, sir! He&#8217;s terribly excited, sir!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The wild man again!&#8221; murmured the master
+of the school, while the boys looked at him and the
+servant with interest. &#8220;Show the visitor in and I
+will hear what he has to say.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259' name='page_259'></a>259</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXVII_THE_TRAIL_THROUGH_THE_WOODS' id='CHAPTER_XXVII_THE_TRAIL_THROUGH_THE_WOODS'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+<h3>THE TRAIL THROUGH THE WOODS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>In a minute the servant ushered in a farmer
+whom the boys recognized as Henry Morrison, a
+man who had a farm along the river-front, about a
+mile from Oak Hall.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-morning, sir,&#8221; said the farmer, bowing
+to the doctor and then to the boys. &#8220;Excuse
+me for being in such a hurry, but I thought you
+would like to know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll be glad to hear what you have to say,
+Mr. Morrison,&#8221; replied the master of the school.
+&#8220;Sit down,&#8221; and he pointed to a handy chair.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s about that wild man, Doctor Clay!&#8221; exclaimed
+the farmer, dropping into the seat and
+mopping his forehead with his handkerchief.
+&#8220;It&#8217;s something terribul, the way he carries on.
+He &#8217;most scared my wife to death!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He has been to your place again?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, sir, last night. He was in the barn, and
+he jumped out at my wife and said he was going to
+blow the fort to pieces! She got so scared she
+dropped her pailful of milk and ran to the house.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260' name='page_260'></a>260</span>
+I got mad and got my shotgun, but the fellow
+had skipped out before I could catch sight of
+him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What time was this?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just about six o&#8217;clock. But that ain&#8217;t all.
+This morning I started for town, intending to tell
+the constable and the justice about it, when all of
+a sudden, when I was passing the end of your
+property, I see the wild man down there, behind
+a tree.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just now?&#8221; asked Dave, eagerly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not more&#8217;n a quarter of an hour ago. That&#8217;s
+why I stepped in here. He&#8217;s a dangerous man,
+Doctor Clay, and I think he ought to be rounded
+up!&#8221; went on Henry Morrison, earnestly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are right, he certainly ought to be put
+under restraint,&#8221; answered the master of Oak
+Hall. &#8220;I will see to this at once. Will you assist
+in the hunt, Mr. Morrison?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course&mdash;if I don&#8217;t have to go alone. I
+don&#8217;t think it is safe for anybody to tackle him
+alone, he&#8217;s that wild and dangerous.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can we take part in the search?&#8221; asked Phil,
+eagerly. &#8220;Oh, do let us do it, Doctor Clay!&#8221; he
+pleaded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose so, if you will promise to be careful.
+Mr. Morrison, can you point out the exact
+spot where you saw the man?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course I can.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261' name='page_261'></a>261</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Then we will at once make up a searching
+party.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Doctor Clay could act quickly when the occasion
+demanded, and inside of ten minutes a searching
+party was made up, composed of Dave and his
+chums, Mr. Dale, Horsehair, and several men
+who chanced to be working around the grounds.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I hope we catch him and are able to prove
+that he blew up the hotel dining-room,&#8221; said Phil
+to Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So do I, Phil.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Henry Morrison led the way, and it was not
+long before the spot was gained where he had seen
+Wilbur Poole. From that point a path ran from
+the river back into the woods.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe he took that path,&#8221; suggested our
+hero, and several thought the same.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think we had better scatter,&#8221; suggested Mr.
+Dale, who had been placed in charge by the doctor.
+&#8220;By doing that we can cover a wide range
+of territory in a comparatively short space of
+time. And keep as quiet as possible, for should
+he hear us he will most likely start and run.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If he didn&#8217;t run when he saw Mr. Morrison,&#8221;
+murmured Buster. &#8220;He may be miles away already.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The crowd separated into pairs, Dave and Phil
+going together and Roger going with Ben, and
+Buster with Horsehair. All had armed themselves
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262' name='page_262'></a>262</span>
+with sticks, and Mr. Dale carried a pair of handcuffs,
+and one of the hired men had a rope.</p>
+<p>Deeper and deeper into the woods went the
+party, spread out in a long line. They had examined
+the river-front and felt fairly certain that
+the wild man had not left by boat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Looks like a wild-goose chase,&#8221; remarked
+Phil, with a sigh, after a half an hour had
+passed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, we don&#8217;t want to give up yet,&#8221; answered
+Dave. &#8220;Why, it isn&#8217;t much after ten o&#8217;clock.
+We can stay out till noon, at least.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d stay out all day, if I thought we could
+catch him,&#8221; returned the shipowner&#8217;s son,
+promptly.</p>
+<p>Presently the boys espied a small stone house,
+standing beside a brook which flowed through
+the woods into the river. In the house lived an
+old man who made his living by making baskets
+and fancy articles of birch bark.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us see if old Herick is around,&#8221; suggested
+Dave. &#8220;He may be able to tell us something.&#8221;</p>
+<p>They found the old man hard at work on a
+fancy basket. He looked surprised when thus
+suddenly confronted by the students.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did I see a wild man?&#8221; he queried, in reply
+to their question. &#8220;I guess I did,&mdash;at least he
+acted queer enough. He danced up here, made a
+deep bow, and told me the army would be along
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263' name='page_263'></a>263</span>
+in four minutes. Then he made another bow and
+walked off, as stiff as a drum-major.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When was this?&#8221; demanded Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;About half an hour ago.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And which way did he go?&#8221; put in Phil,
+eagerly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That way,&#8221; and the old basket-maker pointed
+up the brook. &#8220;Walked right in the water, too.
+I was going to follow him at first but then I didn&#8217;t
+think it was any use.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boys waited to hear no more, but telling
+old Herick to watch for the other searchers and
+tell them about the wild man, they set off up the
+brook as fast as they could travel.</p>
+<p>As the chums progressed they looked to the
+right and left, wondering if Wilbur Poole had
+kept to the tiny watercourse or taken to the woods,
+which were now exceedingly dense.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I see his footprints!&#8221; cried Phil, as they
+passed a sandy stretch. &#8220;Anyway, those marks
+look fresh.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I fancy you are right, Phil, and if so, he can&#8217;t
+be very far ahead of us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>They went on, following the windings of the
+stream until it became less than a foot wide. It
+came to an end at a number of springs among the
+rocks.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fine, cold water,&#8221; announced Dave. &#8220;Here
+is a chance for a good drink, Phil.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264' name='page_264'></a>264</span></p>
+<p>Both were drinking their fill when a loud voice
+suddenly challenged them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ha! What are you doing at my fountain?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Both looked up hurriedly and saw the wild man
+standing on the highest of the rocks. He had his
+arms folded and was glaring at them sternly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; murmured Phil. &#8220;Say, Dave, there
+he is! What shall we do?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us try to make friends with him,&#8221; suggested
+Dave. &#8220;If we don&#8217;t, he may run away,
+and he can easily do that in these thick woods.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If we could only notify the others!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You can go back if you wish, while I talk to
+him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Aren&#8217;t you afraid?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I reckon I can take care of myself,&#8221; answered
+Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you not know I gave a million dollars for
+these fountains?&#8221; went on the wild man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, they are worth it,&#8221; answered Dave,
+calmly. &#8220;It is very good water. Why don&#8217;t
+you have it bottled, Mr. Poole?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who calls me Poole? I am the King of
+Sumatra. My army is following me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To blow up another fort, I suppose,&#8221; said
+Phil, as he commenced to back away.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then I must go, for I don&#8217;t want to be blown
+up,&#8221; and, so speaking, Phil commenced to retreat.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265' name='page_265'></a>265</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;The fort is not here&mdash;it is in Oakdale, close
+to the other fort,&#8221; said the wild man, and now he
+came down from the big rock and stood quite
+close to Dave. There was a strange look of cunning
+in his eyes, and Dave had to shiver, although
+he did his best to keep calm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In Oakdale,&#8221; said Dave, slowly. &#8220;Say, you
+blew up that hotel fort in fine shape, didn&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ha! ha! so I did! But I was discovered,
+worse luck, I was discovered!&#8221; continued the wild
+man, with a sad shake of his head. &#8220;The enemy
+saw me!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Somebody saw you?&#8221; queried our hero, with
+interest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, worse luck. But it shan&#8217;t happen again.
+Next time I shall go masked. I have my mask
+here.&#8221; And Wilbur Poole pulled from his pocket
+a mask made of a bit of blue cloth. &#8220;I will show
+you how I wear it.&#8221; And he fastened it over his
+face by means of a couple of strings.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fine! fine!&#8221; cried Dave, in pretended delight.
+He wished to humor the man until Phil returned
+with the others. &#8220;It couldn&#8217;t be better. You
+ought to patent that kind of a mask.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will patent it soon, after the other fort is
+down.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You just said somebody saw you when you
+blew up the other,&#8221; continued our hero. &#8220;Who
+was it?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266' name='page_266'></a>266</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Ha! that is a state secret. Only the cabinet
+must know of it&mdash;the cabinet and the man who
+makes shoes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am sorry you won&#8217;t let me in on your
+secrets,&#8221; said Dave. &#8220;I want to help you. Won&#8217;t
+you hire me as a clerk?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How much do you want a week?&#8221; demanded
+the wild man, in a business-like tone.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How much will you give?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To a good clerk forty dollars.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then I&#8217;ll take the job.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very good. Your name is Crusoe, isn&#8217;t it&mdash;Robinson
+Crusoe?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve got it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If I give you the job, you must have your hair
+shaved off,&#8221; continued the wild man, looking at
+Dave&#8217;s hair critically.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, I&#8217;ll have that done when we reach
+a barber shop.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It isn&#8217;t necessary to wait!&#8221; cried Wilbur
+Poole. &#8220;I am a barber.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To be sure&mdash;I have a certificate from the
+Emperor of Siam. See here!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The wild man put his hand into an inner pocket
+and suddenly brought forth a pair of long shears.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can cut your hair and shave you,&#8221; he announced.
+&#8220;Just sit down on yonder throne and
+I&#8217;ll start to work.&#8221; And he pointed to a flat rock.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267' name='page_267'></a>267</span></p>
+<p>The sight of the sharp-pointed shears was not a
+pleasant one, and when the wild man invited him
+to sit down Dave felt very much like running
+away. The man evidently saw how he felt, and
+suddenly caught him by the arm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sit down!&#8221; he thundered. &#8220;I won&#8217;t hurt
+you. I am an expert barber.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us talk about the job first,&#8221; said Dave,
+trying to keep his wits about him, although he was
+terribly disturbed. He wondered how long it
+would be before Phil would return.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you want to know?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you cut my hair in the latest fashion?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I never cut hair in any other way.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And will you curl the ends? I like curls.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you want them, although they make a man
+look girlish,&#8221; answered the wild man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And will you&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; went on Dave, when Wilbur
+Poole suddenly grabbed him by both arms
+and forced him backwards on the flat rock.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll go to work at once!&#8221; cried the wild man.
+&#8220;Sit still!&#8221; And he flourished the shears before
+our hero&#8217;s face.</p>
+<p>Dave felt a chill run down his backbone. But
+a moment later he felt a thrill of relief, as from
+the bushes behind the wild man stepped Phil, Mr.
+Dale, and several others.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268' name='page_268'></a>268</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXVIII_THE_CAPTURE_OF_THE_WILD_MAN' id='CHAPTER_XXVIII_THE_CAPTURE_OF_THE_WILD_MAN'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+<h3>THE CAPTURE OF THE WILD MAN</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Now then, you may go to work,&#8221; said our
+hero, as he saw Mr. Dale come up close behind
+the wild man. &#8220;But sharpen the scissors first,
+please.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will,&#8221; was Wilbur Poole&#8217;s answer, and he
+opened up the shears and commenced to stroke
+them back and forth on a rock near by.</p>
+<p>An instant later the wild man was jerked over
+backwards and the dangerous shears were
+snatched from his grasp. He commenced to struggle,
+but the whole crowd surrounded him, and
+before he could realize the situation his hands
+were made fast.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is treachery, base treachery!&#8221; he groaned.
+&#8220;My army has betrayed me!&#8221; And he commenced
+to weep.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What a terrible state of mind to be in!&#8221;
+murmured Roger. &#8220;He is certainly as crazy as
+they make &#8217;em!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess you are right,&#8221; answered Phil. &#8220;But
+I am glad we have got him.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269' name='page_269'></a>269</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;He spoke about the blowing up of the hotel,&#8221;
+said Dave. &#8220;And he said somebody saw him
+do it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who was it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He didn&#8217;t mention any names.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe he was simply wandering in his mind,&#8221;
+suggested Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think so,&#8221; returned Dave. &#8220;I think,
+if he was questioned long enough, we could get
+the truth out of him. He doesn&#8217;t seem to be
+crazy all the time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a terrible thing for the Poole family&mdash;to
+have such a crazy man in it,&#8221; was Buster&#8217;s opinion;
+and the other lads agreed with him.</p>
+<p>The prisoner was marched along the brook, past
+the home of old Herick, and then down the river-road.
+By this time all the searchers had come
+together, including Henry Morrison and some
+outsiders.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m mighty glad you&#8217;ve got him,&#8221; said the
+farmer. &#8220;And I hope he don&#8217;t get away from
+you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He won&#8217;t get away,&#8221; answered Mr. Dale.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The women of this district have been afraid
+to go out alone,&#8221; went on Henry Morrison.
+&#8220;They&#8217;ll be glad to know he&#8217;s been captured.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll have to let the Pooles know right
+away,&#8221; said Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I fancy Doctor Clay will send a telegram,&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270' name='page_270'></a>270</span>
+answered Mr. Dale. &#8220;And in the meanwhile
+we&#8217;ll have to take the prisoner to the Oakdale
+lockup.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was nearly noon when the crowd reached Oak
+Hall. The wild man had but little to say. His
+capture had evidently broken his spirit, and he
+was inclined to cry. But when Doctor Clay asked
+him if he would like to have something to eat, he
+brightened up wonderfully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is a sad case,&#8221; said the master of the Hall.
+&#8220;But under proper treatment I think he can be
+cured.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The news quickly circulated throughout the
+school that the wild man had been caught and that
+he was Wilbur Poole, an uncle to Nat, and all the
+boys were anxious to catch a sight of the strange
+individual. The teachers and servants were likewise
+curious, and looked at him as he ate his
+dinner in a corner of the dining-hall, surrounded
+by those who had captured him and who were
+watching, to see that he did not get away. He was
+not allowed to use a knife and fork, but his food
+was cut up for him and served with a spoon.</p>
+<p>The only person at Oak Hall who did not come
+in to see the wild man was Job Haskers. When
+asked about this, the dictatorial teacher shrugged
+his shoulders.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Some of the boys are wild enough for me,&#8221;
+he said. &#8220;I want nothing to do with the insane.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271' name='page_271'></a>271</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;It is a sad case,&#8221; said the teacher who was
+addressing Job Haskers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There are many just as bad,&#8221; responded the
+other, coldly. &#8220;It is up to the Poole family to
+look after that man and see that he doesn&#8217;t break
+out again.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was decided to take the wild man down to
+Oakdale in the school carryall, to be driven by
+Horsehair. Mr. Dale was to go along, and so
+were Phil, Dave, Ben, Buster, and Doctor
+Clay.</p>
+<p>The carryall was brought around to the side
+entrance of the school, and Wilbur Poole was told
+that he was about to take a ride through the country.
+He walked through the hallway willingly
+enough, but suddenly, on turning a corner, set up
+a shout.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You! you! I have found you at last!&#8221; he
+cried, rushing forward. &#8220;You are the one who
+exposed me! Base soldier that you are! You
+have ruined the whole army!&#8221; And in a sudden
+fit of passion he ran up to Job Haskers and caught
+him by the throat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Le&mdash;let g-g-go!&#8221; gasped the teacher, and
+tried to shake the man off. Then the others ran
+up, and Wilbur Poole was dragged back and handcuffed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you know that man?&#8221; asked Dave, struck
+by a sudden idea.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272' name='page_272'></a>272</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes! yes!&#8221; groaned the wild man. &#8220;He exposed
+me! The army is lost!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How did he expose you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He saw me do it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do what?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Blow up the fort-hotel. Oh, what a base villain
+he was to look on!&#8221; groaned the wild man,
+and suddenly commenced to weep.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is&mdash;the&mdash;er&mdash;man talking about?&#8221;
+stammered Job Haskers, and all saw him turn
+pale.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He says you saw him blow up Sparr&#8217;s place,&#8221;
+said Dave, pointedly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is false, absurd!&#8221; said the teacher. &#8220;I&mdash;er&mdash;I
+never saw the rascal before.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He isn&#8217;t a rascal, Mr. Haskers. He is
+simply out of his mind,&#8221; remonstrated Mr.
+Dale. &#8220;He is not accountable for his actions.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, he ought not to say such things,&#8221; returned
+the dictatorial teacher.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You saw me&mdash;you know you did!&#8221; cried Wilbur
+Poole. &#8220;You spoiled everything! I might
+have blown up many forts if it hadn&#8217;t been for
+you!&#8221; And he shook his head dolefully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Take him away,&#8221; said the teacher, and turned
+his back on the wild man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dave, I think the wild man speaks the
+truth!&#8221; whispered Phil to our hero.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273' name='page_273'></a>273</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Possibly, Phil. I think the matter will bear
+investigation.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And if old Haskers saw the thing done, why
+didn&#8217;t he tell about it. Do you think that letter&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It struck me that such might be the truth,
+Phil. But don&#8217;t say anything until you are sure.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He was down on us&mdash;ever since we mentioned
+that affair with the Widow Breen,&#8221; went
+on the shipowner&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d like to see that letter Jason Sparr got&mdash;saying
+we were guilty,&#8221; returned our hero.
+&#8220;Maybe Doctor Clay can get hold of it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>All the way to Oakdale the boys spoke of the
+case in whispers. Phil was quite sure Job Haskers
+had seen Wilbur Poole blow up the hotel and
+equally sure that the dictatorial teacher had written
+the letter to the hotel-keeper stating he, Dave,
+and their chums were guilty.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He thought we&#8217;d be locked up, or at least that
+we&#8217;d be sent away from the school and he would
+be rid of us,&#8221; said Phil. &#8220;He is growing afraid
+of us! Oh, if we can prove that he did it, I&#8217;ll
+make it hot for him!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If he did such a thing as that, he ought to
+be discharged from Oak Hall,&#8221; was Ben&#8217;s comment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll get my father to sue him for damages,&#8221;
+put in Buster.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274' name='page_274'></a>274</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, don&#8217;t be hasty,&#8221; advised Dave.
+&#8220;There may be some mistake&mdash;although I think
+not.&#8221;</p>
+<p>At Oakdale, Wilbur Poole was turned over to
+the authorities, who placed him in a comfortable
+room attached to the lockup. As it was known
+that he was insane, he could not be counted a
+criminal, and the majority of the people pitied
+him and hoped that some day he would be restored
+to his right mind.</p>
+<p>A telegram was sent to the Poole family, and
+the next day came a reply that some men would
+come to take Wilbur Poole away to a sanitarium.
+It was established beyond a doubt that he had
+used the dynamite to blow up the dining-room of
+Sparr&#8217;s hotel, and, consequently, our hero and his
+chums were cleared of that charge, much to their
+satisfaction.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wonder if Nat will come back?&#8221; said
+Shadow. &#8220;I should think he would hate to
+do it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think he will,&#8221; said Luke.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What will you do if he does come back,
+Phil?&#8221; asked Gus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know, Gus. Of course, I&#8217;ll let him
+know what I think of him for spoiling my plans
+for a spread. But I hate to be hard on him, because
+of this disgrace about his uncle.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that&#8217;s a terrible thing,&#8221; was Chip Macklin&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275' name='page_275'></a>275</span>
+comment. &#8220;I&#8217;d hate to have a crazy man
+in my family.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, such things can&#8217;t be helped,&#8221; put in
+Polly Vane. &#8220;The Poole family will have to
+make the best of it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was several days later when Nat Poole
+showed himself. Phil and Dave did not see him
+until later, and both were struck by the change in
+his appearance. He looked haggard and much
+older, and his arrogance was completely gone.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Got back, eh?&#8221; said Phil, walking up to him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; returned the money-lender&#8217;s son, and
+his voice sounded hollow.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What have they done with your uncle, Nat?&#8221;
+asked Dave, kindly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Put him in another sanitarium, where he will
+have the best of care and doctoring.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hope he gets well.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We all hope that.&#8221; Nat swallowed a lump
+in his throat and then looked gloomily at Phil.
+&#8220;Well, you got the best of me,&#8221; he said, shortly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How the best of you?&#8221; demanded the shipowner&#8217;s
+son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I understand you found out about that
+spread.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I did.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ll pay for the damage done&mdash;as soon
+as I get the money. I haven&#8217;t any now&mdash;Dad&#8217;s got
+too much to pay on Uncle Wilbur&#8217;s account.&#8221; Nat
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276' name='page_276'></a>276</span>
+swallowed another lump in his throat. &#8220;I&#8217;m
+sorry I did it now, Phil, honest I am,&#8221; he went on,
+brokenly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, if that&#8217;s the case, let us drop the matter,
+Nat,&#8221; was the instant reply. &#8220;I don&#8217;t believe
+in hitting a fellow when he is down. You
+haven&#8217;t got to pay me anything. The whole thing
+is past and gone,&mdash;and that ends it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you.&#8221; Nat wanted to say something
+more, but his voice suddenly broke and he turned
+away to hide his emotion, and then walked away.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s hit and hit hard,&#8221; said Roger, in a low
+voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you did well to drop that matter, Phil,&#8221;
+added Dave. &#8220;Maybe Nat has learned a lesson
+he won&#8217;t easily forget.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Dave was right about the lesson Nat Poole
+had learned. He was deeply humiliated, both
+by the exposure concerning the feast and by what
+had been learned concerning his insane uncle, and
+for a long time was quite another boy.</p>
+<p>It may be added here that at a new sanitarium,
+and under first-class medical treatment, a marked
+change came over Wilbur Poole, and in less than a
+year he was completely cured of his weakmindedness.
+With a nurse as a companion he went into
+the country to rest both body and mind, and later
+on came out into the world again as well as anybody.
+Strange to say, he remembered nothing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277' name='page_277'></a>277</span>
+of calling himself the King of Sumatra, nor of
+blowing up Jason Sparr&#8217;s hotel. But others did
+not forget about the blowing up, and the damage
+done had to be settled for by Mr. Aaron Poole,
+who was his brother&#8217;s guardian and manager of
+his estate for the time being.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278' name='page_278'></a>278</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXIX_A_BIT_OF_EVIDENCE' id='CHAPTER_XXIX_A_BIT_OF_EVIDENCE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+<h3>A BIT OF EVIDENCE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Dave, what do you make of this?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, to tell the truth, Phil, I don&#8217;t think
+much of it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t think it is a clew?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s rather faint, I must confess.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t think there is anything to it,&#8221; declared
+Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is something, but not a great deal,&#8221;
+came from Roger. &#8220;I don&#8217;t see how you are going
+to follow it up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>This talk between the boys occurred after Dave,
+Phil, Ben, Roger, and Buster had called upon
+Jason Sparr and the justice and insisted on seeing
+the letter the hotel man had received which stated
+that the boys were guilty of blowing up the dining-room
+of his hostelry.</p>
+<p>The hotel man had treated them kindly, for he
+was in dread that the boys would get their folks
+to sue him for damages. He had offered to pay
+back the money taken from Phil for the spread,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279' name='page_279'></a>279</span>
+and the shipowner&#8217;s son had taken the amount, to
+which he was justly entitled.</p>
+<p>The examination of the letter had revealed
+next to nothing. It was evidently written in a
+disguised hand, but some of the letters looked
+like Job Haskers&#8217;s handwriting. In the corner of
+the paper some sort of an advertisement had been
+torn off, only the letters, &#8220;<i>blisher</i>&#8221; showing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think those letters are part of the word,
+&#8216;<i>Publisher</i>,&#8217;&#8221; Dave had said. &#8220;This letter was
+evidently penned by somebody who used some
+publisher&#8217;s blank.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe Job Haskers had those blanks,&#8221; Phil
+had exclaimed. &#8220;Remember, he said he published
+or was going to publish something once
+upon a time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boys talked it over, but could reach no
+conclusion. Jason Sparr told how the letter had
+come to him, but this added no new light on the
+subject.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, it was a nasty trick, no matter who
+played it,&#8221; said Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I sha&#8217;n&#8217;t rest until I find out who did it,&#8221; retorted
+Phil.</p>
+<p>All were resolved to watch Job Haskers and
+also Nat Poole. But while doing this they had to
+turn once more to their studies. Phil, Ben, and
+Buster had to work harder than ever, and so did
+Dave, to make up for the time lost during their
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280' name='page_280'></a>280</span>
+absence. But Doctor Clay was kind to them, and
+for once Job Haskers did not say anything, although
+he showed that he expected them to &#8220;toe
+the mark,&#8221; as Roger expressed it.</p>
+<p>Several weeks slipped by, and during that time
+Oak Hall played several games of ball. One
+game of importance was won, and this was celebrated
+in a befitting manner. Dave attended the
+games, and so did Phil and Roger, but none of
+the three allowed the sport to interfere with their
+studies. All were &#8220;in the grind,&#8221; and resolved
+to graduate that coming June with the highest
+possible honors.</p>
+<p>During those days Dave received many letters
+from home. His folks and friends were glad to
+know that the wild man had been captured and
+the mystery of the blowing up cleared away. Jessie
+sent him a very warm letter in particular, congratulating
+him for bringing back the runaways,
+and saying she hoped he would have no more
+trouble during the final term at Oak Hall. She
+added that she and all the others expected to
+come to the school at graduation exercises.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now it is up to me to make good,&#8221; said Dave,
+after reading this letter several times. &#8220;Dad
+expects it, and Jessie, and everybody, and I am
+not going to disappoint them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But it was no light task to remain at the top of
+the senior class, or even near it, for there were
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281' name='page_281'></a>281</span>
+bright seniors in plenty, including the studious
+Polly Vane, who seemed the brightest of all. But
+Dave plugged away, day after day, resolved to
+keep at it until the very last. He was writing on
+his theme and had it about half finished.</p>
+<p>&#8220;One month more and it will all be over but
+the shouting,&#8221; said Roger one day, as he came into
+the room where Dave was studying.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All over but the shouting or weeping,&#8221; returned
+Phil, who was present. &#8220;I am afraid some
+of the fellows will do more weeping than cheering,&#8221;
+he added, grimly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us hope that everybody passes,&#8221; said
+Dave, looking up with a quiet smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Such a thing has never been done,&#8221; said Ben.
+&#8220;Somebody is bound to drop by the wayside&mdash;I
+hope it isn&#8217;t yours truly,&#8221; and he sank his head
+again into his book.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think old Haskers is commencing to tighten
+the screws again,&#8221; said Buster. &#8220;He let up for a
+while, after the wild man was caught, but yesterday
+and to-day&mdash;phew! we caught it, didn&#8217;t we?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We sure did!&#8221; cried Phil. &#8220;I can&#8217;t understand
+that man. Why is he a teacher when he
+just naturally hates boys?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a conundrum that can&#8217;t be answered,&#8221;
+said the senator&#8217;s son.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, we won&#8217;t weep on leaving him,&#8221; remarked
+Luke, dryly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_282' name='page_282'></a>282</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Say, that puts me in mind of a story,&#8221; said
+Shadow. &#8220;Once on a time a man in an auto ran
+into a boy carrying a cat in a basket. He didn&#8217;t
+hurt the boy much but he killed the cat. Says he,
+&#8216;I am sorry, my boy, and I&#8217;ll pay you for the
+cat. How much?&#8217; &#8216;I&mdash;I don&#8217;t know,&#8217; blubbered
+the boy. &#8216;Will two dollars do?&#8217; asked the
+man. &#8216;Yes,&#8217; says the boy, and took the money.
+&#8216;Were you taking the cat home?&#8217; asked the man,
+when he was ready to drive on. &#8216;No,&#8217; said the
+boy. &#8216;I was going to take him down to the
+canal and drown him!&#8217;&#8221; And there was a smile
+over Shadow&#8217;s yarn.</p>
+<p>It had been a blustery day, and as night came
+on the wind increased in violence, until it fairly
+howled around Oak Hall. It tore through the
+branches of the oaks that gave the place its name,
+until it looked as if some of the trees might be
+broken off by the fury of the elements.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My gracious! I never saw such a wind!&#8221; cried
+Roger, as he came in from a trip to the gymnasium.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It must be fierce at sea,&#8221; returned Dave, who
+was with him. &#8220;I am glad I am on shore. The
+newspapers will tell about wrecks along the coast
+to-morrow.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Nobody thought of going out that evening, and
+the boys put in the time studying and reading.
+The windows rattled, and occasionally a shutter
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_283' name='page_283'></a>283</span>
+banged, and a good night&#8217;s rest seemed out of the
+question.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My, what a night for a fire!&#8221; remarked Phil,
+while he and his chums were undressing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t mention such a thing!&#8221; returned Ben,
+with a shiver. &#8220;It would burn down everything!&#8221;</p>
+<p>At last the boys retired. A few dropped off
+to sleep, but Dave was not one of them. He had
+studied hard and was restless, and the fury of the
+elements added to his nervousness.</p>
+<p>At last he could stand it no longer to remain in
+bed, and got up to sit in an easy-chair for awhile.</p>
+<p>He was just crossing the dormitory floor when
+there came an extra heavy blast of wind outside,
+followed by a crash, as one of the giant oaks
+standing close to the school building was broken
+off near the top. Then came another crash, a
+jingling of glass, and a sudden wild cry for help.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello, something&#8217;s gone through a window!&#8221;
+Dave muttered. &#8220;Maybe it&#8217;s in the next room!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He ran to the window and looked out. Just
+below the window-sill he saw some branches of the
+broken tree. He looked down and noted that the
+tree-top had gone into the window of the room
+below.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the row?&#8221; cried Roger, springing up
+and rubbing his eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is the roof caving in?&#8221; asked Phil.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_284' name='page_284'></a>284</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Some tree-branches came down and went
+through the window right below us,&#8221; answered
+Dave. &#8220;Listen!&#8221;</p>
+<p>All did so, and heard the cry for help repeated.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s Job Haskers calling!&#8221; said the senator&#8217;s
+son. &#8220;He uses the room below us now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us see if he is hurt,&#8221; suggested another
+of the boys.</p>
+<p>Clad in their pajamas, the boys flocked out
+into the hallway, there to be joined by others.
+Word was passed around of what had occurred,
+and all made their way to the door of the instructor&#8217;s
+apartment. They heard him yelling
+for help with all his might.</p>
+<p>The door was locked, and Dave and some
+others put their shoulders to the barrier and
+forced it open. All was dark in the room, and
+the wind was rushing around, sending books, pictures,
+and other things in all directions.</p>
+<p>Several matches were struck, and at last a sheltered
+light was lit. Doctor Clay, Mr. Dale, and
+some of the other teachers had now arrived, and
+instructors and students gazed curiously at the
+scene before them.</p>
+<p>The top of the tree had come straight through
+the big window of the apartment, crashing down
+on a bureau and a writing-desk, smashing both
+flat. Some branches of the tree rested on the
+side of the bed, pinning Job Haskers against the
+wall, as if in a cage.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_4' id='linki_4'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-004.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 316px; height: 494px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 316px;'>
+<span style='font-variant:small-caps'>&#8220;Help me! Save me!&#8221; spluttered the terror-stricken teacher.</span>&mdash;<i>Page 287</i>.<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Help me! Save me!&#8221; spluttered the terror-stricken
+teacher. &#8220;I am being crushed to
+death!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All hands to the tree!&#8221; shouted Mr. Dale,
+and showed what he meant. Boys and men took
+hold of the tree-branches and pulled them to one
+side.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you much hurt, Mr. Haskers?&#8221; asked
+Doctor Clay, kindly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&mdash;I don&#8217;t know, I think so!&#8221; gasped the
+teacher. His face was white and he was shivering
+from fright.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can&#8217;t you crawl under the branches?&#8221; asked
+Mr. Dale. &#8220;Here, come this way.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He showed how it could be done, and trembling
+from head to feet, the scared teacher got out from
+under the tree-top. His face and one shoulder
+were scratched, but otherwise he appeared to be
+unhurt. But all were forced to acknowledge that
+he had had a narrow escape.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You had better take one of the spare rooms,
+Mr. Haskers,&#8221; said Doctor Clay, as another
+blast of wind swept through the room. &#8220;You
+cannot remain here, with this tree-top in the room.
+And I am afraid we shall have to saw it up to get
+it out again. You can be thankful that your life
+has been spared.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_285' name='page_285'></a>285</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;The furniture is smashed!&#8221; murmured the
+teacher.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Never mind the furniture, so long as you are
+not hurt. It can be mended, and all the window
+needs is some new sash.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;My things have been scattered,&#8221; grumbled
+the teacher. &#8220;A perfect mess!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Leave it until morning&mdash;you can do nothing
+to-night,&#8221; said the doctor; and so it was finally
+decided, and teachers and pupils trooped off to bed.
+The broken-in door was closed, but it could not
+be locked.</p>
+<p>The boys had scarcely gotten back to the dormitories
+when Dave called Phil, Ben, Roger, and
+Buster to one side.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now is our chance,&#8221; he whispered. &#8220;Did
+you notice that the bureau and the writing-desk in
+Haskers&#8217;s room were smashed? It may not be the
+most honorable thing to do, but I think we are
+justified in looking his things over and seeing if
+we can&#8217;t find some clew to that letter Jason Sparr
+received.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Right you are!&#8221; declared Phil, promptly, and
+the others said practically the same.</p>
+<p>They waited until the other boys had retired
+once more, and then, at a signal from Dave, all
+filed silently into the hallway again and tiptoed
+their way to the room below. Soon, they
+were inside and had the light lit, and also a lantern
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_286' name='page_286'></a>286</span>
+which belonged to Ben&#8217;s bicycle, and which
+he had chanced to have on hand.</p>
+<p>Silently and with great care the boys went over
+the many things that had been scattered over the
+floor&mdash;wearing apparel, books, pads, papers, and
+various articles of more or less value. Presently
+Phil gave a low cry.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look at this!&#8221; And he held up several sheets
+of paper. In one corner were the words:</p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:center'>LATIN MADE EASY<br /></p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:center'><i>JOB HASKERS, Publisher,</i><br /></p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:center'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Albany, N. Y.</span><br /></p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s the same paper!&#8221; cried Dave. &#8220;He
+tore the corner off so that just the letters &#8216;<i>blisher</i>&#8217;
+remained.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s pretty good evidence,&#8221; said Roger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I should say it was!&#8221; cried Ben. &#8220;Wonder
+what he will have to say about it, when we confront
+him with it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us look for more evidence, while we are
+at it,&#8221; came from Buster. And then the midnight
+search continued.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_287' name='page_287'></a>287</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXX_THE_EXPOSUREGOODBY_TO_OAK_HALL' id='CHAPTER_XXX_THE_EXPOSUREGOODBY_TO_OAK_HALL'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+<h3>THE EXPOSURE&mdash;GOOD-BY TO OAK HALL</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Doctor Clay, we must see you about something
+that is very important.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Thus spoke Dave, the next morning, as he and
+his chums filed into the doctor&#8217;s private office
+after the opening of the school. Job Haskers
+was not at his class, but in his room, straightening
+out his things, while some men had been sent up,
+to get rid of the tree-top and repair the window.
+The storm was a thing of the past, and no other
+damage of importance had been done.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well, boys,&#8221; returned the master of the
+school, kindly. &#8220;Come in and let me know what
+it is.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The students came in, rather awkwardly it must
+be admitted, for they had much on their minds
+and did not know just how the worthy doctor
+would take it. But they had decided on a course
+of action, and they had given their word to stick
+together to the end. Dave, as the natural leader,
+had been chosen spokesman.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Doctor Clay, we want to bring up a subject of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_288' name='page_288'></a>288</span>
+great importance,&#8221; said Dave. &#8220;Important to
+us, and to you, and to the whole school. The
+boys have asked me to speak for them and for
+myself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;About what?&#8221; demanded the master, somewhat
+shortly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;About Mr. Haskers and how he has treated
+us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What has he done now?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It isn&#8217;t what he has done now, Doctor Clay,
+it is what he did some time ago&mdash;did his best to
+get us into grave trouble,&#8221; answered Dave,
+warmly. &#8220;You&#8217;ll remember the letter Mr. Sparr
+got, stating we were guilty of trying to blow up
+his hotel. We are now satisfied that Mr. Haskers
+penned that letter&mdash;in fact, we have the evidence
+to prove it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Impossible!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, sir, it is true, and I dare him to deny it.
+It is an absolute fact, Doctor Clay, and we have
+come here this morning to inform you that we
+can no longer attend a school where he is a
+teacher,&#8221; went on Dave, firmly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But&mdash;but you&mdash;er&mdash;you astound me, Porter!
+Tell me what you know, or think you know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>In a plain, straightforward manner Dave mentioned
+the letter and the printing that had appeared
+on it. Then he told how he and his chums
+had searched the bedroom after the tree-top crash
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_289' name='page_289'></a>289</span>
+and found the sheets of paper with that same printing,
+and he produced them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And we also found these, in a corner of the
+broken writing-desk,&#8221; he continued. &#8220;Some writing
+by Mr. Haskers, in which he practiced backhand.
+This writing is just like that which appears
+in the letter Mr. Sparr got. Compare the two and
+you will see we are right. Wilbur Poole said Mr.
+Haskers saw him blow up the hotel, and he told
+the truth, even if he is weak-minded.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But why should Mr. Haskers do such an outrageous
+thing?&#8221; asked the master of Oak Hall.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will tell you why, sir,&#8221; returned Dave, and
+related the affair of the Widow Breen. &#8220;That
+made him very sore on us, and he wanted to get
+us out of the school. At first he tried it by overworking
+us in our lessons, and when he found
+that that didn&#8217;t work he tried this game of making
+out that we were criminals.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, but&mdash;but would a teacher of mine stoop
+so low?&#8221; murmured the worthy doctor, shaking
+his head doubtfully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No ordinary teacher would, Dr. Clay. But
+Mr. Haskers is not an ordinary man&mdash;he is very
+dictatorial and harsh, and he hates boys even
+though he has to teach them. He isn&#8217;t a bit like
+Mr. Dale, or the others.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We never had any trouble with any teacher
+but Haskers,&#8221; put in Phil.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_290' name='page_290'></a>290</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;And if we have to leave Oak Hall I&#8217;m going
+to get my father to sue Haskers for damages,&#8221;
+added Roger.</p>
+<p>A talk lasting the best part of an hour followed,
+and at last the worthy doctor had his eyes opened
+to the unworthiness of his assistant. He scanned
+the sheets of paper and the writing the boys had
+brought with interest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are right&mdash;this is Mr. Haskers&#8217;s hand,&#8221;
+he said, slowly. &#8220;But is it the same hand that
+wrote that villainous letter to Mr. Sparr?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Compare the two and you will see that we are
+right,&#8221; answered Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will,&#8221; answered the doctor; and a little
+later he set off for Oakdale in his buggy, going
+alone.</p>
+<p>The boys walked down to the gymnasium, resolved
+to keep out of all classes until the matter
+had been settled. They had impressed it on Doctor
+Clay&#8217;s mind that either Job Haskers must
+leave the school or they would do so.</p>
+<p>It was nearly noon when the master of Oak
+Hall came back, driving slowly and looking very
+thoughtful. The boys met him at the entrance
+to the grounds and he told them to come to the
+office, and closed the door carefully behind them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You were right,&#8221; he said, almost brokenly.
+&#8220;I have been deceived by this&mdash;this&mdash;I do not
+know what to call him! It will make a great stir
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_291' name='page_291'></a>291</span>
+when the truth is known&mdash;and it will hurt the
+school,&#8221; he added, with a sigh.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why should we make a stir about it?&#8221; asked
+Dave, quickly. &#8220;Let him go, that is all we ask.
+He can resign.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, the truth must come out,&#8221; was the firm
+reply. &#8220;He shall not shelter himself behind you,
+even for the benefit of the school. I have already
+told the authorities the facts in the case. If they
+wish to arrest him they can do so, and you may
+appear against him, if you wish.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When will you tell him?&#8221; asked Phil, as there
+came a brief pause.</p>
+<p>&#8220;At once! And I wish you to be present and
+hear what is said,&#8221; returned Doctor Clay. He
+rang a bell and a servant appeared. &#8220;Tell Mr.
+Haskers to come here immediately.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was silence after this, the boys not knowing
+what to say, and the master of the school being
+busy with his thoughts. Presently the door
+opened and Job Haskers came in, with a look of
+curiosity on his face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You sent for me, Doctor?&#8221; he inquired.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I did, Mr. Haskers,&#8221; was the cold reply. &#8220;I
+want your resignation, and I want it at once!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The master of Oak Hall had gotten to his feet
+and the two men stood facing each other. Doctor
+Clay had his jaw set, and never had the students
+seen him look so determined. He was no
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_292' name='page_292'></a>292</span>
+longer a kindly schoolmaster, he was a judge, and
+a stern judge at that.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&mdash;you want my resignation?&#8221; faltered
+Job Haskers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, and at once.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because you are not fit to teach here&mdash;you are
+not fit to teach anywhere!&#8221; thundered the doctor.
+&#8220;I want your resignation, and then I want you to
+leave just as soon as you possibly can.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But&mdash;but&mdash;I want you to explain. I
+want&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is not necessary for me to explain, Haskers.
+You have been found out. You are a despicable
+villain, and you ought to be in jail. I
+trusted you, and you have deceived me. More
+than that, you have tried to get these young gentlemen
+into serious trouble. Don&#8217;t deny it, for it
+will do no good. We have the absolute proof
+against you, and those proofs are also in the hands
+of the law. If you don&#8217;t want to be arrested, you
+will leave this school as soon as you can get your
+baggage packed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sir, I want you to know&#8211;&#8211;&#8221; commenced Job
+Haskers, but stopped short, for Doctor Clay had
+taken a stride forward and was shaking a finger in
+the teacher&#8217;s face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will not argue with you, Haskers. For a
+long time I have not been satisfied with your work,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_293' name='page_293'></a>293</span>
+for you did not seem to have the students&#8217; interest
+at heart. You have a good education. But a
+teacher must have more than that&mdash;he must have
+a heart for his work. Now you are found out,
+and I want nothing more to do with you. I will
+give you a check for what is due you up to to-day,
+and you will sign a receipt in full, and also your
+resignation, and then I never want to see or hear
+of you again.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And suppose I won&#8217;t resign?&#8221; snarled the
+teacher. &#8220;I have a contract&#8211;&#8211;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you don&#8217;t get out, you&#8217;ll go to jail.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And we&#8217;ll sue you,&#8221; Dave could not help putting
+in.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s right, we&#8217;ll push the case as far as the
+law allows,&#8221; added Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ha! you think you are smart, but you don&#8217;t
+know it all,&#8221; snarled the teacher, but his manner
+showed his uneasiness. He attempted to argue,
+but Doctor Clay would not listen, and when he
+said he would send for a constable, Job Haskers
+quickly capitulated, signed his resignation, took his
+check, and hurried away to pack his baggage. He
+left about an hour later, by the back way, so that
+none of the students saw him go. An hour after
+that a man came for his trunks and bags; and that
+was the last seen or heard of him at Oak Hall.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hurrah!&#8221; cried Dave, when the affair was
+at an end. &#8220;How glad I am that Haskers is
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_294' name='page_294'></a>294</span>
+gone! I feel as if a weight had been taken from
+my head!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess everybody will be glad,&#8221; returned
+Roger, and he was right. Some of the students
+wanted to get up a celebration in honor of the
+unpopular teacher&#8217;s departure, but this was not
+permitted. But the boys had a time on the quiet,
+and thoroughly enjoyed it.</p>
+<p>With the going away of Job Haskers, and the
+clearing up of the mystery surrounding the letter,
+Oak Hall settled down once more to its normal
+condition. Another teacher came to take the
+place of the man who had left, and he proved
+popular all around, and made Doctor Clay wonder
+why he had not made a change long before.</p>
+<p>With their minds free from worry, Dave and
+his chums buckled down to their lessons, and our
+hero spent much time over his paper on &#8220;The
+Future of Our Country.&#8221; Soon the examinations
+started, and then the boys fell to worrying over
+how they would fare in this final test.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I hope I pass,&#8221; remarked Phil, when
+the last examination was over. &#8220;I don&#8217;t expect
+to be near the top. I lost too much, going to
+Cave Island, and when I ran away.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Me for the passing mark, too,&#8221; chimed in
+Ben.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I am hoping for something better,&#8221; said
+Roger.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295' name='page_295'></a>295</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;What about you, Dave?&#8221; queried Buster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am like Roger, hoping for something better,&#8221;
+answered our hero, with a smile. &#8220;But
+I&#8217;m prepared to take what comes,&#8221; he added.</p>
+<p>At last came the day when the announcements
+were to be made. Dave had sent in his theme
+and he expected to hear from this as well as from
+his studies. In the meantime, preparations were
+going forward for the graduation exercises, and
+visitors were expected from far and near.
+Nearly all the folks from Crumville were coming,
+and also the parents of Phil, Roger, and the other
+seniors.</p>
+<p>The big assembly room was crowded when the
+announcements were made. The passing mark
+was seventy-five per cent., and many of the boys
+dreaded to think that they might be below that.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will read the names in the order of merit,&#8221;
+said Doctor Clay, after the opening exercises.
+&#8220;Only two boys have failed to pass for graduation,
+and they will be conditioned, if they so desire.
+I am proud of the record.&#8221; And then the
+master of the school proceeded to read the list.
+Polly Vane and Dave had each ninety-six per cent.,
+Roger had ninety-four, Shadow ninety, Sam and
+Luke each eighty-eight, Phil eighty-seven, Gus
+eighty-six, and so on down to Buster, who
+squeezed through with seventy-eight. The boys
+who had failed to pass were Nat Poole, who had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_296' name='page_296'></a>296</span>
+only sixty-eight, and one of his cronies, who was
+marked sixty-nine.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It ain&#8217;t fair! I did as well as lots of &#8217;em,&#8221;
+said Nat, when the reading was over. But nobody
+listened to him, for all knew that the examinations
+had been just in every particular.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will now announce the prizes for the best
+themes on the subject, &#8216;The Future of Our Country,&#8217;&#8221;
+went on Doctor Clay. &#8220;The reading of
+the nine papers handed in has afforded me great
+pleasure, for all are good and many of them excellent.
+But I think the best of all is that written
+by David Porter, and the committee of teachers
+who have examined the papers agree with me.
+Porter, I congratulate you, and I will now ask you
+to come forward and read your meritorious composition
+to your fellow-students.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And amid a general handclapping our hero
+went to the platform and commenced to read the
+theme. Everybody listened with close attention,
+and loud was the applause when he had concluded.
+It was certainly a fine paper, and later on
+Doctor Clay had it published in one of the school
+journals, where it attracted not a little attention.</p>
+<p>Dave was certainly happy and he had good reason
+to be. He sent word home that night of how
+he had fared and the next day received several
+messages of congratulation. One message from
+Jessie he prized very highly, for she wrote, &#8220;You
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297' name='page_297'></a>297</span>
+deserve a big hug for coming through so finely.
+My very best wishes.&#8221; The other boys also got
+congratulations; and that night and the night to
+follow were &#8220;bonfire nights,&#8221; in more ways than
+one.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, we are rid of Haskers, and also Merwell
+and Jasniff,&#8221; remarked Roger to Dave.
+&#8220;We ought to be happy, eh, Dave?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, and especially over coming out so well
+for graduation,&#8221; answered Dave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you think we&#8217;ll ever see Haskers or Merwell
+again?&#8221; questioned Phil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know&mdash;I trust not,&#8221; answered our
+hero. But his wish was not fulfilled. He did
+meet the pair, and in a most unexpected fashion,
+as will be related in the next volume of this series,
+to be called &#8220;Dave Porter in the Gold Fields; or,
+The Search for the Landslide Mine,&#8221; in which we
+will learn how Dave went West with some of his
+chums, and joined an old prospector in a hunt for
+a lost mine that had been willed to Roger Morr&#8217;s
+mother.</p>
+<p>The graduation exercises at Oak Hall that year
+formed a gala event long to be remembered. The
+school and the campus were crowded, and Dave
+and his chums surprised even Doctor Clay by
+&#8220;chipping in&#8221; and hiring a brass band to play
+outside, after the exercises were over. The boys
+also presented their teachers and the master with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_298' name='page_298'></a>298</span>
+some volumes of history and poetry, and received
+numerous gifts in return. From his father Dave
+got a bank-book, with an amount written therein
+that was a complete surprise. His sister gave him
+a neat stickpin and his uncle a set of books,
+and from Jessie and her folks came a desk set, of
+solid silver, suitably engraved.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I think I ought to be the happiest boy
+alive,&#8221; said Dave, after the exercises were over,
+and he had his diploma, tied with a broad ribbon.
+&#8220;I feel just as if I was walking on air.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And I am glad, too,&#8221; said his sister Laura,
+warmly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We are all glad,&#8221; put in Jessie, and gave him
+her brightest smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Glad and proud, Dave,&#8221; said his father.
+&#8220;My boy, you have done very well.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And then the whole party went down to the
+gymnasium, where refreshments were being served
+to the visitors. And here let us leave Dave Porter,
+wishing him well.</p>
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1.5em;margin-bottom:1em'>THE END</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p style='text-align:center'>
+<span style='font-size:1.4em;'>DAVE PORTER SERIES</span><br />
+<span style='font-size:1.2em;'>By EDWARD STRATEMEYER</span>
+</p>
+
+<hr style='border:none; border-bottom:1px solid silver; border-top:1px solid silver; height:3px; margin-bottom:0em;' />
+
+<p style='text-indent:1em;'>&#8220;Mr. Stratemeyer has seldom introduced a more popular hero than Dave Porter. He is a typical boy, manly, brave, always ready for a good
+time if it can be obtained in an honorable way.&#8221;&mdash;Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wis.</p>
+
+<p style='text-indent:1em;'>&#8220;Edward Stratemeyer&#8217;s &#8216;Dave Porter&#8217; has become exceedingly popular.&#8221;&mdash;Boston Globe.</p>
+
+<p style='text-indent:1em;'>&#8220;Dave and his friends are nice, manly chaps.&#8221;&mdash;Times-Democrat, New Orleans.</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p style='margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
+DAVE PORTER AT OAK HALL<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or The School Days of an American Boy</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER IN THE SOUTH SEAS<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or The Strange Cruise of the Stormy Petrel</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER&#8217;S RETURN TO SCHOOL<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or Winning the Medal of Honor</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER IN THE FAR NORTH<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or The Pluck of an American Schoolboy</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER AND HIS CLASSMATES<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or For the Honor of Oak Hall</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER AT STAR RANCH<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or The Cowboy&#8217;s Secret</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER AND HIS RIVALS<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or The Chums and Foes of Oak Hall</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER ON CAVE ISLAND<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or A Schoolboy&#8217;s Mysterious Mission</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER AND THE RUNAWAYS<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or Last Days at Oak Hall</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER IN THE GOLD FIELDS<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or The Search for the Landslide Mine</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER AT BEAR CAMP<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or The Wild Man of Mirror Lake</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER AND HIS DOUBLE<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or The Disappearance of the Basswood Fortune</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER&#8217;S GREAT SEARCH<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or The Perils of a Young Civil Engineer</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER UNDER FIRE<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or A Young Army Engineer in France</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+DAVE PORTER&#8217;S WAR HONORS<br />
+<span style='margin-left: 1.5625em;'>Or At the Front with the Fighting Engineers</span></p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr style='border:none; border-bottom:1px solid silver;' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center'>For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt<br />
+of price by the publishers.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center'>LOTHROP, LEE &amp; SHEPARD CO.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;BOSTON</p>
+
+<!-- generated by ppg.rb version: ppg-090430 -->
+<!-- timestamp: Fri May 01 05:18:28 -0600 2009 -->
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Dave Porter and the Runaways, by Edward Stratemeyer
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Dave Porter and the Runaways, by Edward Stratemeyer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Dave Porter and the Runaways
+ Last Days at Oak Hall
+
+Author: Edward Stratemeyer
+
+Illustrator: H. Richard Boehm
+
+Release Date: May 1, 2009 [EBook #28654]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DAVE PORTER AND THE RUNAWAYS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: HE SAW AN ARM AND A HEAD COME UP.--_Page 240._]
+
+
+
+
+Dave Porter Series
+
+DAVE PORTER
+
+AND THE RUNAWAYS
+
+OR
+
+LAST DAYS AT OAK HALL
+
+BY
+
+EDWARD STRATEMEYER
+
+Author of "Dave Porter at Oak Hall," "The Lakeport Series,"
+"Old Glory Series," "Pan-American Series," etc.
+
+ILLUSTRATED BY H. RICHARD BOEHM
+
+BOSTON
+
+LOTHROP LEE & SHEPARD CO.
+
+
+
+
+Published, March, 1913
+
+Copyright, 1913, by Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co.
+
+All Rights Reserved
+
+Dave Porter and the Runaways
+
+Norwood Press
+
+Berwick & Smith Co.
+
+Norwood, Mass.
+
+U.S.A.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+"Dave Porter and the Runaways" is a complete story in itself, but
+forms the ninth volume of a line issued under the general title of
+"Dave Porter Series."
+
+In the first volume of this series, entitled "Dave Porter at Oak
+Hall," the reader was introduced to a typical American lad, and the
+particulars were given of his doings at an up-to-date boarding
+school.
+
+There was a cloud over Dave's parentage, and in order to solve the
+mystery of his identity he took a long voyage over the ocean, as
+related in the second volume, called "Dave Porter in the South Seas."
+Then he came back to his schoolmates, as told of in "Dave Porter's
+Return to School," and then took a long trip to Norway, to hunt up his
+father, the particulars of which are given in "Dave Porter in the Far
+North."
+
+Having settled the matter of his identity to his satisfaction, our
+hero came back to Oak Hall and had a number of strenuous contests,
+related in detail in "Dave Porter and His Classmates." Following this
+came the summer vacation, and the youth made a trip West, the
+happenings of which are set down in "Dave Porter at Star Ranch."
+
+When Dave returned to Oak Hall once more he found the school rivalries
+as bitter as ever, and what these led to has been related in "Dave
+Porter and His Rivals." His enemies tried hard to do our hero much
+injury, but he exposed them and they were forced to flee, to escape
+the consequences of their actions.
+
+The winter holidays found Dave homeward bound. He had anticipated some
+jolly times among his relatives and friends, but a robbery upset all
+his plans, and, almost before he knew it, he found himself bound
+southward, as related in "Dave Porter on Cave Island." On the island
+he had many adventures out of the ordinary, and he came home more of a
+hero than ever, having saved Mr. Wadsworth, his benefactor, from
+ruin.
+
+In the present story Dave is back once again at school. There are some
+queer happenings, and then some lads run away. How Dave proved his
+common sense, and brought the runaways back, I leave for the pages
+which follow to tell. I trust the reading of this volume will do all
+my young friends good.
+
+ Edward Stratemeyer.
+ _February_ 1, 1913.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I. Dave and His Chums 1
+ II. A Glimpse at the Past 11
+ III. A Talk of the Future 21
+ IV. Mr. Job Haskers's Doings 31
+ V. At Oak Hall Once More 41
+ VI. Phil Shows His Stubbornness 52
+ VII. Phil and Ben Make a Move 62
+ VIII. An Unusual Compact 72
+ IX. The King of Sumatra 82
+ X. Nat Poole Wants to Know 91
+ XI. Bonfire Night at the Hall 101
+ XII. Plans for a Spread 111
+ XIII. The Cabin on the Island 121
+ XIV. The Bandanna Handkerchief 131
+ XV. At the Hotel 141
+ XVI. The Blowing up of the Bridge 151
+ XVII. A Serious Accusation 161
+ XVIII. The Meeting on the Road 171
+ XIX. Looking for the Runaways 181
+ XX. The Wild Man Again 190
+ XXI. Something of a Clew 200
+ XXII. After the Runaways 210
+ XXIII. At the Camp 220
+ XXIV. Out in the Storm 230
+ XXV. Perils of the Flood 239
+ XXVI. Back to the School 249
+ XXVII. The Trail Through the Woods 259
+ XXVIII. The Capture of the Wild Man 268
+ XXIX. A Bit of Evidence 278
+ XXX. The Exposure--Good-By to Oak Hall 287
+
+
+
+
+DAVE PORTER AND THE RUNAWAYS
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+DAVE AND HIS CHUMS
+
+
+"I say, Dave, here's an odd piece of news."
+
+"An odd piece of news, Roger? What about?"
+
+"A wild man in the woods back of Oak Hall," answered Roger Morr, who
+held a letter in his hand. "Queerest thing you ever heard of."
+
+"I should say it was, if it's about a wild man," returned Dave Porter.
+"Who sent that letter?"
+
+"Shadow Hamilton."
+
+"Maybe it's another one of Shadow's innumerable yarns," suggested
+Dave, with a faint smile. "If he can't tell them by word of mouth, he
+writes them down."
+
+"What has Shadow got to say about the wild man?" asked Phil Lawrence,
+looking up from the suit-case he was packing. "Has he been trying to
+clean out Oak Hall, or anything like that?"
+
+"No, not exactly," returned Roger, turning back to the letter, which
+he had not yet finished. "He keeps in the woods, so Shadow says, and
+scares everybody who comes that way."
+
+"How does he scare them?" asked Dave, pausing in the act of stowing a
+suit of clothing in a trunk.
+
+"Shadow writes that he and Lazy were out walking one day and the wild
+man came after them with a big club. He wears long hair and a long
+beard, and his clothes are in tatters."
+
+"What did they do?" questioned Phil.
+
+"They ran back towards the school. The wild man followed 'em as far as
+the bridge over the brook, and then jumped into the bushes and
+disappeared."
+
+"Humph!" muttered Phil. "Is that all?"
+
+"Oh, no! The day before that, Chip Macklin and two other of the
+smaller boys went out, along the river, and the wild man came after
+them and shoved Chip into the water. He yelled to them never to come
+near him again. The other fellows ran away, and as soon as Chip could
+get out of the water he went after 'em. Then, three days later, Doctor
+Clay sent out Mr. Dale and Horsehair, the driver, to look into the
+matter, and the wild man met them at the bridge and threw mud balls at
+'em. One mud ball hit the teacher in the arm, and one struck Horsehair
+in the nose and made it bleed. Horsehair was afraid to go on, because
+the wild man jumped around and shouted so furiously. Mr. Dale tried to
+catch him, but he ran away."
+
+"Poor chap! He must be crazy," was Dave's comment. "He ought to be
+taken care of by the authorities."
+
+"Yes, but they can't catch him," continued Roger. "They have tried
+half a dozen ways, but he slips 'em every time."
+
+"Who is he?" asked Dave, as he continued to pack his trunk.
+
+"Nobody has the least idea, so Shadow writes."
+
+"Say, that will give us something to do--when we get back to Oak
+Hall!" cried Phil. "We'll organize a posse to round up the wild man!"
+
+"I think we'll have plenty of other things to do when we get to
+school, Phil," remarked Dave. "Just remember that we have lost a lot
+of time from our lessons, and if we want to make up what we have
+missed, and graduate from Oak Hall with honor, we've got to buckle
+down and study."
+
+"Oh, I know that," answered Phil, and gave a little sigh. "Just the
+same, I'm going to have a try at the wild man--if he comes my way."
+
+"So am I," cried Roger. "And Dave will try with us; won't you, old
+man?" And Roger caught his chum affectionately by the shoulder. "You
+are the fellow to solve mysteries!"
+
+Dave was about to answer when there came a knock on the bedroom door.
+He opened it to find himself confronted by a middle-aged lady, who was
+smiling but anxious.
+
+"How are you getting along, boys?" she asked.
+
+"First-rate, Mrs. Wadsworth," answered Roger. "We'll soon be finished
+now."
+
+"Are the girls getting anxious?" questioned Dave.
+
+"Say, what do you think?" burst out Phil. "We are going back to Oak
+Hall to capture a wild man who----"
+
+"Phil!" burst out both Dave and Roger, and the other youth stopped
+short in confusion.
+
+"A wild man?" cried the lady of the house, in consternation. "Oh,
+Dave, I hope----"
+
+"Oh, don't let him worry you, Mrs. Wadsworth," responded Dave,
+quickly. "There is a wild man up there, but I don't think he will
+bother us any, and we've got too much to do to hunt for him." And the
+lad gave his chum a look that said as plainly as words: "What did you
+want to mention it for?"
+
+"Oh--I--er--I was only fooling," stammered Phil. "Of course, if there
+is a wild man he won't come near us. Tell the girls we'll be ready in
+five minutes--at least I will," he added, and resumed his packing.
+
+"Can I do anything for you?" asked the lady.
+
+"You might try to find my striped cap," answered Dave. "I can't seem
+to locate it."
+
+"It is in the library--I saw it a while ago, Dave."
+
+"And my baseball bat--the new one with the black handle."
+
+"That is in the back hall, in a corner. How about your books?"
+
+"I've got all of them. Send Laura with the bat and cap, will you,
+please?"
+
+"Yes;" and Mrs. Wadsworth hurried off, anxious to be of all the
+assistance possible.
+
+"Say, that was a bad break for me," murmured Phil, as the door closed,
+and before Dave or Roger could speak. "I didn't want to worry her,
+Dave. I'm sorry I mentioned the wild man."
+
+"And the man may be caught before we get back to Oak Hall," said
+Roger. He crossed the room and peered into a closet. "Has anybody seen
+my baseball shoes?"
+
+"You left those at the Hall, Roger," answered Dave.
+
+"Did I? All right, then. I came away in such a hurry I can't remember
+what I took and what I didn't."
+
+"I guess we've got about everything now," resumed Dave, looking
+around the bedroom. He glanced at his watch. "Ten minutes to twelve.
+We are to have lunch at a quarter past, and start at one, sharp."
+
+"Provided the auto is ready," interposed Phil.
+
+"It will be--trust my Uncle Dunston for that," answered Dave. "My, but
+isn't it jolly to think we are going back to school in the auto
+instead of by train!"
+
+"Yes, and to think that the girls and your uncle are going with us!"
+added Roger.
+
+"Dave, look out for Roger, he's got his eye on Laura!" said Phil,
+slyly.
+
+"Oh, you give us a rest, Phil Lawrence!" burst out Roger, growing red.
+"I guess you've got an eye on her yourself."
+
+"Poor me! Poor me!" murmured Phil, as if talking to himself. "Roger
+will talk to nobody but Laura, and Dave will see and hear and think of
+nobody but Jessie, and I'll be left in the cold! Oh, what a cruel
+world this is! If only--wow!" and Phil's pretended musings came to a
+sudden end, as Dave shied a pair of rolled-up socks at him and Roger
+followed with a pillow. In another instant a mimic battle was on, with
+pillows and various articles of clothing for ammunition. Then came
+another knock on the door and Laura Porter appeared, with a baseball
+bat in one hand and her brother's cap in the other.
+
+"Oh dear me!" she cried, and then stopped short, for a red sweater,
+thrown by Roger at Phil, had missed its aim and landed on her head.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Laura, really I do!" gasped Roger, as he sprang
+forward and took the sweater from its resting-place. "I--I didn't mean
+that for you."
+
+"Oh, Roger, of course you did!" cried Phil, with a twinkle in his eye.
+"That's the way he salutes girls always, Laura."
+
+"Is this the way you are packing up?" demanded Dave's sister, with a
+little smile, while poor Roger grew redder than ever.
+
+"Oh, we were only waiting for you to bring my things, Laura," answered
+her brother, coolly. "We'll be ready in three minutes and a half by
+the factory whistles."
+
+"Say, what is this I hear about a wild man?" continued Laura, as she
+sat down on a chair Roger shoved towards her. "You've made Mrs.
+Wadsworth and Jessie all excited over it."
+
+"Oh, it isn't anything," burst out Phil, quickly. "I made a mistake
+even to mention it."
+
+"She came down and told Jessie and me that she was afraid you'd have
+more trouble, when you got back to school. As if you haven't had
+troubles enough already!" And Laura looked affectionately at her
+brother, and then at his chums.
+
+"Oh, this won't amount to anything, Laura," said Dave. "So tell Mrs.
+Wadsworth and Jessie not to worry about it."
+
+"But I want to know what it means?" demanded the sister; and in the
+end Dave and his chums had to relate what they knew about the wild
+man. As they finished the girl shook her head doubtfully.
+
+"I don't like that a bit," she said. "I am sure you'll get mixed up
+with that wild man somehow. Why, he might attack you and try to kill
+you!"
+
+"We'll be on our guard--when we go near the woods," answered Roger.
+
+"You had better not go alone," insisted the girl.
+
+"We seldom travel alone," said her brother. "Generally Roger, Phil,
+and I are together, and very often some of the other fellows are with
+us. But don't you worry, Laura, and tell Jessie and her mother it will
+be all right."
+
+"And there is another thing to be careful about, Dave," went on Laura,
+as she prepared to leave.
+
+"What is that?"
+
+"Be careful of how you treat Nat Poole."
+
+"Why, what do you mean?" cried Dave, and then he added quickly, as he
+saw that his sister had something on her mind: "What has happened
+now?"
+
+"I don't know exactly, Dave. But I got word through Ben Basswood's
+cousin that Nat had told Ben he wasn't going to let you ride over him
+this term. I think Nat is jealous because you were so successful in
+that trip to Cave Island."
+
+"Did you learn of anything Nat intended to do?" questioned Roger,
+curiously.
+
+"No, excepting that he said he wasn't going to play second fiddle to
+your crowd any longer. He tried to get into a quarrel with Ben, but
+Ben would have nothing to do with him."
+
+"Did Nat go back to the Hall when it opened?" asked Phil.
+
+"Yes, the same day Ben went back."
+
+"I am not afraid of Nat Poole," declared Dave, stoutly. "He is a
+bully, always was, and I suppose he always will be. I tried to do him
+a favor the last time I saw him--but he doesn't seem to have
+appreciated it."
+
+"Laura!" called a musical voice, from the stair landing.
+
+"Coming, Jessie!" answered Laura. "Now you boys, hurry--lunch will be
+served in a few minutes;" and she left the room.
+
+"So Nat Poole wants to make more trouble, eh?" mused Dave, as he
+resumed packing. "What a chap he is! Why can't he be decent and mind
+his own business?"
+
+"Because he isn't that breed, that's why," answered Phil. "He hates to
+see another fellow become popular. Dave, you take my advice and watch
+him, when we get back to school."
+
+"I'll do it," answered Dave, thoughtfully.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+A GLIMPSE AT THE PAST
+
+
+"Everything ready?"
+
+"Yes, so far as I know."
+
+"Then we are off! Good-by, everybody!"
+
+"Good-by! Take care of yourself, Dave!"
+
+"I will!"
+
+There was a tooting of an automobile horn, a chorus of cries and
+cheers, a waving of caps, and then the big touring car that had been
+drawn up in front of the Wadsworth mansion rolled from the piazza
+steps through the spacious grounds; and Dave Porter and his chums were
+once more on their way to boarding school.
+
+To those who have read the previous volumes of this line of stories
+Dave Porter will need no special introduction. For the benefit of new
+readers allow me to state that Dave was a wideawake American lad, now
+well along in his school years.
+
+When a small child our hero had been found one day, walking along the
+railroad tracks near the town of Crumville. He could tell nothing
+about himself, and as nobody came to claim him, he was taken to the
+local poorhouse, where he remained a number of years. Then he was
+bound out to a broken-down college professor named Caspar Potts, who
+was farming for his health. The professor did what he could for the
+lad, but soon got into difficulties with a mean money-lender named
+Aaron Poole, and would have lost his farm had it not been for
+something out of the ordinary happening.
+
+On the outskirts of the town lived a wealthy jewelry manufacturer,
+Oliver Wadsworth. Mr. Wadsworth had a daughter named Jessie, and one
+day, through an explosion of an automobile tank, the little miss was
+in danger of being burned to death, when Dave came to her assistance.
+This so pleased the Wadsworths that they came not only to the boy's
+aid but also helped Caspar Potts.
+
+"The lad shall go to boarding school and get a good education," said
+Oliver Wadsworth. And how Dave was sent off has already been related
+in the first book of this series, entitled "Dave Porter at Oak Hall."
+At the school he made many warm friends, including Roger Morr, the son
+of a United States senator; Phil Lawrence, the offspring of a wealthy
+shipowner; Buster Beggs, who was fat as he was jolly, and Maurice,
+otherwise "Shadow" Hamilton, who would rather spin yarns than eat. He
+also made some enemies, not the least of whom were Gus Plum, a great
+bully, and Nat Poole, son of the money-lender already mentioned. Plum
+had since reformed, but Nat was as overbearing and dictatorial as
+ever.
+
+The great cloud resting over Dave in those days was the question of
+his identity, and when some of his enemies spoke of him as "that
+poorhouse nobody" he resolved to find out who he really was. Getting a
+strange clew, he set forth on his travels, as described in "Dave
+Porter in the South Seas," where he found his uncle, Dunston Porter.
+Then he came back to Oak Hall, as told of in "Dave Porter's Return to
+School," and next went to the Land of the Midnight Sun, as set forth
+in "Dave Porter in the Far North," where he was gladdened by a
+long-hoped-for meeting with his father.
+
+"They can't say I'm a poorhouse nobody now," he told himself, and went
+back to Oak Hall once again, as set forth in "Dave Porter and His
+Classmates." Here he made more friends than ever, but he likewise made
+enemies, the most bitter of the latter being one Link Merwell, the son
+of a ranch-owner of the West. Merwell did his best to get Dave into
+trouble, but in the end was exposed and had to leave the school.
+
+Vacation time was now at hand, and through Laura Porter, our hero's
+newly-found sister, Dave and his chums were invited to visit some of
+Laura's friends in the Far West. Laura Porter and Jessie Wadsworth
+went along; and what a grand time the young folks had can be realized
+by reading "Dave Porter at Star Ranch." The boys went hunting and
+fishing, and learned to do some broncho-riding, and they likewise fell
+in with Link Merwell again and showed that bully up in his true
+colors.
+
+"Back to the grind now!" said Dave, after the vacation was over, and
+back he did go, to Oak Hall, as told of in "Dave Porter and His
+Rivals." That term was a lively one, for some lads came there from
+another school, and they, led by Nat Poole, tried to run matters to
+suit themselves. But when the newcomers lost an important football
+contest, Oak Hall woke up to the true condition of affairs, and Dave
+and his chums quickly regained their places on the eleven, and then
+won a grand victory. During this time Link Merwell, in company with
+another bad boy named Nick Jasniff, became a student at Rockville
+Military Academy, a rival institution of learning. Both bullies did
+their best to make trouble for our hero, but, as before, he exposed
+them, and this time they had to flee to escape arrest.
+
+When the Christmas holidays came around Dave went back to Crumville,
+where he and his family and old Caspar Potts now lived with the
+Wadsworths. At that time Mr. Wadsworth had at his jewelry works some
+rare diamonds, waiting to be reset. Directly after Christmas came a
+startling robbery. The diamonds were gone, and it was learned by Dave
+that if they were not recovered, not only would Mr. Wadsworth be
+ruined, but that his own father and his uncle would be seriously
+crippled financially, as they had gone on a bond for the return of the
+gems.
+
+At first, clews to the robbers were scarce, but soon Dave made a queer
+discovery, and followed this up by another, as set forth in the volume
+preceding this, entitled, "Dave Porter on Cave Island." He and his
+chums became satisfied that Link Merwell and Nick Jasniff had
+committed the theft, and they followed the evil pair, first to Florida
+and then to Cave Island, so named because of the numerous caverns it
+contained. The evil-doers were caught and the diamonds recovered, but,
+at the last moment, Link Merwell managed to escape.
+
+"Let him go," said Dave. "He acts as if he wanted to turn over a new
+leaf."
+
+"I am glad it wasn't Jasniff," returned Phil. "He is the worse of the
+pair."
+
+"Right you are," agreed Roger.
+
+The senator's son and Phil had accompanied Dave to Crumville, and all
+had received a warm reception at the hands of those who were waiting
+for them. Mr. Wadsworth was delighted to get back the jewels, and
+thanked Dave over and over again for what he had done. Dave's father
+and his uncle were also happy, and as for Laura, she had to hug her
+brother over and over again. Jessie wanted to hug him, too, but her
+maidenly modesty prevented this, but she gave Dave a look and a hand
+squeeze that meant a good deal, for our hero was her hero, too, and
+always had been.
+
+The boys knew they had to go back to Oak Hall, but the older folks had
+insisted that they rest up a bit, after their traveling. So they
+"rested" by going skating and sleigh-riding for the last time that
+season, taking the girls along.
+
+"I've got an idea," said Dave's uncle, one morning, after the snow had
+cleared away. "The roads are so fine just now, what is to prevent my
+taking you to Oak Hall in the touring car? We can make it in a day, I
+think."
+
+"Grand!" shouted Dave.
+
+"Just the thing!" added Phil.
+
+"Couldn't be better," supplemented Roger.
+
+"You can ship your baggage on by express," went on Dunston Porter,
+"and then we'll have room enough to take Laura and Jessie, if they
+want to go along."
+
+"Fine!" burst out Roger, so quickly that it made Phil wink, and then
+the senator's son grew red. "Isn't it all right?" he demanded.
+
+"Sure thing," responded the shipowner's son.
+
+The matter was talked over; and that night it was arranged that the
+two girls should go along on the trip, returning later to Crumville
+with Mr. Porter. Not to tire Laura and Jessie too much, it was decided
+to leave after lunch the next day, stopping over night at Ryeport, and
+finishing the trip to Oak Hall the morning following.
+
+"If only the good weather holds out," said Roger, wistfully. And then
+he added suddenly: "Who is going to sit in front with your uncle,
+Dave?"
+
+"Why, you are, of course," broke in Phil, with a grin.
+
+"Why--er--I----" stammered the senator's son.
+
+"Now, Phil, you know you said you'd like that seat," broke in Dave.
+"He's only fooling you, Roger." And then Roger looked quite satisfied,
+for, it might as well be confessed, Roger and Laura were very friendly
+and liked greatly to be in each other's company. The senator's son had
+a manly regard for Dave's sister--the same kind of a feeling that our
+hero had for dear little Jessie.
+
+The trunks and suit-cases had been shipped off, and the big
+six-cylinder car--a new machine belonging to the Porters--had been
+brought around, with Dunston Porter at the wheel, for the old hunter
+and traveler had taken a strong liking to autoing. The girls and boys
+had piled in, after much handshaking and some kisses, and now the car
+was rolling out of the grounds, leaving Mr. and Mrs. Wadsworth, Dave's
+father, and old Caspar Potts standing on the piazza, waving the
+travelers adieu.
+
+"Take care of yourself, my boy!" shouted Mr. Porter.
+
+"I will, Dad!" called back Dave. "You take it easy till I get back,"
+he added, for he knew that his parent had been working hard of late.
+
+"I hate to see Dave go--he is so full of life and good cheer,"
+murmured Mrs. Wadsworth, with a sigh.
+
+"Best lad in the world," added her husband.
+
+"Yes, yes! The very best!" came in a quavering voice from old Caspar
+Potts, and the tears stood in his glistening eyes.
+
+"I trust he comes through this year at Oak Hall all right," resumed
+Mr. Porter, as, the automobile having disappeared, those left behind
+reentered the house. "He wishes to graduate, you know."
+
+"Don't you think he'll come through?" asked the manufacturer,
+quickly.
+
+"I'm not sure about it. He has lost so much time--on that trip he and
+the others took--you know."
+
+"That is true."
+
+"Oh, Davy will come through, never fear!" cried Caspar Potts. "I know
+the lad. If he makes up his mind--well, it's as good as done," and he
+nodded his whitened head several times. To the old college professor
+who knew him so well, there was no youth quite so clever and manly as
+Dave Porter.
+
+In the meantime the big touring car was leaving Crumville rapidly
+behind. On the front seat, beside Mr. Porter, sat Phil, waving an Oak
+Hall banner and cracking all kinds of jokes. In the back were the two
+girls with Dave and Roger. All were well bundled up, for the air,
+though clear, was still cold.
+
+"Here is where we make fifty miles an hour!" cried the shipowner's
+son, gayly.
+
+"Oh, Phil!" burst out Laura. "Fifty miles an hour! Uncle Dunston,
+don't you dare----"
+
+"Phil is fooling," interrupted her uncle.
+
+"That's it--I made a mistake--we are to go at sixty miles an hour,
+just as soon as we pass the next chicken coop. We won't dare do it
+before, for fear of blowing the coop over. We----"
+
+"Why not make it seventy-five miles while you are at it," broke in
+Dave. "Nothing like going the limit." And at this there was a general
+laugh.
+
+"There is a bad turn ahead," said Dunston Porter, a minute later.
+"They have torn up part of the road around the hill. We'll have to
+take it pretty slowly."
+
+The touring car crept up the hill, past several heaps of dirt, and
+then started to come down on the other side. Here there was a sharp
+curve, with heavy bushes on both sides. Mr. Porter blew the horn loud
+and long, to warn anybody ahead that he was coming.
+
+"Look out!" yelled Phil, suddenly. But the warning was not necessary,
+for Dunston Porter saw the danger and so did the others. A horse and
+buggy were just ahead on the torn-up highway, going in the same
+direction as themselves. The horse was prancing and rearing and the
+driver was sawing at the lines in an effort to quiet the steed. It
+looked as if there might be a collision.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A TALK OF THE FUTURE
+
+
+The girls screamed and the boys uttered various cries and words of
+advice. Dave leaned forward, to jam on the hand-brake, but his uncle
+was ahead of him in the action. The foot-brake was already down, and
+from the rear wheels came a shrill squeaking, as the bands gripped the
+hubs. But the hill was a steep one and the big touring car, well
+laden, continued to move downward, although but slowly.
+
+"Keep over! Keep over to the right!" yelled Dunston Porter, to the
+driver of the buggy. But the man was fully as excited as his horse,
+and he continued to saw on the reins, until the turnout occupied the
+very center of the narrow and torn-up highway.
+
+It was a time of peril, and a man less used to critical moments than
+Dunston Porter might have lost his head completely. But this old
+traveler and hunter, who had faced grizzly bears in the West and lions
+in Africa, managed to keep cool. He saw a chance to pass on the right
+of the turnout ahead, and like a flash he let go on the two brakes
+and turned on a little power. Forward bounded the big car, the right
+wheels on the very edge of a water-gully. The left mud-guards scraped
+the buggy, and the man driving it uttered a yell of fright. Then the
+touring car went on, to come to a halt at the bottom of the hill, a
+short distance away.
+
+"Hello!" exclaimed Dave, as he looked back at the turnout that had
+caused the trouble. "It's Mr. Poole!"
+
+"You mean Nat's father?" queried Phil.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Hi, you! What do you mean by running into me?" stormed the
+money-lender, savagely, as he presently managed to get his steed under
+control and came down beside the touring car.
+
+"What do you mean by blocking the road, Mr. Poole?" returned Dunston
+Porter, coldly.
+
+"I didn't block the road!"
+
+"You certainly did. If we had run into you, it would have been your
+fault."
+
+"Nonsense! You passed me on the wrong side."
+
+"Because you didn't give me room to pass on the other side."
+
+"And your horn scared my horse."
+
+"I don't see how that is my fault. Your horse ought to be used to
+auto-horns by this time."
+
+"You've scraped all the paint off my carriage, and I had it painted
+only last week," went on the money-lender, warming up. "It's an
+outrage how you auto fellows think you own the whole road!"
+
+"I won't discuss the matter now, Mr. Poole," answered Dunston Porter,
+stiffly. "I think it was your fault entirely. But if you think
+otherwise, come and see me when I get back from this trip, which will
+be in four days." And without waiting for more words, Dave's uncle
+started up the touring car, and Aaron Poole was soon left far behind.
+
+"If he isn't a peach!" murmured Roger, slangily. "It's easy to see
+where Nat gets his meanness from. He is simply a chip off the old
+block."
+
+"He's a pretty big chip," returned Phil, dryly.
+
+"I don't see how he can blame us," said Dave. "We simply couldn't pass
+him on the left. If we had tried, we'd have gone in the ditch sure.
+And the scraping we did to his buggy amounts to next to nothing."
+
+"I am not afraid of what he'll do," said Dunston Porter. "A couple of
+dollars will fix up those scratches, and if he is so close-fisted I'll
+foot the bill. But I'll give him a piece of my mind for blocking the
+road."
+
+"But his horse was frightened, Uncle Dunston," said Laura.
+
+"A little, yes, but if Poole hadn't got scared himself he might have
+drawn closer to the side of the road. I think he was more frightened
+than the horse."
+
+"He certainly was," declared Phil. "When we scraped the buggy his face
+got as white as chalk, and he almost dropped the lines."
+
+"He'll hate all of us worse than ever for this," was Dave's comment.
+
+"I am not afraid of him," answered the uncle.
+
+On and on sped the big touring car, and soon the stirring incident on
+the road was, for the time being, forgotten. Crumville had been left
+far behind, and now they passed through one pretty village after
+another. On the broad, level stretches Dunston Porter allowed the boys
+to "spell" him at the wheel, for each knew how to run an automobile.
+
+"Twenty miles more to Ryeport!" cried Dave, as they came to a
+crossroads and read a signboard.
+
+"And it's just half-past five," added the senator's son, consulting
+his watch. "We'll get there in plenty of time to wash up and have a
+fine dinner."
+
+"And, say, maybe we won't do a thing to that table!" murmured Phil,
+smacking his lips.
+
+"Oh, you boys are always hungry," was Jessie's comment.
+
+"Well, you know, we've got to grow," answered Phil, with a grin.
+
+"I think I'll enjoy eating after such a long ride," said Laura. "The
+fresh air certainly does give one an appetite."
+
+"I think I'll order bread and milk for all hands," remarked Dunston
+Porter, with a sly smile.
+
+"Bread and milk!" murmured Jessie, in dismay.
+
+"Sure. It's famous for your complexion."
+
+"A juicy steak for mine!" cried Dave. "Steak, and vegetables, and
+salad, and pudding or pie."
+
+"Well, I guess that will do for me, too," said his uncle, simply. "You
+see, I suppose I'll have to eat to keep you company," and he smiled
+again.
+
+"Uncle Dunston, what a tease you are!" murmured Laura. "Your appetite
+is just as good as that of any of the boys."
+
+Dave was at the wheel, and he sent the touring car along the smooth
+highway at a speed of twenty miles an hour. He would have liked to
+drive faster, but his uncle would not permit this.
+
+"The law says twenty miles an hour, and I believe in obeying the law,"
+said Dunston Porter. "Besides, you can never tell what may happen, and
+it is best to have your car under control."
+
+The truth of the latter remark was demonstrated less than five
+minutes later, when they came to another crossroads. Without warning
+of any kind, a racing car came rushing swiftly from one direction and
+a coach from the other. Dave could not cross ahead of the racing car,
+and the approach of the coach from the opposite direction cut him off
+from turning with the car. So all that was left to do was to jam on
+both brakes, which he did, and then, as the racing car shot past, he
+released the wheels and went on, just ahead of the coach. But it was a
+narrow escape all around, and the girls and Roger leaped to their feet
+in alarm.
+
+"Phew! see them streak along!" was Phil's comment, gazing after the
+racing car, which was fast disappearing in a cloud of dust.
+
+"They ought to be arrested!" was Laura's comment. "Why, we might have
+been smashed up!"
+
+"Good work, Davy!" cried Dunston Porter. "You did just the right
+thing."
+
+"Even if that coach driver is shaking his fist at us, eh?" answered
+Dave, and he bobbed his head in the direction of the coach, which had
+hauled up but was now going on.
+
+"If you had been going a little faster it would have been all up with
+us," said Phil, with a grave shake of his head.
+
+"Let me take the wheel now," said Dunston Porter, quietly, and Dave
+slid out of the driving-seat willingly enough, for the excitement had
+left him somewhat limp.
+
+Half-past six found them in Ryeport, and a few minutes later they
+rolled up to the National Hotel, and the girls and boys got out, while
+Mr. Porter took the car around to the garage. They had sent word ahead
+for rooms, and all soon felt at home. The girls had a fine apartment
+on the second floor, front, with Dunston Porter next to them, and the
+three boys in a big room across the hallway.
+
+When the young people assembled in the dining-room, after brushing and
+washing up, a surprise awaited them. They had a table to themselves,
+ordered by Dunston Porter, and decorated with a big bouquet of roses
+and carnations. A full course dinner was served.
+
+"Oh, this is lovely!" cried Jessie, as she caught sight of the
+flowers.
+
+"Just grand, Uncle Dunston!" added Laura. And then she added, in a
+lower voice: "If there wasn't such a crowd, I'd give you a big hug for
+this!"
+
+"And so would I," added Jessie.
+
+"All right, that's one you owe me, girls, remember that," answered the
+old hunter and traveler.
+
+They spent over an hour at the table, enjoying the bountiful spread
+provided, and telling stories and jokes. The boys were in their
+element, and kept the girls laughing almost constantly.
+
+"We'll be back to the grind day after to-morrow, so we had better make
+the best of it," was the way Dave expressed himself.
+
+After the meal, Dunston Porter went out to give directions concerning
+the touring car, and Phil accompanied him. This left our hero and
+Roger alone with the two girls. They sought out the hotel parlor,
+which they found deserted, and Dave and Jessie walked to the far end,
+where there was an alcove, while Roger and Laura went to the piano.
+
+"Dave, won't it be hard work to go back to the grind, as you call it?"
+questioned Jessie, as both stood looking out of the window.
+
+"In a way, yes, but it's what a fellow has got to expect, Jessie," he
+returned. "A chap can't get an education without working for it."
+
+"I trust you pass with high honors," the girl went on, with a hopeful
+look into his face.
+
+"I'll try my best. Of course, I've lost some time--going to Cave
+Island and all that. Maybe I'll flunk."
+
+"Oh, Dave, that would be--be----" Jessie could not go on.
+
+"As soon as I get back I'm going to buckle down, and get to be a
+regular greasy grind, as they call 'em. I've made up my mind to one
+thing I'm afraid the others won't like."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"I'm going to cut the baseball nine, if I can. It takes too much time
+from our studies."
+
+"Won't that be easy?"
+
+"I don't know. I made quite a record, you know. Maybe the crowd will
+insist on it that I play. Of course, I don't want to see Oak Hall lose
+any games. But I guess they'll have players enough--with all the new
+students coming in."
+
+"And if you do graduate, Dave, what then?" asked Jessie, after a
+pause. This question had been on her mind a long time, but she had
+hesitated about asking it.
+
+"To tell the honest truth, Jessie, I don't know," answered Dave, very
+slowly. "I've thought and thought, but I can't seem to hit the right
+thing. Your father and Professor Potts seem to think I ought to go to
+college, and I rather incline that way myself. But then I think of
+going to some technical institution, and of taking up civil
+engineering, or mining, or something like that. Uncle Dunston knew a
+young fellow who became a civil engineer and went to South America and
+laid out a railroad across the Andes Mountains, and he knew another
+young fellow who took up mining and made a big thing of a mine in
+Montana. That sort of thing appeals to me, and it appeals to Dad,
+too."
+
+"But it would take you so far from home, Dave!" and Jessie caught hold
+of his arm as she spoke, as if afraid he was going to leave that
+minute.
+
+"I know it, but--er--but--would you care, Jessie?" he stammered.
+
+"Care? Of course, I'd care!" she replied, and suddenly began to blush.
+"We'd all care."
+
+"But would you care very much?" he insisted, lowering his voice.
+"Because, if you would, I'd tell you something."
+
+"What would you tell me?" she asked.
+
+"The young fellow who went to South America as a civil engineer took
+his wife with him."
+
+"Oh, Dave!" and for the moment Jessie turned her head away.
+
+"If I went so far off, I'd want somebody with me, Jessie. A fellow
+would be awfully lonely otherwise."
+
+"I--I suppose that would be so."
+
+"If you thought enough of a fellow, would you go to South America, or
+Montana, or Africa with him?" And Dave looked Jessie full in the
+face.
+
+"I'd go to the end of the world with him," she answered, with sudden
+boldness.
+
+Then Mr. Porter and Phil came back, and the conversation became
+general.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+MR. JOB HASKERS'S DOINGS
+
+
+"And now for Oak Hall!"
+
+It was Dave who uttered the words, the next morning, after a good
+night's rest and an early breakfast. The big touring car had been
+brought around by Dunston Porter, and the young folks had climbed in
+and stowed away the limited baggage they carried. All felt in
+excellent spirits, and Dave was particularly gay. What Jessie had said
+the evening before, and the way she had said it, still hung in his
+mind. She was a splendid girl, and if it was in him to do it, he was
+going to make himself worthy of her. He was still young, so he did not
+dwell long over these things, but his regard for her was entirely
+proper, and likely to make him do his best in his endeavors.
+
+Phil had asked for permission to run the car for a while and took the
+wheel as soon as Ryeport was left behind. The shipowner's son knew how
+to handle an automobile almost as well as any of them, but he had one
+fault, which was, that he did not steer out of the way of sharp
+stones and like things calculated to bring on punctures and
+blow-outs.
+
+"My, what a glorious morning!" exclaimed Laura, as they bowled along
+over the smooth roads.
+
+"Couldn't be better," answered Roger. "Wish we were going on all day!"
+he added.
+
+"So do I," added Dave. They expected to reach Oakdale by noon, get
+dinner there, and then run up to the school.
+
+"Not too fast, Phil," warned Mr. Porter, as the shipowner's son "let
+her out a bit," as he expressed it. "You don't know what sort of a
+road you've got beyond the turn."
+
+"We'll soon be coming to some roads we know," answered Phil. "Those we
+used to travel on our bicycles."
+
+They passed through several towns and villages. Then they reached a
+crossroads, and here some men and a steam roller were at work, and the
+road was closed. One of the workmen motioned for them to take the road
+on the left.
+
+"Must be a road around," said Dunston Porter. "It doesn't look very
+good, but you can try it. Shall I take the wheel?"
+
+"Oh, I can run the car easily enough," answered Phil.
+
+For half a mile they went on without trouble, through a rolling
+country where the scenery was very fine. Then they reached a point
+where the road was full of loose stones.
+
+"Be careful!" cried Mr. Porter.
+
+They rolled on, past a pretty farmhouse and some barns. They were just
+on the point of making another turn when there came a sudden bang!
+from under the car, and the turnout swayed to one side of the road.
+Phil threw out the clutch and put on the brakes, and they came to a
+standstill. Then the driver shut off the engine.
+
+"What is the matter?" queried Jessie.
+
+"A blow-out, I guess," answered Dave. "We'll soon see."
+
+Dunston Porter and the boys got down to the ground and made an
+examination. The shoe of the rear left wheel had been badly cut by the
+sharp stones and the inner tube had been blown out through the cut.
+
+"We'll have to put on one of the other shoes," said Mr. Porter. They
+carried two with them, besides half a dozen inner tubes.
+
+"All right, here is where we get to work!" cried Dave. "Somebody time
+us, please," and he started in by getting off his coat and cuffs and
+donning a working jumper. His uncle quickly followed suit, while Phil
+and Roger got out the lifting-jack and some tools.
+
+The girls stood watching the proceedings for a while and then strolled
+back towards the farmhouse. The boys and Mr. Porter became so
+engrossed in putting on a new inner tube and a shoe that they did not
+notice their absence. The new shoe fitted the rim of the wheel rather
+tightly and they had all they could do to get it into place.
+
+"Phew! this is work and no mistake!" murmured Roger. "I wonder why
+they can't get tires that won't blow out or go down."
+
+"Maybe some day they will have them," answered Dunston Porter.
+
+"I reckon this is all my fault," put in Phil, ruefully. "I must have
+gone over some extra sharp stone, and it cut like a knife."
+
+"Oh, such accidents are liable to happen to anybody," answered Dave.
+He looked at his watch. "Twenty-five minutes, and we haven't blown it
+up yet! No record job this time."
+
+"Thank fortune we've got a patent pump to do the pumping for us,"
+remarked his uncle. Pumping tires by hand he found a very disagreeable
+task.
+
+At last the shoe and tube were in place and the pump was set in
+motion. Dave watched the gauge, and when it was high enough he shut
+off the air. The tools were put away, and they were ready to go on
+again.
+
+"The girls went back to that farmhouse," said the senator's son,
+pointing to a small cottage.
+
+"Let us run back and pick them up, and wash our hands at the well."
+
+Once in front of the house, Dunston Porter, who was at the wheel,
+sounded the horn. At the same time the boys made for the well, which
+stood between the house and one of the barns.
+
+"Maybe the girls went inside," remarked Dave, as he looked in vain for
+them.
+
+"Must be somewhere around," returned Phil.
+
+All washed up, using soap and towels carried in the car. Then Dave
+went to the door of the farmhouse and knocked. In answer to the
+summons Laura appeared.
+
+"Oh, Dave, come in!" she cried. "I want you to meet the lady here."
+
+Wondering what his sister wanted, our hero stepped into the
+sitting-room, which was small and plainly but neatly furnished. In a
+rocking-chair sat an elderly woman, pale and careworn.
+
+"Mrs. Breen, this is my brother," said Laura. "And these are his
+school chums," she added, nodding towards Phil and Roger.
+
+"How do you do, boys?" said the woman, in a thin, trembling voice.
+
+"We just told her we were bound for Oak Hall," said Jessie, who was
+also present. "And she says she knows somebody there."
+
+"She knows Mr. Job Haskers," finished Laura.
+
+"Mr. Haskers!" repeated Dave, mentioning the name of one of the
+teachers--a dictatorial individual nobody liked, and who was allowed
+to keep his position mainly because of his abilities as an instructor.
+The chums had had more than one dispute with Job Haskers, and all
+wished that he would leave the school.
+
+"Yes, yes, I know him," answered Mrs. Breen, nodding her head gravely
+and thoughtfully. "He is a great scholar--a very great scholar," and
+she nodded again. She was not well and her mind did not appear to be
+overly bright. She lived alone in the cottage, a neighboring farmer
+taking care of her few acres of ground for her.
+
+"Dave, come here," whispered Laura, and led her brother to a corner of
+the room. "Mrs. Breen tells me that Mr. Haskers owes her money--that
+he used to board with her and that he borrowed some--and she says he
+writes that he can't pay her because he gets so little salary, and
+that sometimes he has to wait a long while himself."
+
+"How much is it?" asked Dave, with interest. He remembered how
+close-fisted Job Haskers had been on more than one occasion.
+
+"Nearly two hundred dollars, so she says."
+
+"He ought to be able to pay that, Laura. I think he gets a fair
+salary--in fact, I am sure of it--and I am also pretty sure that
+Doctor Clay doesn't keep him waiting for his money."
+
+"It is too bad! She looks so helpless and so much in need," murmured
+the girl.
+
+"I'll find out about this," answered Dave.
+
+He sat down, as did the others, and soon had the elderly lady telling
+her story in detail. It was not very long. Job Haskers had boarded
+with her one summer, just before obtaining his position at Oak Hall,
+and he owed her sixty dollars for this. During the time he had spent
+with her he had spoken of a school-book he was going to publish that
+would bring him in much money, and she had loaned him a hundred and
+twenty-five dollars for this. But she had never seen the school-book,
+nor had he ever paid back a cent. His plea, when she had written to
+him, had been that his pay was poor and that he had to wait a long
+time to get money, and that his publishers had not yet gotten around
+to selling his book.
+
+"I never heard of any book he got out," said Roger. "And I think I
+would hear if there was such a book."
+
+"That's so," added Phil. "Old Haskers would be so proud of it he would
+want everybody to know."
+
+"It is certainly a shame he doesn't pay this lady, if he has the
+money," was Dunston Porter's comment. "Did he give you a note?" he
+asked of Mrs. Breen.
+
+"He wrote out some kind of a paper and was going to give it to me. But
+I never got it."
+
+"He's a swindler, that's what he is!" murmured Phil, wrathfully.
+
+"It looks that way," answered Dave, in an equally low tone.
+
+"He knows this lady is next to helpless and he intends to do her out
+of the money!"
+
+"He ought to be sued," exclaimed Roger.
+
+"You have no note, or other writing about the money?" questioned Mr.
+Porter.
+
+"I have his letters," answered the elderly lady. "They are in the
+bureau yonder." And she pointed to an ancient chest of drawers.
+
+"Shall I get them?" asked Jessie, for she saw that it was a task for
+the old lady to move around.
+
+"If you will, my dear. I am so stiff it is hard to get up."
+
+Both girls went to the chest of drawers and brought out a small box of
+letters. Mrs. Breen put on her glasses and fumbled them over and
+brought forth three communications which were, as the boys recognized,
+in Job Haskers's well-known jerky handwriting. She passed them over to
+be read, and all present perused them with interest.
+
+The contents, however, were disappointing, especially to the boys and
+Dunston Porter, who had hoped to find something by which legally to
+hold the school-teacher. Not once did Job Haskers mention that he owed
+Mrs. Breen any money. He simply stated that he regretted he could do
+nothing for her, that times were hard, and that his income was limited
+and hard to get. He said as little as possible, and the tone of the
+communications showed that he hoped he would hear no more from the old
+lady who had done what she could to aid him.
+
+"I think this is the limit!" said Dave to his uncle. "Don't you think
+he ought to be sued?"
+
+"I don't know about suing him, Dave; but I think this ought to be put
+in a lawyer's hands."
+
+"He makes money enough to pay this lady," said Phil. "Say, I've a good
+mind to give him a piece of my mind!" he added, hotly.
+
+"I'll look into this when I come back this way," said Dunston Porter,
+after a little more talk. "Perhaps I can get one of our lawyers to
+prod this Haskers a little, and also state the case to Doctor Clay."
+
+"Oh, will you do that, Uncle Dunston?" cried Laura, brightening, for
+she, as well as all of the others, felt sorry for Mrs. Breen, who
+seemed so poor, old, and lonesome.
+
+"Yes, I'll do it. And now we had better be on our way,--if we want to
+reach Oakdale by noon," went on Mr. Porter.
+
+The boys went out, followed by Jessie. Laura lingered, to whisper
+something in her uncle's ear. Dunston Porter nodded, and then Laura
+joined the others.
+
+"Mrs. Breen, I will be back in a day or two, to see you about this
+money affair," said Mr. Porter, when he and the old lady were alone.
+"In the meantime, as you were so kind as to take the young ladies in
+while we were mending our machine, allow me to make you a little
+present," and as he finished he placed a five-dollar bill in her lap.
+
+"Oh!" she cried, taking up the banknote. "Why, it's five dollars! I--I
+can't really take all that money!"
+
+"Oh, yes, you can," said Mr. Porter, smiling. "Use it as you see fit,
+and remember that I'll be back, and we'll do what we can to get that
+money from Mr. Haskers."
+
+"You are very, very kind!" murmured the old lady, and tears stood in
+her eyes. The past winter had been a severe one for her, and she had
+had a hard struggle to get along.
+
+"Good-by!" shouted the girls and boys to her, and she waved her hand
+to them. Then the automobile started off once more, in the direction
+of Oakdale.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+AT OAK HALL ONCE MORE
+
+
+"Hurrah! here we are at Oakdale at last!"
+
+"Old town looks natural, doesn't it?"
+
+"So it does, Roger. See any of the fellows?"
+
+"Not yet, Dave. But we are sure to meet somebody, even if it is a
+school-day," went on the senator's son.
+
+"Uncle Dunston, let me take the auto around to the hotel," said our
+hero. "I know the streets better than you do. We have to make several
+turns."
+
+"All right, Dave," was the ready answer, and Dunston Porter arose and
+allowed his nephew to crowd into the driver's seat.
+
+The run to the town in the vicinity of which Oak Hall was located had
+been made without further incident. On the way the party had talked
+over Mrs. Breen's affairs, and Dunston Porter had promised to take the
+matter up, through his lawyer.
+
+"I think it best that our names don't appear in the case," said he.
+"Otherwise, Mr. Haskers might not treat you so well during the term."
+
+"He never treats us well, anyway," grumbled Phil. "But you are right,
+don't mention our names."
+
+On this late winter day the town looked rather dreary, but the young
+folks were in high spirits, and Dave, with a grand flourish, ran the
+car up to one of the best hotels the place afforded. As before, word
+had been sent ahead that they were coming, and the host of the resort
+came out to meet them.
+
+"We'll have dinner ready inside of quarter of an hour," he said. "Come
+in and make yourselves at home."
+
+The repast was fully as good as the dinner served at Ryeport, and
+everybody enjoyed it greatly.
+
+"And now for the Hall!" cried Dave.
+
+"Glad to leave us?" asked Jessie, half-reproachfully.
+
+"You know better than to ask such a question," he replied. "But if we
+have got to get back to the grind, why, we might as well do it."
+
+"And I'm a bit anxious to see how the old place looks," added the
+senator's son.
+
+"Dave, you can run the car to the Hall, if you wish," said Mr. Porter,
+feeling sure the youth would like to do that very thing.
+
+"All right."
+
+The touring automobile was brought around, and they were just getting
+in when there came a sudden hail from across the way.
+
+"Hello, there, everybody!"
+
+"It's Dave Porter, and Roger, and Phil!" said somebody else.
+
+"Why, how are you, Shadow!" cried our hero. "And how are you, Buster?"
+he added, as Maurice Hamilton and Buster Beggs came across the road to
+greet them.
+
+"Fine!" puffed Buster, who was very fat and jolly. "Only Shadow has
+been walking the feet off of me!" And then the stout youth shook hands
+all around.
+
+"Now, just to hear that!" cried Shadow, as he, too, shook hands. "Why,
+all we did was to walk from the Hall to here."
+
+"And up one street and down another for half an hour," burst in
+Buster.
+
+"Say, that puts me in mind of a story!" cried Shadow, who was noted
+for his yarn-spinning weakness. "Once two men started to walk----"
+
+"Stow it!" came from three of the other lads in concert.
+
+"It's too early yet to tell stories, Shadow," said Dave, with a smile.
+"You can tell them to-night. Tell us now, is there anything new at the
+Hall?"
+
+"There sure is."
+
+"What?" asked Phil and Roger.
+
+"The wild man."
+
+"Oh, has he turned up again?" asked the girls, with interest.
+
+"Twice--yesterday morning and this morning," said Buster.
+
+"He didn't turn up at all, Buster," interposed Shadow. "When you start
+to tell a story, why don't you tell it straight?"
+
+"Oh, you tell it," grumbled the fat boy. "You have that sort of thing
+down to a science."
+
+"There isn't very much to tell," went on Shadow Hamilton. "He left his
+mark, that's all."
+
+"Left his mark?" queried Dave.
+
+"That's it--wide, blue marks. He must have about a ton of blue
+chalk."
+
+"Say, Shadow, you are talking in riddles," burst out the shipowner's
+son. "Give it to us in plain United States, can't you?"
+
+"Sure I can. Well, this wild man visited the school yesterday morning
+and this morning, before anybody was up. The first time he went into
+the big classroom and took some books, and the next time he visited
+the kitchen and pantry and took some grub--I beg the ladies' pardon--I
+should have said food--a ham, a chicken, and some doughnuts."
+
+"And the blue chalk----?" queried Mr. Porter.
+
+"I was coming to that. In the classroom he left his mark--a big
+circle, with a cross inside, in blue chalk."
+
+"And how do you know that is the mark of the wild man?" asked Laura.
+
+"Oh, we found that out some time ago," answered Shadow. "He seems to
+have a mania for blue chalk, and even puts it on his face sometimes,
+and he chalks down that circle with the cross wherever he goes."
+
+"Then, if he does that, why can't they trail him down?" asked Dave.
+
+"Because he is like a flea--when you try to put your hands on him he
+isn't there," answered Shadow. "And say, that puts me in mind of
+another story. Once three boys were----"
+
+"That will do, Shadow!" cried Roger. "About the wild man is enough for
+the present."
+
+"Have they any idea who he is?" asked Dunston Porter.
+
+"Not the slightest," answered Buster. "And they don't know where he
+keeps himself, although it must be in the woods near the school."
+
+"Oh, Dave, I hope he doesn't harm anybody!" cried Jessie, with a
+shiver.
+
+"Are you boys ready to go back to the Hall?" asked Dunston Porter.
+
+"I am," responded Buster, readily.
+
+"So am I," added the story-teller of the school.
+
+"Then we'll take you along, provided you don't mind being crowded."
+
+"We won't mind, if the young ladies won't," returned the fat youth.
+
+"Oh, come in by all means!" cried Laura.
+
+"We'll make room somehow," added Jessie.
+
+A minute later the big car started on the way to Oak Hall, with Dave
+at the wheel and his uncle beside him.
+
+"Looks familiar, doesn't it?" called out Roger, as they spun along the
+turnpike.
+
+"It certainly does!" answered Roger, and then he added, "What do you
+say to the old school song?"
+
+"Fine!" came back the answer, and then the senator's son commenced a
+song they all knew well, which was sung to the tune of "Auld Lang
+Syne." The girls knew the song, too, and readily joined in.
+
+ "Oak Hall we never shall forget,
+ No matter where we roam;
+ It is the very best of schools,
+ To us it's just like home!
+ Then give three cheers, and let them ring
+ Throughout this world so wide,
+ To let the people know that we
+ Elect to here abide!"
+
+Loud and clear over the cool air sounded the song, and it was sung
+several times. Then, just as the car rolled into the grounds of the
+school, the boys gave one of the Hall yells, and Dave honked the horn
+of the automobile loud and long.
+
+"Hello! It's the Porter crowd!"
+
+"Welcome to our city!"
+
+"How about Cave Island, Dave! Did you bring it with you?"
+
+"Heard you caught Jasniff and Merwell, Roger. Good for you!"
+
+"Say, Phil, you're as sunburnt as if you'd been to the seashore for a
+summer."
+
+So the talk ran on as half a dozen students flocked up to the car. The
+afternoon session was over, and despite the chilliness many lads were
+out on the campus. Many knew the girls--having met them at some
+athletic games and at a commencement--and those that did not were glad
+of a chance for an introduction.
+
+"I am real glad to see you back, boys," said Doctor Hasmer Clay, the
+head of the institution, as he appeared and shook hands. "Glad to see
+you, Mr. Porter, and also the young ladies," he added. "So you came
+all the way by automobile, eh? It must have been a delightful trip."
+
+"It was," answered Dave's uncle.
+
+All went inside, and the visitors were permitted to accompany Dave and
+his chums to their dormitory. The boys' baggage had already arrived,
+so it did not take the lads long to settle down.
+
+"And now we'll have to start back," said Dunston Porter, a little
+later. "Dave, take good care of yourself, and make a good record."
+
+"I'll do my best, Uncle Dunston."
+
+"And don't let that wild man get you," added Jessie, as she took his
+hand and allowed him to hold her own, perhaps longer than was
+necessary.
+
+"And don't forget to write," put in his sister.
+
+"Oh, I'll not forget that!" answered Dave, with a smile, both to his
+sister and to the girl whom he regarded so warmly.
+
+It was a trying moment--this parting--but it was soon over, and, with
+Dunston Porter at the wheel, and the girls and boys waving their
+hands, the touring car left the Oak Hall grounds, on its return
+journey to Crumville.
+
+"Well, here we are, as the pug dog said to the looking-glass, when he
+walked behind it to look for himself," remarked Phil, dropping into a
+chair.
+
+"I suppose it will take us a few days to get settled down," answered
+Dave, resting on the top of a table. "I don't feel much like unpacking
+yet, do you?"
+
+"No, let us wait until to-night or to-morrow," returned Roger,
+dropping on one of the beds. He was still thinking of how clear and
+deep Laura's eyes had appeared when she had said good-by to him.
+
+"I really hope you will not be homesick," said a girlish voice, and
+Bertram Vane, one of the students, appeared from the next room and sat
+down on a chair. "Homesickness is such an awfully cruel thing, don't
+you know."
+
+"No homesickness here, Polly," answered Dave. "I guess we are just
+tired out, that's all. We've done a lot of traveling since we left Oak
+Hall."
+
+"So I understand. Wasn't it dreadful that Jasniff and Merwell should
+prove such villains!" went on the girlish student. "Weren't you really
+afraid to--er--to touch them?"
+
+"Not much!" cried Phil. "I am only sorry Merwell got away."
+
+"But you got the diamonds, I heard?" put in Sam Day, who was another
+of the chums.
+
+"We did."
+
+At that moment came musical sounds from another room near by--the
+sounds of somebody strumming on a guitar.
+
+"Hello, there's Luke Watson!" cried Roger. "Hi, come in with that
+guitar and give us a tune, Luke!" he called out.
+
+"Thought I might cheer you up," said Luke, appearing. "How would you
+like me to play 'The Girl I Left Behind Me,' or something like that?"
+
+"Make it 'Oh, Those Eyes So Tender!'" suggested Buster.
+
+"Or else that beautiful ditty called, 'He Loved, But Had to Leave
+Her,'" suggested Shadow. "Say, that puts me in mind of a story," he
+went on. "This is true, too, though you may not believe it. A young
+man went to call on his best girl and took a bouquet of flowers along.
+The bouquet was done up in several thicknesses of tissue paper. Some
+of his friends who were jokers got hold of that bouquet and fixed it
+up for him. He gave it to the girl, and when she took off the tissue
+paper what do you suppose she found? A bunch of celery and some soup
+greens! He was so fussed up he didn't know what to say, and he got out
+in a hurry."
+
+"Hurrah for the chaps who fixed up the bouquet!" cried Phil. "But
+start up, Luke. Something in which we can all join."
+
+"But not too loud," cautioned Roger. "Old Haskers might not like----"
+
+"Oh, hang old Haskers!" interrupted Phil. "He can't----"
+
+"Sh-sh!" came from Dave, suddenly, and silence fell on the group of
+boys. All turned towards the doorway leading to the hall. There, on
+the threshold, stood the instructor just mentioned, Mr. Job Haskers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+PHIL SHOWS HIS STUBBORNNESS
+
+
+Not one of the boys knew how to act or what to say. All wondered if
+Job Haskers had heard his name mentioned.
+
+If the ill-natured instructor had heard, he made no mention of it. He
+looked sharply about the apartment and waved his hand to Luke.
+
+"Watson, how many times have I told you that you make too much noise
+with your musical instruments?" he said, harshly. "You disturb the
+students who wish to study."
+
+"I thought this was the recreation hour, Mr. Haskers," answered the
+lad, who loved to play the guitar and banjo.
+
+"True, but I think we get altogether too much of your music," growled
+the instructor. He turned to Dave, Roger, and Phil. "So you are back
+at last. It is high time, if you wish to go on with your regular
+classes."
+
+"We told Doctor Clay that we would make up what we have missed, Mr.
+Haskers," answered Dave, in a gentle tone, for he knew how easy it
+was to start a quarrel with the man before him. As Phil had once said,
+Job Haskers was always walking around "with a chip on his shoulder."
+
+"And how soon will you make up the lessons in my class?" demanded the
+instructor.
+
+"I think I can do it inside of ten days or two weeks."
+
+"That won't suit me, Porter. You'll have to do better. I'll give each
+of you just a week--one week, understand? If you can't make the
+lessons up in that time I'll have to drop you to the next lower
+class."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Haskers!" burst out Roger. He knew what that meant only too
+well. They would not have a chance to graduate that coming June.
+
+"I'll not argue the point, Morr. I'll give you a week, starting
+to-morrow. When you come to the classroom I will show you just what
+you have to make up." Job Haskers looked around the room. "Now, then,
+remember, I want less noise here." And so speaking, he turned on his
+heel and walked away.
+
+For a moment there was silence, as the boys looked at each other and
+listened to the sounds of Mr. Haskers's retreating footsteps. Then
+Phil made a face and punched one of the bed pillows, savagely.
+
+"Now, wouldn't that make a saint turn in his grave?" he remarked.
+"Isn't he the real, kind, generous soul!"
+
+"He ought to be ducked in the river!" was Buster's comment. "Why, how
+can anybody make up the lessons you've missed in a week? It's absurd!
+Say, do you know what I'd do if I were you? I'd complain to the
+doctor."
+
+"So would I," added Sam Day. "Two weeks would be short enough."
+
+"I'll not complain to the doctor," returned Phil. "But I know what I
+will do," he added, quickly, as though struck by a sudden idea.
+
+"What?" came from several.
+
+"Never mind what. But I'll wager he'll give us more time."
+
+"I guess I know what you think of doing," said Dave. "But take my
+advice and don't, Phil."
+
+"Humph! I'll see about it, Dave. He isn't going to run such a thing as
+this up my back without a kick," grumbled the shipowner's son.
+
+"Well, wait first and see if he doesn't change his mind, or if we
+can't get through in the week," cautioned Dave.
+
+"What was Phil going to do?" questioned Luke, strumming lowly over the
+strings of his guitar.
+
+"Oh, don't let's talk about it," cried Dave, before Roger could speak.
+He did not wish the Mrs. Breen affair to become public property.
+"Tell us about the wild man, and all the other things that have
+happened here since we went away."
+
+"And you tell us all about Cave Island and those stolen jewels," said
+Buster.
+
+Thereafter the conversation became general, Dave and his chums telling
+of their quest of the Carwith diamonds, and the other students
+relating the particulars of a feast they had had in one of the
+dormitories, and of various efforts made to catch the so-called wild
+man.
+
+"I don't believe he is what one would call a wild man," said Ben
+Basswood, Dave's old chum from home, who had just come in from some
+experiments in the school laboratory. "He is simple-minded and very
+shy. He gets excited once in a while, like when he threw those
+mud-balls."
+
+"Well, you ought to know," remarked Buster. "Ben is the only fellow
+here who has talked to the man," he explained.
+
+"When was that, Ben?" questioned Dave.
+
+"That was when the man first appeared," answered the Crumville lad. "I
+didn't find out until yesterday that he was the wild man, and then it
+was because of that blue chalk he uses. I met him in the woods when I
+was out during that last snow, looking for rabbits with my shotgun. I
+came across him, sitting on a rock, looking at an old newspaper. He
+had some of the blue chalk in his hand and had marked a circle with a
+cross on the rock. He asked me where I was going, and told me to look
+out and not shoot a star, and then he asked me if I used chalk for
+powder, and said he could supply a superior brand of chalk cheap. I
+thought at first that he was merely joking, but I didn't like the look
+in his eyes, and then I made up my mind he was not right in his head,
+and I left him. When I came back that way, an hour later, he was gone,
+and I have never seen him since."
+
+"Where was this, Ben?"
+
+"Up in the woods, where the brook branches off by the two big rocks."
+
+"I know the spot!" cried Roger. "Say, maybe he hangs out around
+there."
+
+"No, we hunted around there yesterday, but he wasn't to be seen. I
+don't believe he has any settled place of abode, but just roams
+through the woods."
+
+"Poor fellow! Somebody ought to catch him and place him in a
+sanitarium," was Dave's comment.
+
+Various matters were talked over until the supper hour, and then the
+boys filed down to the dining-hall. Here our hero met more of his
+school chums, including Gus Plum, who had once been his enemy but who
+was now quite friendly, and little Chip Macklin, who in days gone by
+had been Plum's toady.
+
+"Very glad to see you back, Dave!" cried Gus. "And, say, you've
+certainly made a hero of yourself," he added, warmly.
+
+"It was great, what you and Roger and Phil did," added Chip, in deep
+admiration.
+
+Everybody was glad to see Dave back, and after supper it was all he
+could do to get away from many of his friends. But he managed it at
+last, and he, Roger, and Phil went upstairs, to put away their things
+and get out their schoolbooks.
+
+"We have got to study and that is all there is to it," said Dave,
+firmly. "Fun is one thing and getting ready to graduate is another. We
+have got to get down to the grind, boys."
+
+"That's right," answered the senator's son.
+
+"But don't forget what old Haskers said," grumbled Phil. "He'll make
+us sweat, just you wait and see!"
+
+"'Sufficient for the day is the evil thereof,'" quoted Dave. "I think
+we can get through if we buckle down hard."
+
+"Supposing Mr. Dale and the other teachers pin us down as old Haskers
+did?" demanded Phil.
+
+"They won't do it," declared our hero. "Take my word for it, Mr. Dale
+will give us a month, if we want it. I know him. And the others will
+do the same."
+
+"Well, maybe we can get through, if that's the case," said the
+shipowner's son, slowly. "Just the same, I think old Haskers the
+meanest man alive."
+
+The following morning, after a good night's rest, the boys went to
+their various classes. As Dave had predicted, Mr. Dale, the head
+teacher, treated them with all possible consideration, for he loved
+boys and understood them thoroughly. The other teachers were likewise
+very lenient.
+
+"Old Haskers is the one stumbling-block," said Roger. "Dave, maybe we
+had better see Doctor Clay about him."
+
+"Not much!" cried Phil. "We've got a club we can use on Haskers. Why
+not use it?"
+
+"You mean, go to him and tell him we know about that Mrs. Breen
+affair, and that we will expose him if he doesn't let up on us, Phil?"
+said Dave.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Do you think that is a--well, a gentlemanly thing to do?"
+
+"It's what old Haskers would do, if he was in our place."
+
+"Perhaps. But I'd rather not do it. Let my uncle's lawyer try to
+collect that money without our appearing in the case. We have had
+trouble enough in the past with Haskers. Let us buckle in and study
+up. I am sure we can get through," added Dave, earnestly.
+
+"All right," growled Phil; but his manner showed that he was not
+satisfied.
+
+Two days went by, and the boys settled down to the regular routine of
+the school. The lessons to be made up were exceedingly hard, and Dave
+found he had to study almost constantly to do what was required of
+him.
+
+"But I am going to make it!" he murmured, setting his teeth hard. "I
+am not going to disappoint the folks at home."
+
+One afternoon the three chums had a very hard lesson in Latin to do.
+It was a clear, sunshiny day and they had one of the windows wide open
+to let in the fresh air. Dave and Roger were bending over their books
+when they heard a sudden exclamation from Phil.
+
+"I'll be hanged if I'm going to do it!"
+
+And then of a sudden a Latin book was hurled across the room, to land
+on a bureau, just missing the glass.
+
+"Hello!" cried Dave, raising his head. "What's wrong now?"
+
+"I'm not going to do it!" cried Phil, stretching himself. "It's an
+outrage and I won't submit to it."
+
+"You mean this boning away for Haskers?" queried Roger.
+
+"Just that," answered the shipowner's son. "Why can't he treat us as
+fairly as the other teachers did? It wouldn't hurt him a bit to give
+us more time."
+
+"Phil, what's the use of talking it over again?" asked Dave. "I
+thought we had settled it once for all."
+
+"No, I won't stand it, I tell you," cried Phil, stubbornly. "He can't
+make a pack-mule of me."
+
+"Well, then, speak to the doctor about it," advised Roger.
+
+"I don't have to speak to the doctor," stormed Phil; and walking over
+to a rack, he caught up his cap and marched from the room.
+
+"He is certainly in a bad humor," was Dave's comment. "I am afraid
+he'll put his foot into it, Roger."
+
+"So am I. He's been aching to get back at old Haskers ever since he
+put all this studying up to us."
+
+"Do you know, Ben is just as angry at Haskers as Phil is?" went on our
+hero, after a pause, during which both had hoped that their close chum
+would return. But Phil had stalked down the stairs and out of the
+building.
+
+"Ben?"
+
+"Yes, so he told me this noon."
+
+"What about?"
+
+"Oh, Ben talked in class and old Haskers penalized him heavily--gave
+him a lot of extra Latin to do. It nearly broke Ben up."
+
+"You told Ben about that Breen affair, didn't you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Maybe he and Phil will both go to Haskers about it."
+
+"I hope not, Roger. I don't think it is just the right thing to do--to
+use that as a club over Haskers to get him to let us off. I don't like
+that kind of dealing."
+
+"Neither do I. But it's just what such a mean-spirited fellow as
+Haskers deserves. He has never treated us squarely since we came here.
+I think this school would be a good deal better off without him, even
+if he is well educated."
+
+Dave heaved a deep sigh. He was on the point of replying, but changed
+his mind. He took up his book again, and soon was trying his best to
+study. Roger followed his example.
+
+But both boys made slow progress. Each was thinking about Phil. What
+would be the outcome of their headstrong chum's actions?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+PHIL AND BEN MAKE A MOVE
+So far Dave and Nat Poole had not met face to face. Our hero had seen
+the money-lender's son a number of times, but Nat had always been with
+some of his cronies and had, apparently, not taken any notice.
+
+But on the morning following the conversation just recorded, the pair
+came face to face in one of the narrow hallways.
+
+"Good-morning, Nat," said Dave, pleasantly.
+
+"Morning," grumbled the other student. He was about to pass Dave, but
+suddenly changed his mind. "So you got back, eh?"
+
+"Yes, I've been back several days."
+
+"I heard that Link Merwell got away from you?"
+
+"That is true."
+
+"Humph! If I had the chance to nab him that you had, I'd not let him
+get away."
+
+"We held Jasniff."
+
+"Maybe you let Merwell go on purpose," continued the money-lender's
+son, shrewdly.
+
+"Not at all, Nat. He gave us the slip, clean and clear."
+
+"Humph!" Nat paused for a moment. "I got word from my dad that you
+almost smashed him up on the road with your auto."
+
+"Hardly as bad as that."
+
+"He is going to make your uncle pay for the damage done."
+
+"It wasn't much."
+
+"It was enough. You want to be more careful with your car after this.
+You auto fellows seem to think you own the whole road."
+
+"What about your motor-boat, Nat?" asked Dave. He remembered how the
+money-lender's son had played more than one mean trick while running
+the craft.
+
+"Oh, my boat is all right, Dave Porter!" sniffed Nat; and then he
+moved on, with a scowl on his face.
+
+"The same old Nat," soliloquized our hero. "Too bad that he can't make
+himself a bit more agreeable."
+
+That day was a particularly trying one in the classroom. The lessons
+were unusually hard, and Dave had all he could do to pass, especially
+in those studies presided over by Professor Haskers. Roger made one
+miss in his Latin and poor Phil made several, while Ben Basswood's
+recitation was a complete failure.
+
+As was usual with him, Job Haskers was exceedingly dictatorial, and
+said some cutting things that brought the blood to Dave's face.
+
+"You must do much better than this, Porter and Morr," said the
+professor. "Otherwise I shall have to place you in the next lower
+class. You, Lawrence and Basswood, have failed so utterly that I will
+have to take your cases under immediate consideration. The class is
+dismissed."
+
+"The old bear!" growled Ben, under his breath.
+
+He looked inquiringly at Phil, and the latter nodded knowingly.
+
+Dave did not know what to do. He did not wish Phil and Ben to get into
+further trouble, yet he did not know how to interfere. Besides, he was
+suffering himself and hardly knew what to do on his own account.
+
+"This is the worst yet," cried Roger, as he and our hero came out of
+the classroom side by side.
+
+"There go Phil and Ben," returned Dave. "Roger, they have got some
+plan up their sleeve."
+
+"I believe you, Dave. I wish I knew what to do. Shall we go to Doctor
+Clay?"
+
+"I've been thinking of that, Roger. But I hate to do it. I'd rather
+fight my own battles."
+
+"So would I."
+
+"Let us wait until to-morrow and see if things don't take a turn for
+the better."
+
+"All right, just as you say. But it's a shame, the way old Haskers
+treats us," grumbled the senator's son.
+
+In the meantime Phil and Ben had gone on ahead. Both were exceeding
+angry and consequently not in a frame of mind to use their best
+judgment.
+
+"It's an outrage!" burst out the shipowner's son. "An outrage, Ben! I
+am not going to stand for it!"
+
+"Well, I am with you, Phil," returned Ben. "But what can we do?"
+
+"You know what I spoke about last evening?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How about doing that?"
+
+"I am with you, if you are game."
+
+"Of course we may make old Haskers tearing mad."
+
+"We'll only face him with the truth, won't we?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then, let us do it. And the sooner the better."
+
+"Yes, but we must see him alone."
+
+"Of course. I think we can manage it just before supper--when he goes
+up to his room to fix up for the evening."
+
+The two chums talked the affair over for a long time.
+
+"I don't suppose Dave will like this," ventured Ben, presently. "What
+do you think?"
+
+"He isn't hit as hard as we are," answered Phil, lamely. "If he
+was--well, he might look at things in a different light."
+
+"That's so," answered Ben. But deep down in his heart he was afraid
+that our hero would not altogether approve of what he and Phil
+proposed to do.
+
+The boys took a walk, and purposely kept out of the way of Dave and
+Roger. They did not return to the Hall until fifteen minutes before
+the first bell for supper. Then they came in by a side entrance and
+passed swiftly up the stairs and along the hallway to the room
+occupied by Job Haskers.
+
+"Who is it?" asked the teacher, sharply, when Phil had knocked.
+
+"Mr. Haskers, it is Phil Lawrence," was the reply. "Ben Basswood is
+with me. We wish to see you."
+
+"Ah, indeed!" said the teacher, coldly. "You come to me at an unusual
+hour. You may see me to-morrow, before class."
+
+"Mr. Haskers, we wish very much to see you now," put in Ben.
+
+"We have got to see you," added Phil, warmly.
+
+There was no immediate reply to this. The boys heard Job Haskers
+moving around the room and heard him shut a bureau. Then the door was
+flung open.
+
+"You insist upon seeing me, eh?" demanded the professor, harshly.
+
+"We do, Mr. Haskers," returned Phil, boldly.
+
+"Very well, young gentlemen; step in." And Job Haskers glared at the
+boys as he stood aside for them to enter.
+
+"We came to see you, sir, about those Latin lessons," went on Phil,
+finding it just then difficult to speak. He realized that Job Haskers
+was in no humor for being lenient.
+
+"Well?" shot out the professor.
+
+"We feel that we are not being treated fairly," put in Ben, believing
+he should not make Phil do all the talking.
+
+"Not treated fairly? I believe I am the best judge of that,
+Basswood."
+
+"Mr. Haskers, I hate to say it, but you are a hard-hearted man!" cried
+out Phil, the door being closed, so that no outsider might hear. "You
+are not giving us a fair chance. The other teachers have given me and
+Dave Porter and Roger Morr several weeks in which to make up those
+lessons we missed while we were away. You wish to give us only a
+week."
+
+"And you didn't give me a fair chance to make up," added Ben.
+
+"See here, who is master here, you or I?" demanded Job Haskers,
+drawing himself up. "Boys, you are impudent! I will not stand it!"
+
+"Yes, you will stand it," cried Phil, throwing caution to the winds.
+"All we ask is a fair deal, and you have got to give it to us. We'll
+make up those lessons, if you'll give us a fair amount of time. I
+don't intend to be put in a lower class for nothing."
+
+"And I'm not going to stand it either," came from Ben.
+
+"Ha! this to me?" snarled Job Haskers. "Take care, or I'll have you
+dismissed from the Hall!"
+
+"If you try it, it will be the worst day's work you ever did, Mr.
+Haskers," warned the shipowner's son.
+
+"What, you threaten me?"
+
+"We are going to make you give us a fair chance, that is all. And if
+you'll do that, we'll give you a fair chance."
+
+"Why, why--you--you----" The irate instructor knew not for the moment
+how to proceed.
+
+"Mr. Haskers, I think you had better listen to me," pursued Phil.
+
+"I have listened to all I care to hear."
+
+"Oh, no, you haven't. There is much more--and you had better listen
+closely--if you care at all for your reputation here at Oak Hall."
+
+The professor stared at the boy and grew a trifle pale.
+
+"Wha--what do you--er--mean by that, Lawrence?"
+
+"I hate very much to bring this subject up, Mr. Haskers, but you
+practically compel me to do it. If you will only promise to give us a
+fair chance to make up our lessons, I won't say a word about it."
+
+"Just what do you mean?" faltered the teacher.
+
+"I know something about your doings in the past--doings which are of
+no credit to you. If you disgrace Ben and me by degrading us in
+classes, we'll disgrace you by telling all we know."
+
+"And what do you know?" demanded Job Haskers, hastily.
+
+"We know a good deal," put in Ben.
+
+"All about your dealing with the poor widow, Mrs. Breen," added the
+shipowner's son. "How you still owe her for board, and how you
+borrowed money to publish a book that was never issued."
+
+"Who told you that?" cried Job Haskers, stepping back in
+consternation. "Who told you that I had borrowed money from her, and
+that I owed her for board?"
+
+"Never mind who told us," said Ben. "We know it is true."
+
+"And you went to that lawyer, eh?" stormed Professor Haskers. "You
+got him to threaten a suit, didn't you? I got his letter only this
+afternoon."
+
+"We went to no lawyer," answered Phil.
+
+"I know better! I see it all now! You want to get me into trouble--to
+disgrace me here!" Job Haskers began to pace the floor. "It is--er--a
+mistake. I meant to pay that lady but it--er--slipped my mind. And the
+book has been issued, but the publishers have not--er--seen fit to
+push it, that is why you and the world at large have not heard of
+it."
+
+"Mr. Haskers, we haven't told anybody about this," went on Phil,
+pointedly. "You can settle with that lawyer, whoever he may be,--and
+we'll not say a word to anybody--that is, providing you'll give us a
+fair chance in our lessons."
+
+"Ha! maybe you wish me to pass you without an examination," cried the
+teacher, cunningly.
+
+"No, sir!" answered Phil, stoutly.
+
+"We simply ask for more time, that is all," added Ben. "We don't ask
+any favor. We can make up the lessons if you will give us as much time
+as the other teachers would give us."
+
+"You have not told anybody of this--this--er--affair of Mrs. Breen?"
+
+"No."
+
+"It is all a mistake, but I should not like it to get abroad. It would
+hurt my reputation a great deal. I shall settle the matter in the
+near future. I do not owe that lady as much as the lawyer says I
+do,--but that is not your affair." Job Haskers continued to pace the
+floor. "Now about your lessons," he continued, after a pause. "If
+I--er--thought that I had really been too hard on you----" He paused.
+
+"You certainly have been hard," said Phil.
+
+"And if you really need more time----"
+
+"Give us two weeks more and we'll be all right," put in Ben.
+
+"And if--er--if I should decide to do that, you will--er----"
+
+"We'll make good--and keep our mouths shut," finished Phil.
+
+"Very well. I will think it over, young gentlemen, and let you know
+to-morrow morning, before class. And in the meantime----"
+
+"We won't say a word to anybody," said Ben, with a little grin.
+
+"So be it;" and Job Haskers bowed. "There is the supper-bell. You may
+go now. Come to me just before class to-morrow," he added; and then
+the two students passed out of the room, and the teacher shut the door
+after them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+AN UNUSUAL COMPACT
+
+
+"He'll do it--he is bound to do it!" cried Ben, as he and Phil hurried
+down to the dining-room.
+
+"I think so myself, Ben," answered the shipowner's son. But, for some
+reason, he did not seem as joyful over the outcome of the interview as
+might have been expected.
+
+"He won't dare let this news become public property," went on the
+other student. "He is too afraid of public opinion."
+
+"Ben, he thinks we got that lawyer to take the case up."
+
+"You told him we hadn't."
+
+"But he didn't believe it--I could tell that by his manner. And, Ben,
+do you know, after all, this looks to me as if we had, somehow, bribed
+him to be easy on us," continued Phil, with added concern.
+
+"Oh, don't bother your head about that, Phil. We only asked for what
+is fair, didn't we?"
+
+"Yes, but----" And then the shipowner's son did not finish, because
+he did not know what to say. In some manner, Phil's conscience
+troubled him, and he wondered what Dave and Roger would say when they
+heard of what had occurred.
+
+During the meal that followed but little was said by any of the boys.
+Once or twice our hero looked at Phil, but the latter avoided his
+gaze. As soon as the repast was over, Phil rushed outside, followed by
+Ben; and that was the last seen of the pair until it was time to go to
+bed.
+
+"They have been up to something, that is certain," was the comment of
+the senator's son.
+
+"Well, we can only wait and see what turns up," answered Dave,
+thoughtfully. "I don't think I care to ask them."
+
+In the morning, when Dave got up he looked over to where Phil was in
+the habit of sleeping. The bed was empty, and the shipowner's son was
+gone.
+
+"Dressed half an hour ago," said another of the dormitory inmates.
+
+"Went off again with Ben, I'll wager," murmured Roger. Ben was in
+another room, across the hallway, that term.
+
+Dave and Roger had been hard at work the evening before, doing their
+best to make up the lessons they had missed while away from the
+school. They doubted if Phil and Ben had studied at all. With
+considerable curiosity they awaited the opening of the morning
+classes, to see what might happen. They felt that something was "in
+the air."
+
+Just before the last bell rang Phil and Ben appeared, their faces
+wreathed in smiles.
+
+"It's all right, fellows!" cried the shipowner's son, merrily. "It's
+all right!"
+
+"Now we can take our time making up those missed lessons," added Ben.
+
+"You went to old Haskers?" queried Roger.
+
+"We sure did," answered the shipowner's son.
+
+"And told him about----" began our hero.
+
+"Never mind what we told him, Dave," interrupted Phil. "We did tell
+him that we wanted to make up the lessons but couldn't do it in the
+time he had allotted. He argued it, at first, but now he has agreed to
+give us the same time Mr. Dale did, three weeks."
+
+"Good!" exclaimed Roger.
+
+"You, or all of us?" asked our hero.
+
+"All of us. I think he'll speak to you at recess--he said he would."
+
+"What did he say when you--when you mentioned Mrs. Breen?" asked
+Roger.
+
+"Hush, somebody might hear you!" returned Phil, in a whisper. "We have
+promised to keep that quiet."
+
+"But the poor woman----" began Dave.
+
+"Will get her money, never fear. A lawyer has already written about
+it, and old Haskers says he will pay up. He claims it is all a
+mistake. But he doesn't want anybody at Oak Hall to get wind of it."
+
+There was no time to say more, and evidently neither Phil nor Ben felt
+in the humor to discuss the affair. The early morning lesson proceeded
+as usual, but it was noticed that Professor Haskers was much subdued
+in his manner towards the students.
+
+"Porter and Morr, I wish to speak to you at recess," said he, coming
+down to where the two lads sat. "Kindly remain here."
+
+When the other students had left the classroom the instructor came to
+our hero and his chum and motioned for them to follow him to a private
+room close by.
+
+"I wish to speak to you about the lessons you are to make up," said
+Job Haskers, after clearing his throat several times. "I understand
+that you want more time."
+
+"We would like to have more time, yes," answered Dave, briefly, and
+looking the teacher full in the face.
+
+"Can you do the lessons in three weeks?"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Haskers," said Dave, and Roger nodded his head.
+
+"Then you can take that much time. But, remember, I shall expect you
+to--to--er--to make up the lessons."
+
+"Yes, sir," came from both students.
+
+"If you need more time--or any assistance--possibly I can arrange it,"
+went on Job Haskers, eagerly.
+
+"Thank you, if you give me three weeks I am sure I can make up the
+lessons to your satisfaction, Mr. Haskers," came from our hero.
+
+"And so can I," added the senator's son. "Anyway, I'll try my level
+best."
+
+"Very well, then, we will let it stand that way." There was a pause
+and the instructor bit his lip several times. "By the way,
+I--er--understand that there is a very unpleasant rumor going around
+concerning me," he proceeded. "It is all a mistake which I shall try
+to clear up without delay. I trust that you will not attempt
+to--er--to circulate that rumor any further."
+
+"Mr. Haskers, do you mean about that affair with Mrs. Breen?" demanded
+Dave, bluntly.
+
+"Yes. I have already explained to Lawrence and Basswood that it is a
+mistake, and that the widow will be paid all that is due her. But if
+this should--er--be mentioned here----" The teacher stopped short and
+looked sharply at Dave and Roger.
+
+"Mr. Haskers, let us understand each other," answered Dave, quickly.
+"I have no desire whatever to get you or anybody else into trouble.
+Nor do I want to ask you for any favors. I think we are justly
+entitled to more time in which to make up those lessons, and now that
+you have granted that time, I shall do my best to make good. As for
+that Mrs. Breen affair, I think that poor old lady ought to have her
+money. I understand some lawyer is going to try to collect it for her.
+Well, if you settle the matter I shall feel very glad; and you can
+rest assured that I will not say a word about the matter to anybody in
+this school, or anywhere else."
+
+"You--er--you give me your word on that, Porter?" demanded the
+instructor, eagerly.
+
+"I do."
+
+"And you, Morr?"
+
+"Yes, sir," answered the senator's son.
+
+"Who else is there who knows about this--er--unpleasant affair?"
+
+"Phil Lawrence and Ben Basswood," answered Roger.
+
+"No other students?"
+
+"Not that I know of."
+
+"Very well, then." Job Haskers drew a breath of relief. "See that you
+keep your word. And about the lessons--if three weeks are not long
+enough, I may--er--be able to give you a little more time."
+
+"That time will be enough," replied Dave.
+
+"We'll make it with ease," added Roger.
+
+"Then that is settled, and you may go," and so speaking, Job Haskers
+left the room. The two boys followed him, and went out on the campus.
+
+"How did you make out?" questioned Phil, as he ran up to them.
+
+"We got our time," answered Roger.
+
+"But let me tell you one thing," said Dave. "After this Haskers is
+going to hate us worse than ever."
+
+"I don't see why," declared the shipowner's son. "I think we are
+letting him off mighty easy."
+
+"He feels as if he had been forced into doing what we want," went on
+Dave. "I think he looks at it as if you had used that Mrs. Breen
+incident as a club over him."
+
+"Well, it was a club in one sense, Dave."
+
+"I know it, Phil, and, although I am glad we have won out and gotten
+that extra time, still I am sorry that you and Ben went to him as you
+did."
+
+"Humph! did you think I was going to sit still and be put back into a
+lower class?"
+
+"Maybe it might have been better if you had gone to Doctor Clay."
+
+"I don't think so," replied Phil, shortly; and then the school-bell
+rang again and all the boys had to go to their next classes.
+
+In spite of the cloud that thus hung over the affair, every one of
+the chums was glad of the extra time in which to make up the lost
+lessons. Not one of them had to grind away as hard as before, and Dave
+took a little time off, in which to send a letter to his father and
+another to Jessie.
+
+The next day was warm and pleasant and, after school-hours, Roger
+proposed to Dave that they take a walk up the woods road back of the
+school.
+
+"All right, a walk in the woods will do us good," was the answer.
+"Shall we ask some of the others?"
+
+"If you wish," and in the end Phil went along, and also Buster Beggs
+and Gus Plum.
+
+"My, but I had a run-in with old Haskers this afternoon," said the
+stout youth. "I came close to carrying the matter to the doctor."
+
+"What was it about?" questioned Dave.
+
+"Oh, nothing at all, to my way of thinking. I went to the library to
+get a book and he accused me of wasting my class time. He was very
+ugly. I won't stand for much more of it," grumbled Buster.
+
+Dave said no more, but he and Roger exchanged glances. Evidently the
+irate instructor was going to "take it out of somebody," as the saying
+goes.
+
+The boys walked on and on, along the road, until Oak Hall was left far
+behind. Soon Buster forgot his troubles, and the crowd were chatting
+gayly of many things.
+
+"Call for candidates for the baseball team next Saturday," announced
+Gus Plum. "I hope we get up a team this year that knocks the spots out
+of Rockville Military Academy and all the other institutions we cross
+bats with."
+
+"Are you going to try for the nine this term, Gus?" questioned Dave.
+
+"Sure! Why not? You'll try, won't you?" went on the big youth, in
+surprise.
+
+"No, I've decided not to go into athletics this term, Gus. I want to
+give all my time to my studies."
+
+"Yes, but the nine needs you, Dave!" put in Buster. "I heard some of
+the fellows talking about it only yesterday. They had you slated for
+your old position."
+
+"Well, if Gus wants to play, he can fill the box," answered Dave.
+
+"But we need more than one pitcher," insisted Buster.
+
+"There are plenty of new students coming along. I hear Thomas is a
+good one, and so is Ennis."
+
+"I'm not going to play, either," said Roger. "I want to graduate with
+all the honors possible."
+
+"How about you, Phil?"
+
+"I--I think I'll play," answered the shipowner's son, rather lamely.
+"I'll see about it later."
+
+"Well, I don't want to neglect my studies," said Gus Plum. "But I have
+done some hard work this winter and so I am pretty well ahead. I
+didn't lose time going to Cave Island, you know," he added, with a
+smile.
+
+"Well, it was worth it--losing that time," answered Dave. "It saved
+Mr. Wadsworth from ruin, and that's a good deal."
+
+"If the baseball nine----" commenced Buster, and then broke off short.
+"What was that?" he demanded, as a cry from a distance broke on the
+ears of all.
+
+"It's a woman's voice!" cried Dave, quickly. "She is calling for help!
+Come on and see what is the matter!" And he started off on a run, with
+his school chums at his heels.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE KING OF SUMATRA
+
+
+The boys had been traveling along a broad highway that ran to a town
+on the other side of the woods. The trees were thick and so were the
+bushes, with here and there a big rock, covered with the dead vines of
+the summer previous.
+
+At one point some distance ahead was an old stone house, standing
+where another road ran in the direction of the river. This house had
+not been inhabited for years, and the doors and windows were gone, and
+the falling of the chimney had smashed in a large portion of the
+sloping roof.
+
+It was from in front of the old house that the cries for assistance
+came, and now the boys heard two voices, both somewhat girlish in
+tones.
+
+"Oh, let me go! Please, let me go!" came, wildly.
+
+"You have no right to touch us!" was added, in another voice.
+
+"What's the matter?" called out Dave, as loudly as he could. But in
+his mind there had already flashed an inkling of what was going on.
+For some time past the wild man of that locality had not shown
+himself. Now, perhaps, he was again at his old tricks.
+
+"Oh, make him go away!" screamed a girlish voice, and then, as our
+hero made a turn of the road, he caught sight of two girls standing
+near the old stone house. Back of them was another figure, that of a
+tall, powerful man, but this figure disappeared as if by magic, behind
+the ancient building.
+
+"Why, Miss Rockwell!" exclaimed Dave, as he recognized a young lady
+from town whom he knew well. "And you, too, Miss Feversham! What is
+the matter?"
+
+"That man--the wild man!" panted Vera Rockwell. "He--he--stopped us!"
+
+"He wanted our purses!" added Mary Feversham, the other young lady.
+
+"Where is he?" asked Roger and Phil, in a breath.
+
+"He just ran behind the house--I saw him," answered Dave. "Did he hurt
+you any?" he went on, anxiously, for he and Vera and Mary were good
+friends.
+
+"No, but he--he scared us so!"
+
+"Let us go after him!" put in Phil, quickly. He had taken Mary
+Feversham out a number of times and the two were well acquainted.
+"Come on!" and he started around the house.
+
+All of the others were not slow to follow. Behind the building they
+came upon a mass of weeds and bushes and in their midst the remains of
+an old well, long since caved in. What had once been a path led to the
+side road before mentioned.
+
+"That's the way he must have gone--down the side road!" cried the
+shipowner's son.
+
+"Supposing we see if we can catch him?" suggested Dave. "But somebody
+ought to go back, and stay with the girls," he added thoughtfully.
+
+"I'll go back," answered Phil. He was only too glad of a chance to
+talk to Mary, not having seen her for a long time.
+
+"If that fellow comes back, whistle for us," advised Roger.
+
+Dave was already on the side road with Buster and Gus beside him, and
+the senator's son quickly followed.
+
+"Don't go too fast or I--I can't ke--keep up with you!" panted
+Buster.
+
+"Do you see anything of him, Dave?" queried Roger.
+
+"Not yet, but there is a turn just ahead. When we make that we'll be
+able to see almost to the river."
+
+All of the students sped on, the stout lad doing his best to keep up
+with the others. They reached the turn with Dave a step or two in
+advance.
+
+"There he is!"
+
+"I see him! Say, he's wild-looking enough!"
+
+"He is making for the river!"
+
+"We ought to be able to catch him. We are four to one."
+
+Dave and Roger pressed forward with increased speed and poor Buster
+fell somewhat behind.
+
+"I'm coming as fa--fast as I ca--can!" blurted out the fat youth. "Go
+on--I'll get there sooner or later!"
+
+"Pick up a stick, if you see one," cried Dave, to Roger and Gus. "We
+may have a hot fight on our hands. That man ought to be in jail, or in
+an asylum."
+
+As they sped along, the three kept their eyes open and each presently
+armed himself with a fair-sized club. The wild man was running like a
+deer, pausing occasionally to turn and brandish his long arms at them
+savagely. They could see that his clothing was in tatters and that his
+hair and beard were long and unkempt.
+
+"Hi! stop!" called out Dave, although he had but little hope of
+causing the man to halt. "We want to talk to you."
+
+"Go back! Beware! Go back, or it will be the worse for you!" called
+the wild man. "Leave the King of Sumatra alone!"
+
+"The King of Sumatra?" repeated Roger. "Say, he's crazy sure enough,
+to imagine himself that!"
+
+The boys continued after the wild man and urged him to stop. But
+instead of heeding them, he ran on the faster.
+
+"He's an athlete, when it comes to running," remarked Dave, as he
+tried in vain to get closer to the man.
+
+"They say crazy people are always strong," answered the senator's
+son.
+
+"I've go--got to gi--give up!" panted Gus, and came to a halt.
+"Go--got a pa--pain in my side!" And he put his hand over his hip.
+
+"All right, we'll manage alone!" cried Roger. "I don't think we can
+catch that fellow anyway," he added, half under his breath.
+
+Another turn of the woodland road brought the Leming River into plain
+view, at a point where the stream was both wide and deep. The wild man
+kept sprinting along and it was impossible for the boys to draw any
+closer to him.
+
+"Shall we threaten to shoot him if he won't stop?" asked Roger.
+Neither of the lads carried firearms.
+
+[Illustration: "STOP!" CRIED DAVE.--_Page 87._]
+
+"No, he might do some shooting on his own account,--if he is armed.
+Come on, he may fall, or something like that."
+
+Inside of three minutes more the wild man gained the shore of the
+river and disappeared around a point of rocks and brushwood.
+
+"Be careful, Dave," warned Roger. "He may spring out at you with a
+club."
+
+"I've got my eyes open," was the ready reply.
+
+Both advanced with caution, and soon came up to the nearest of the
+rocks. With clubs ready for use, the two youths continued to move
+forward. Then they came to a sudden halt. The wild man was no longer
+in sight. What had become of him?
+
+"Maybe he ran into the woods," suggested Roger.
+
+"Perhaps, but--hark!" And our hero held up his hand. From a distance
+came a scraping sound, like something sliding over a rock.
+
+"Look!" called out the senator's son. "He's got a boat! There he
+goes!"
+
+Dave turned in the direction pointed out by his chum. Both saw a small
+rowboat sweep out from under some brushwood. In it stood the wild man,
+using an oar as a pole on the rocks.
+
+"Stop!" cried Dave. "Stop, or you may be sorry for it."
+
+"You can't catch the King of Sumatra!" yelled the wild man, and
+flourished his arms and made a hideous face at them. Then he sat down
+on the middle seat of the craft, placed the oars in the rowlocks, and
+commenced to row rapidly down the stream.
+
+"Well, that's the end of the chase," remarked Dave, in some disgust.
+
+"That's right, since we haven't any boat," returned Roger. "Wonder
+where he got that craft? I don't think he bought it."
+
+"It isn't likely. Probably he saw it somewhere along the river and
+simply appropriated it." And this proved to be true.
+
+The boys watched the wild man until a bend of the stream hid rower and
+craft from view. Then they turned back in the direction of the old
+stone house.
+
+"Did you get him?" demanded Buster, who was waiting with Gus at the
+point where he had dropped out of the race.
+
+"No," answered Roger, and told why.
+
+"He sure is a cute one," went on the stout youth. "Say, if they don't
+catch him soon, he'll have this whole neighborhood scared to death."
+
+The students soon reached the old house. Here they found the two girls
+and Phil, the latter with a heavy stick in his hand, ready for any
+emergency. The girls had calmed down a little, but were still much
+agitated.
+
+"We were to come home in my uncle's carriage," said Mary Feversham.
+"But the horse got a lame foot and so we decided to walk. We had heard
+of the wild man, but did not think we would meet him. Oh, it was
+dreadful!"
+
+"He didn't hurt you, did he?" asked Dave.
+
+"Oh, no, but he frightened us so! He danced around us and caught us by
+the arms, and he wanted us to give him money! Oh, it was dreadful!"
+
+"He ought to be in an asylum," said Dave. And then he and Roger
+related how the wild man had escaped.
+
+"I sha'n't go out alone again," said Vera Rockwell. "That is, not
+until that man is captured."
+
+"We'll take you both home," said Phil, promptly, looking at Mary.
+
+"But we don't want to keep you from what you were going to do," said
+Vera.
+
+"Oh, we were only out for a walk," replied Dave. "We'll walk to town
+with you. Maybe we'll hear something more of this strange fellow."
+
+All turned back on the road that led close to Oak Hall, and after
+discussing the wild man from various points of view, the conversation
+turned to other matters. The girls told of what they had been doing
+during the past holidays and asked the boys about themselves.
+
+"I heard that that horrid Jasniff is under arrest," said Vera to
+Dave. "I am glad of it. It is a pity that Merwell got away."
+
+"Perhaps," answered our hero. "But, somehow, I sometimes think that
+Link Merwell will turn over a new leaf."
+
+Vera looked back, to make sure that none of the others were near.
+
+"Just like Mr. Plum, I suppose you mean," she whispered. "Oh, it was
+splendid, what you did for him, Dave!"
+
+"Oh, I didn't do much for Gus."
+
+"My brother thinks you did. He heard the whole story. It was brave and
+noble of you, it was indeed!" And Vera's face showed her earnestness.
+
+"Well, Gus has turned out a nice fellow. I wish Merwell would turn out
+as good."
+
+"But he helped to take those jewels."
+
+"That is true--and that will always be a black mark against him," said
+Dave, soberly.
+
+Soon all reached the outskirts of Oakdale and there, at one of the
+corners, the boys left the girls.
+
+"Pretty late!" cried Gus Plum, consulting the watch he carried. "We'll
+have to hike back lively, if we don't want to be marked up for
+tardiness."
+
+"We can get an excuse, if we tell about the wild man," said Buster.
+"I've hurried all I'm going to."
+
+"We'll certainly have a yarn to spin when we get back to the school,"
+was Phil's comment.
+
+At the entrance to the campus the boys, who were a little late, met
+the first assistant to Doctor Clay. As my old readers know Mr. Dale
+was as pleasant as Job Haskers was disagreeable.
+
+"Had a fine walk, boys?" he asked, with a smile.
+
+"We had an adventure," answered Dave, and then he and his chums told
+what it was.
+
+"Well! well! that wild man again," mused the instructor. "This is
+getting truly serious. I was hoping he would leave this neighborhood.
+And so he calls himself the King of Sumatra? That is strange."
+
+"It certainly is strange," answered Dave.
+
+But how strange, our hero was still to find out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+NAT POOLE WANTS TO KNOW
+
+
+That evening Dave was on his way to the school library, to consult a
+certain work of reference, when he ran into another student who
+suddenly grasped him by the shoulder. It was rather dark where the
+pair confronted each other, and for the instant our hero did not
+recognize the fellow.
+
+"What do you want?"
+
+"I want to speak to you for a minute, Dave Porter," said the other, in
+a voice that trembled a trifle.
+
+"Oh, it's you, Nat," answered Dave, as he recognized the son of the
+Crumville money-lender. "What do you want?" He rather imagined that
+the youth wished to pick another quarrel with him.
+
+"I--I want to talk in private with you," returned Nat, and looked
+around, to see if anybody else was near.
+
+"What about?"
+
+"You were out walking this afternoon and met that wild man, so I
+heard."
+
+"That is true."
+
+"You tried to catch him, didn't you?"
+
+"Yes, Roger Morr, Buster Beggs, Gus Plum, and I did our best to collar
+him, but he was too fast for us. He ran down to the river, got into a
+rowboat, and rowed away."
+
+"So I heard. And I heard something else," continued the boy from
+Crumville. "When you called to the man to stop he answered back,
+didn't he?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Will you please tell me what he said?" And Nat's voice had an eager
+ring in it.
+
+"He told us to beware and go back, or we'd get into trouble."
+
+"Didn't he say something more than that?"
+
+"Oh, yes, a great deal more."
+
+"He called himself something, didn't he?"
+
+"Yes. Look here, Nat, what is this to you? Why are you so interested?"
+queried Dave, for he could easily perceive that the other youth was
+more than ordinarily anxious to know the particulars of what had
+occurred.
+
+"I--I--want to--er--know, that's all. Did he call himself anything?"
+
+"Yes; he thinks he is the King of Sumatra."
+
+"He called himself that?" asked Nat, with increased excitement.
+
+"Yes, two or three times. But see here, Nat----"
+
+"Will you please tell me how he looked? Was he tall and rather thin?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And what kind of hair did he have?"
+
+"Brownish-red, as near as I could make out, and very long. And he had
+rather a long beard and a large nose," went on our hero.
+
+At this brief but accurate description of the wild man, Nat Poole
+paled a trifle and uttered something of a gasp.
+
+"Whe--where did he go?" he faltered.
+
+"He rowed down the river just as fast as he could. I don't know how
+far he went, for the bend hid him from view," answered our hero. "Say,
+Nat, do you think you know that man?"
+
+"Why--er--know him? Of course I don't know him," was the stammered-out
+reply. "But I--I think--maybe--I've met him." And then, to avoid
+further questioning, Nat Poole hurried away. Our hero could do nothing
+but stare after him.
+
+"That is mighty queer," mused Dave, as he turned into the library to
+consult the reference book. "If Nat doesn't know the man, why was he
+so anxious? He acted scared to death when I said the fellow called
+himself the King of Sumatra."
+
+Dave remained in the school library for a half an hour and then joined
+Phil, Roger, and the others in Dormitory Number Twelve. He found the
+students discussing a talk Roger had had with Nat Poole only a few
+minutes before.
+
+"Nat called me out in the hallway," said the senator's son. "He wanted
+to know all about that wild man, and he wanted to make dead certain
+that he had called himself the King of Sumatra."
+
+"That is certainly queer--on top of what happened to me," said Dave,
+and told of the interview he had had.
+
+"Well, this is a puzzle," declared Phil, slowly. "What do you make of
+it, Dave?"
+
+"I think Nat imagines he knows the wild man."
+
+"That's the way it looks to me," added the senator's son.
+
+"Say, you don't suppose that wild man has anything to do with the
+fellows Nat used to train with--Jasniff, Merwell, and that crowd?"
+questioned Buster.
+
+"It's possible, but I don't think so," returned our hero. "He is
+surely a crazy individual, and as nobody around here seems to know
+him, he must be a stranger to these parts."
+
+"But what would make Nat so interested?" asked little Chip Macklin.
+
+"Give it up," answered Roger.
+
+"Maybe he has something to tell, but won't tell it to us," ventured
+Phil. "He may go right to the doctor."
+
+But if Nat Poole went to the master of Oak Hall, or to anybody else at
+that institution, the boys did not hear of it. He asked no more
+questions about the wild man, and when any of our friends came near
+him he immediately walked away, thus avoiding an interview.
+
+The proposed meeting of the athletic committee of Oak Hall was held on
+Saturday afternoon in the gymnasium and was well attended. An even
+twenty names had been put up for the regular baseball nine of the
+institution. Of these names, fifteen belonged to old students and five
+were those of newcomers to Oak Hall. As he had said he would do, Gus
+Plum had handed in his name, and so had Sam Day and some of our other
+friends. But Dave, Phil, and Roger were conspicuous by their absence.
+
+"See here, Porter, you're going to play, aren't you?" asked the former
+manager.
+
+"No," answered Dave, quietly but firmly.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Well, in the first place, I have too many back lessons to make up,
+and in the second place, I hope to graduate this coming June, and I
+want to make a record for myself, if possible."
+
+"But you can do that and play on the nine, too," urged the manager.
+
+"I don't think so. I'd like to play," continued our hero, wistfully,
+"but I don't see how I can."
+
+"This isn't fair, Porter. We really need you."
+
+"Oh, it isn't as bad as that," returned Dave, with a faint smile.
+"You've got Gus Plum to pitch, and some of the others. There are
+plenty of good ball-players here this term."
+
+"I don't know about that," answered the manager, with a grave shake of
+his head. "I wish you'd come in."
+
+"Not this year," said Dave; and then the two separated.
+
+Phil and Roger were likewise urged to try for the nine, but they
+followed Dave's example. Then a tentative nine was formed, with Gus
+Plum as pitcher, and also a "scrub" nine, with one of the newcomers to
+Oak Hall in the box. Practice was to start on Wednesday afternoon of
+the following week.
+
+"Too bad we couldn't take part," sighed the shipowner's son. "I'd like
+to wallop the Rockville Military Academy fellows just once more!"
+
+"Well, we can't have everything," answered Dave. "I want to graduate
+with the highest possible honors, and that means plenty of hard
+boning."
+
+"And a fellow can't bone and play ball, too," added Roger.
+
+"We might--if old Haskers would be easy on us," murmured the
+shipowner's son.
+
+"Now, see here, Phil," said Dave, almost sternly. "Don't ask Haskers
+for any more favors. He has done all that can reasonably be expected
+of him."
+
+"All right, just as you say," grumbled Phil. But his manner showed
+that he was not altogether satisfied.
+
+A week went by, and Dave and his chums applied themselves diligently
+to their studies. During that time nothing more was heard of the wild
+man, and the excitement concerning that strange individual again died
+down. But the folks living in the vicinity of the woods back of Oak
+Hall were on their guard, and it was seldom that women and children
+went out alone.
+
+The boys were doing very well in their studies, and Dave received warm
+words of encouragement from Andrew Dale. He had made up nearly all the
+back lessons imposed upon him by Job Haskers, and that dictatorial
+teacher could not help but be satisfied over the showing made. Roger
+was also doing well, and poor Phil was the only one who was backward,
+although not enough to cause alarm.
+
+"I'll get there, but it comes hard," said the shipowner's son. "I
+should have asked old Haskers for more time."
+
+"Don't you do it," answered Dave. "Come, I'll help you all I can."
+Which he did.
+
+One day there came a letter to our hero which gave him great
+satisfaction. He read it carefully, and then hastened off to
+communicate the news to Phil, Roger, and Ben.
+
+"It's a letter from my Uncle Dunston," he explained to his chums. "If
+you will remember, he said he would hire a lawyer to take up that Mrs.
+Breen case against Professor Haskers."
+
+"What does he say?" asked Roger, quickly.
+
+"I will read it to you," answered Dave, and read the following:
+
+ "You will be glad to learn that Mr. Loveland, one of our lawyers,
+ has gotten a settlement for Mrs. Breen out of your teacher, Mr.
+ Haskers. He had quite a time of it, Haskers declaring that he did
+ not owe as much as the widow said he did. The lawyer said he would
+ sue for the full amount, and then Haskers came to see him. Mr.
+ Loveland says the teacher wanted to learn who had hired him to
+ stir the matter up, and mentioned some students' names. But the
+ lawyer gave him no satisfaction at all, and at last Haskers paid
+ up in full, took his receipt, and got out. I instructed Mr.
+ Loveland to put his charges for services on our bill, so Mrs.
+ Breen will get the entire amount collected. I am going to take it
+ to her in person, and see to it that it is wisely invested for her
+ benefit."
+
+"Good!" cried the senator's son. "That will help the old lady a great
+deal."
+
+"Say, I'll bet old Haskers was sore when he forked over that money,"
+was Ben's comment. "No wonder he's been looking like a thundercloud
+lately."
+
+"Yes, and he'd let out on us--if he dared," said Phil. "But he doesn't
+dare."
+
+"Don't be too sure of that, Phil," said Dave, seriously. "There is no
+telling what he will do--later on, when he thinks this affair has
+blown over."
+
+"Humph! I am not afraid of him," declared Phil, recklessly.
+
+"If he tries any of his games we'll expose him," added Ben.
+
+"Better go slow," advised Roger. He, too, felt that Job Haskers might
+become very vindictive.
+
+Spring was now at hand, and a week later came the first baseball game
+of the season. It was a contest with Esmore Academy from Daytonville
+and held on the Oak Hall grounds. Quite a crowd was present, including
+some of the town folks. Gus Plum was in the pitcher's box for the
+Hall, and Sam Day was on first base, and Chip Macklin on third.
+
+"I hope we win!" cried Dave.
+
+"I hope you do," answered Vera Rockwell, who was present with some
+other girls. "But why are you not playing?" she went on.
+
+"Not this term," said our hero, with a smile, and then he spoke of his
+studies.
+
+"I suppose it is noble of you to give up this way," she said.
+"But--I'd like to see you play."
+
+The contest proved a well-fought one, and was won by Oak Hall by a
+score of eight runs to five. At the conclusion there was a great
+cheering for the victors.
+
+"This means bonfires to-night!" cried Roger, as the gathering broke
+up.
+
+"Yes, and a grand good time!" added Buster Beggs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+BONFIRE NIGHT AT THE HALL
+
+
+It was certainly a night long to be remembered in the annals of Oak
+Hall,--and for more reasons than one.
+
+At the start, several bonfires were lit along the bank of the river,
+and around these the students congregated, to dance and sing songs,
+and "cut up" generally. None of the teachers were present, and it was
+given out that the lads might enjoy themselves within reasonable
+bounds until ten o'clock.
+
+"Let's form a grand march!" cried Gus Plum. "Every man with a torch!"
+
+"Yes, but don't set anything on fire," cautioned Roger.
+
+"Say, that puts me in mind of a story," came from Shadow. "A fellow
+went into a powder shop to buy some ammunition. He was smoking a pipe,
+and the proprietor----"
+
+"Whoop! Hurrah for Shadow!" yelled somebody from the rear, and the
+next instant the story-teller of the Hall found himself up on a pile
+of barrels which had not yet been set on fire.
+
+"Now then, tell your yarns to everybody!" came the cry.
+
+"Speak loud, Shadow!"
+
+"Give us all the details."
+
+"Tell us the story about the old man and the elephant."
+
+"No, give us that about the old maid and the mouse."
+
+"Let us hear about the fellow who was shipwrecked on the Rocky
+Mountains."
+
+"Or about how the fellow who couldn't swim fell into a flour barrel."
+
+"Say, what do you take me for?" roared Shadow. "I don't know any story
+about the Rocky Mountains, or a flour barrel either. If you want to
+hear----"
+
+"Sure we do!"
+
+"That's the very yarn we've been waiting for!"
+
+"Say, Shadow, won't you please tell it into a phonograph, so I can
+grind it out to my grandfather when I get home?"
+
+"Is that the story that starts on a foggy night, at noon?"
+
+"No, this one starts on a dusty day in the middle of the Atlantic."
+
+"Say, if you fellows want me to tell a story, say so!" grumbled
+Shadow. "Otherwise I'm going to get down."
+
+"No! no! Tell your best yarn, Shadow."
+
+"All right, then. Once two men went into a shoe store----"
+
+"Wow! That's fifty years old!"
+
+"I heard that when a child, at my grandson's knee."
+
+"Tell us something about smoke, Shadow!"
+
+"And fire. I love to hear about a fire. It's so warm and----"
+
+"Hi! let me get down! Do you want to burn me up?" yelled the
+story-teller of the school, suddenly, as, chancing to glance down, he
+saw that the barrels were on fire. "Let me down, I say!" And he made a
+leap from the barrels into the midst of the crowd.
+
+Shadow landed on the shoulders of Nat Poole, and both went down and
+rolled over. In a spirit of play some of the students near by covered
+the rolling pair with shavings and straw. Shadow took this in good
+part and merely laughed as he arose, but the money-lender's son was
+angry.
+
+"Hi, who threw those dirty shavings all over me?" he bawled. "I don't
+like it."
+
+"Don't mind a little bath like that, Nat!" called one of the
+students.
+
+"But I do mind it. The shavings are full of dirt, and so is the straw.
+The dirt is all over me."
+
+"Never mind, you can have a free bath, Nat," said another.
+
+"I'll lend you a cake of soap," added a third.
+
+"I don't want any of your soap!" growled the money-lender's son. "Say,
+the whole crowd of you make me sick!" he added, and walked off, in
+great disgust.
+
+"Phew! but he's touchy," was the comment of one of the students. "I
+guess he thinks he's better than the rest of us."
+
+"Let's give him another dose," came the suggestion, from the rear of
+the crowd.
+
+"Shavings?"
+
+"Yes, and straw, too. Put some down his neck!"
+
+"Right you are!"
+
+Fully a dozen students quickly provided themselves with shavings and
+straw, both far from clean, and made after Nat, who was walking up the
+river-front in the direction of the boathouse.
+
+Before the money-lender's son could do anything to defend himself, he
+found himself seized from behind and hurled to the ground.
+
+"Now then, give it to him good!" cried a voice, and in a twinkling a
+shower of shavings, straw, and dirt descended upon poor Nat, covering
+him from head to foot.
+
+"Hi! let up!" spluttered the victim, trying to dodge the avalanche.
+But instead of heeding his pleadings the other students proceeded to
+ram a quantity of the stuff into his ears and down his collar. Nat
+squirmed and yelled, but it did little good.
+
+"Now then, you are initiated into the Order of Straw and Shavings!"
+cried one merry student.
+
+"Just you wait, I'll get square, see if I don't," howled Nat, as he
+arose. Then he commenced to twist his neck, to free himself from the
+ticklish straw and shavings.
+
+"Come on and have a good time, old sport!" howled one of his
+tormentors; and then off the crowd ran in the direction of the
+bonfires, leaving Nat more disgusted than ever.
+
+"I'll fix them, just wait and see if I don't!" stormed the
+money-lender's son to himself, and then hurried to the Hall, to clean
+up and make himself comfortable.
+
+In the meantime the march around the campus had begun, each student
+carrying a torch of some kind. There was a great singing.
+
+"Be careful of the fire," warned Mr. Dale, as he came out. "Doctor
+Clay says you must be careful."
+
+"We'll take care!" was the cry.
+
+The marching at an end, some of the boys ran for the stables and
+presently returned with Jackson Lemond, the driver of the school
+carryall, commonly called Horsehair, because of the hairs which clung
+to his clothing.
+
+"Come on, Horsehair, join us in having a good time."
+
+"Give us a speech, Horsehair!"
+
+"Tell us all you know about the Wars of the Roses."
+
+"Or how Hannibal crossed the Delaware and defeated the Turks at the
+Alamo."
+
+"I can't make no speech," pleaded the carryall driver. "Just you let
+me go, please!"
+
+"If you can't make a speech, sing," suggested another. "Give us Yankee
+Doodle in the key of J minor."
+
+"Or that beautiful lullaby entitled, 'You Never Miss Your Purse Until
+You Have to Walk Home.' Give us that in nine flats, will you?"
+
+"I tell you I can't make a speech and I can't sing!" shouted out the
+driver for the school, desperately.
+
+"How sad! Can't speechify and can't sing! All right, then, let it go,
+and give us a dance."
+
+"That's the talk! A real Japanese jig in five-quarter time."
+
+There was a rush, and in a twinkling poor Horsehair was boosted to the
+top of a big packing-case, that had been hauled to the spot as fuel
+for one of the bonfires.
+
+"The stage!" announced one of the students, with a wave of his hand.
+"The World-Renowned Horsehairsky will perform his celebrated Dance of
+the Hop Scotch. Get your opera glasses ready."
+
+"What's the admission fee?"
+
+"Two pins and a big green apple."
+
+"I can't dance--I ain't never danced in my life!" pleaded the victim.
+"You let me go. I've got to take care o' my hosses."
+
+While he was speaking Buster Beggs had come up behind Horsehair and
+placed something attached to a dark string on the box, between the
+driver's feet. It was an imitation snake, made of rubber and colored
+up to look very natural.
+
+"Oh my, look at the snake!" yelled several, in pretended alarm.
+
+"Where? where?" yelled Horsehair.
+
+"There, right between your feet! He's going to bite you on the leg!"
+
+"Take care, that's a rattler sure!"
+
+"If he bites you, Horsehair, you'll be a dead man!"
+
+"Take him off! Take him off!" bawled the carryall driver, and in
+terror he made a wild leap from the packing-box and landed directly on
+the shoulders of two of the students. Then he dropped to the ground,
+rolled over, got up, and ran as fast as his legs could carry him in
+the direction of the stables. A wild laugh followed him, but to this
+he paid no attention.
+
+"Well, we are certainly having a night of it," remarked Dave, after
+the fun had quieted down for a moment. He spoke to Roger.
+
+"Where is Phil?" asked the senator's son.
+
+"Went off with Ben, I think."
+
+"Where to?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"It's queer how much they keep together lately; isn't it?" continued
+Roger.
+
+"Oh, I don't know. Of course that affair with Haskers may have
+something to do with it," answered our hero, slowly.
+
+"I wish Haskers would leave this school, Dave."
+
+"Oh, it won't make much difference to us, if we graduate, whether he
+stays or not."
+
+"I know that. But, somehow, I don't think he is a good man to have
+here, even if he is a learned instructor. He never enters into the
+school spirit, as Mr. Dale does."
+
+"Well, we can't all be alike."
+
+"Would you keep him, if you were in Doctor Clay's shoes?"
+
+"I hardly think so. Certainly not if I could find another teacher
+equally good."
+
+The boys walked on until they found themselves at the last bonfire of
+the line, close to where the school grounds came to an end. Here was
+a hedge, and beyond were the woods reaching up from the river.
+
+"Nobody down by this bonfire," remarked Dave. "Say, this is careless
+work," he added. "The wind might shift and set the woods on fire."
+
+"I didn't think they'd start a fire so far from the others," answered
+his chum.
+
+"Let us kick it into the water," suggested our hero, and this they
+started to do, when, unexpectedly, a voice hailed them, and they saw a
+student sitting in a tree that grew in the hedge which separated the
+campus from the woods.
+
+"Let that fire alone!" the youth called, angrily.
+
+"Why, it's Nat Poole!" exclaimed Roger, in a low voice. "Whatever is
+he doing in that tree?"
+
+"I am sure I don't know," returned Dave.
+
+"Is he alone?"
+
+"He seems to be."
+
+"Do you hear what I say?" went on the money-lender's son. "Leave that
+fire alone."
+
+"Did you build it?" asked Dave.
+
+"I did, and I want you to leave it alone."
+
+"All right, Nat, if you say so," answered Roger. "We thought it had
+been abandoned and that it might set fire to the woods."
+
+To this Nat Poole did not reply. Plainly he was annoyed at being
+discovered in his present position. Dave and Roger looked around, to
+see if anybody else was in the vicinity, and then, turning, walked in
+the direction of the other bonfires.
+
+"What do you make of that, Dave?" asked the senator's son, presently.
+
+"It looked to me as if Nat was waiting or watching for somebody,
+Roger."
+
+"So it did. The question is, Who was it?"
+
+"I don't know. But I've got something of an idea."
+
+"Some of the students?"
+
+"No. That wild man."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+PLANS FOR A SPREAD
+
+
+"That wild man?" exclaimed the senator's son, stopping short to stare
+at Dave.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How do you make that out?"
+
+"Because I think Nat is interested in the fellow, although just how I
+won't pretend to say. But you'll remember how excited he got when he
+found out that the wild man called himself the King of Sumatra."
+
+"Oh, I see. You think he knows the fellow and thought that the bonfire
+might attract him to the place."
+
+"Yes. I've heard it said that crazy folks were sometimes attracted by
+the sight of fire. Maybe Nat has heard the same and wants to see if it
+will work in the case of this man."
+
+"Shall we go back and see what happens?" suggested Roger.
+
+Dave mused for a moment.
+
+"Would it be just right to play the spy, Roger?"
+
+"Well, this isn't playing the spy in the ordinary sense of the term,
+Dave. That wild man ought to be locked up."
+
+"But it may not be the wild man he is looking for."
+
+"Oh, let us go back a little while, anyway," urged the senator's son.
+
+They retraced their steps until within fifty feet of the bonfire and
+then walked to the shelter of the hedge. They thought they had not
+been seen, but they were mistaken.
+
+"Humph! so you think you are going to spy on me, after all!" cried a
+voice, and Nat Poole came towards them, with a deep frown on his
+face.
+
+"It's rather queer you are in the tree," answered Roger, somewhat
+sharply.
+
+"It's my affair, not yours, Roger Morr!" roared the money-lender's
+son. Then, without another word, he walked to the bonfire, kicked the
+blazing sticks into the river, and strode off in the direction of the
+Hall.
+
+"He's good and mad," was Roger's comment.
+
+"And we didn't learn anything, after all," added our hero.
+
+Dave and his chum rejoined the merry throng at the other bonfires. But
+the celebration in honor of the baseball victory was practically at an
+end, and a little later the students retired, to skylark a little in
+the dormitories, and then settle down for the night.
+
+A week passed, and Dave stuck to his studies as persistently as ever.
+During that time he sent off several letters, and received a number in
+return, including one from Jessie, which he treasured very highly and
+which he did not show to his chums.
+
+"Here is news of Link Merwell," said Luke Watson, one day, as he came
+along with a letter. "It's from a friend of mine who knows Merwell. He
+says he saw Link in Quebec, Canada, at one of the little French hotels
+in the lower town."
+
+"What was Merwell doing?" questioned Dave, with interest.
+
+"Nothing much, so my friend writes. He says Link was dressed in a blue
+suit and wore blue glasses, and he thought his hair was dyed."
+
+"Evidently doing what he could to disguise himself," was Phil's
+comment.
+
+"My friend writes that he saw Merwell only one evening. The next day
+he was missing. He made inquiries and says he was at the hotel under
+the name of V. A. Smith, of Albany, New York."
+
+"He does not dare to travel around under his own name," remarked
+Shadow. "Say, that puts me in mind of a story," he went on,
+brightening up. "Once a chap changed his name, because----"
+
+"Say, cut it out," interrupted Phil. "We want to hear about Merwell."
+
+"There isn't any more to tell," said Luke. "My friend tried to find
+out where he had gone but couldn't."
+
+"He must be having a lonely time of it--trying to keep out of the
+hands of the law," murmured Dave.
+
+"And maybe he hasn't much money," said Buster. "His father may have
+shut down on him."
+
+Gus Plum listened to all this conversation without saying a word. But
+down in his heart the former bully of Oak Hall was glad that he had
+cut away from Merwell and Jasniff, and turned over a new leaf, and he
+resolved then and there that, come what might, he would never again
+turn aside from the path of right and honor.
+
+"Say, why don't you listen to my story?" pleaded Shadow, and then
+related a somewhat rambling tale of a man who had changed his name
+and, later on, lost some property because of it.
+
+Another day slipped by and it was one of particular interest to Dave
+and Roger, for in the morning they made up the last of the back
+lessons imposed upon them by Job Haskers. They had done exceedingly
+well, but the harsh teacher gave them little credit. Phil and Ben had
+still three days' work, but Professor Haskers said nothing of this.
+
+"He doesn't dare," declared the shipowner's son.
+
+"That's right," chuckled Ben. "We could give him a good black eye
+before this whole school if we wanted to."
+
+Dave had already finished up the back lessons for the other teachers,
+so he was now free to spend his time on what was ahead of him. He was
+as enthusiastic as ever to make a record for himself, and pitched in
+with a will, and his enthusiasm was caught by Roger, who also resolved
+to do his best.
+
+"Whoop! hurrah! What do you think of this?" came from Phil, late one
+afternoon, after the mail had been distributed. "Somebody hold me
+down! I guess I'm going to fly! Or maybe I'm only dreaming!" And he
+began to caper around gayly.
+
+"What is it all about, Phil?" asked Dave. "Hit your funny-bone?"
+
+"Money, boys, money! That's what it is about," replied the shipowner's
+son. "I've got five thousand dollars, all my own!"
+
+"Five thousand dollars!" gasped Buster.
+
+"All your own?" queried Gus Plum.
+
+"Where did you get it?" asked another.
+
+"Why, it's this way," answered Phil, when he could calm down a
+little. "About two years ago a great-uncle of mine died, leaving
+considerable money. He was interested in various enterprises and his
+death brought on legal complications and some litigation. He left his
+money to a lot of heirs, including myself. My father and I never
+thought we'd get anything--thought the lawyers and courts would
+swallow it all. But now it seems that it has been settled, and yours
+truly gets five thousand dollars in cash."
+
+"When do you get it, Phil, right away?" asked Buster.
+
+"Well,--er--I, of course, don't get it until I am of age. It's to go
+in the bank."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"Won't you get any of it until then?" asked Shadow. "Your dad might
+let you have a little, just to celebrate----"
+
+"That's just it--just what he has done!" cried Phil. "I've got---- But
+wait," cried the shipowner's son, interrupting himself. "I'll plan
+this thing out. You shall all be my guests later on," he added,
+mysteriously.
+
+"Will you give a spread?" asked Chip Macklin.
+
+"Don't ask questions, only wait," returned Phil. And that was all he
+would say on the point, although he talked freely about his
+inheritance.
+
+The next morning Phil and Ben were seen in earnest conversation, and
+that afternoon the two boys left the school as soon as they could get
+away, bound on an errand to Oakdale.
+
+"We ought to get a dandy spread for a dollar or a dollar and a half a
+head," said Phil, as they hurried along. "And twelve at a dollar and a
+half will be only eighteen dollars."
+
+"The music will cost something," said Ben.
+
+"Yes, I'm counting on two pieces, a harp and a violin, for ten
+dollars. That's the price Professor Smuller charges."
+
+The boys were bound for the Oakdale Union House, a new hotel which had
+just been opened by a man named Jason Sparr. It was a nice resort,
+without a bar, and catered to the better class of people, including
+the students at Oak Hall and at the Military Academy.
+
+The boys found the hotel proprietor glad to see them, and willing to
+set any kind of a spread that they were able to pay for. Trade was not
+yet brisk, and Jason Sparr said he would do his best to serve them. He
+was a smooth, oily man, and a fellow who wanted all that was coming to
+him.
+
+"I can set you an elegant table for eighteen dollars for twelve," said
+he. "I'll give you oysters, fish, two kinds of meat, several
+vegetables, salad, ice-cream, coffee, and also nuts, cake, olives,
+celery, and other fixings."
+
+"That's the talk!" cried Phil, enthusiastically. "Just make a nice
+spread of it, and you can have all our trade in the future."
+
+"You'll be well pleased," answered Jason Sparr.
+
+"Can we have a private dining-room?"
+
+"To be sure--the blue room over yonder," and the hotel man showed the
+boys the apartment.
+
+"I want some flowers, too," said Phil. "You can put two dollars' worth
+of roses on the table."
+
+"Very well--that will make an even twenty dollars."
+
+"When do you want me to pay?"
+
+"Such spreads are usually paid for in advance," answered Jason Sparr,
+shrewdly. He did not intend to take any chances with schoolboys.
+
+"All right, here is your money," answered the shipowner's son, and
+brought forth one of the two crisp twenty-dollar bills his father had
+mailed to him, with the good news of his fortune.
+
+"Tell him about the music," suggested Ben.
+
+"Oh, yes, I thought I'd have Professor Smuller furnish some
+music--harp and violin."
+
+"Fine! They can sit in the alcove, and we'll put some of our palms
+around them," returned Jason Sparr.
+
+"Remember, this is for next Saturday night, seven o'clock sharp," said
+Phil.
+
+"I've got it down," returned the hotel proprietor, as he wrote in his
+book.
+
+"And don't say anything to anybody about it. I want to surprise my
+friends."
+
+"Very well, mum's the word," and the hotel man looked very wise and
+knowing.
+
+Leaving the place, Phil and Ben sought out the home of Professor
+Smuller, a violinist, who, with a friend who played the harp, often
+furnished music for dances and other occasions.
+
+"Yes, yes, I can furnish music," said the violinist. "Just tell me
+what you want." Business was slow and he was glad to get any sort of
+an engagement.
+
+The matter was explained, and the professor promised to be on hand and
+bring the harpist with him. He said he could play anything the
+students desired, including the well-known school songs. He would fill
+the engagement for the boys for eight dollars, although his regular
+price was ten. But he would have to have cash in advance.
+
+Again Phil paid out his money, and then, the business concluded, he
+and Ben left the professor's home and hurried along the road leading
+to Oak Hall.
+
+"Have you made up your list yet?" asked Ben, when nearing the school.
+
+"Not quite. I'll have Dave and Roger and Shadow and Buster, of course.
+I'll have to leave out some fellows, but that can't be helped. I
+can't afford a spread for the whole school."
+
+"Of course you can't."
+
+"I think I'll have Luke and Sam, and maybe Gus and Chip."
+
+As the boys drew closer to the school Ben had to stop to fix his shoe.
+Both sat down on some rocks, at a turn in the road. They were about to
+go on again when somebody made the turn of the road, coming from the
+town. It was Nat Poole.
+
+"Hello! you been to town?" cried Ben, good-naturedly.
+
+"Yes," answered the money-lender's son. "Haven't I a right to go if I
+want to?" he added, and then hurried on ahead of them.
+
+"Rather peppery," mused Ben. "Say, Phil, there is one fellow you won't
+invite, and I know it."
+
+"Right you are, Ben," was the ready answer. "All I ask of Nat Poole
+is, that he leave me alone."
+
+But Nat was not to leave Phil alone, as events were quickly to prove.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE CABIN ON THE ISLAND
+
+
+"Dave, come on out for a row. You haven't been on the river this
+year."
+
+It was Gus Plum who spoke. He was out in one of the craft belonging to
+Oak Hall, and hailed our hero as the latter was strolling along the
+river-bank.
+
+"All right, Gus!" Dave cried, cheerily. "I don't know but that a try
+at the oars will do me good, after the hard studying I've been
+doing."
+
+"You are bound to get a high-water mark this term, aren't you?" went
+on Gus Plum, as he brought the rowboat up to the dock, so that Dave
+might get in.
+
+"I'd like to graduate with honor, yes."
+
+"What are you going to do after you leave here, Dave?" went on the big
+youth, as the two rowed up the river.
+
+"I don't know yet. Have you made up your mind?"
+
+"Oh, I think I'll go into business, but I am not sure."
+
+"You won't try for college?"
+
+"No. You see, I don't make much of a fist at learning, so what's the
+use? But I love business--buying and selling things."
+
+The two boys continued at the oars until the vicinity of Oak Hall was
+left far behind.
+
+"If we only had a power-boat we might run up to Squirrel Island,"
+remarked Gus.
+
+"Perhaps Nat Poole will lend you his motor-boat," suggested our hero,
+with a little grin.
+
+"Humph! I'd not ask him," returned the big youth, promptly. "I am done
+with Nat Poole. I want to stick to my new friends." And the former
+bully of the school fairly beamed on Dave, who had done so much to
+make him reform.
+
+"Have you seen the motor-boat this season, Gus?"
+
+"Yes, Nat got it out two days ago. I think he is on the river now."
+
+The boys rowed on, until they came to a bend where there was something
+of a cove. As they rounded the point they heard the steady put-put! of
+a gasoline engine not far off.
+
+"There is Nat's craft now!" cried our hero, and pointed ahead.
+
+"He's all alone," was Plum's comment. "He can't have many friends
+these days, or he'd have some of them along."
+
+"I'd hate to be without friends, Gus, shouldn't you?"
+
+"Yes, indeed! But it's Nat's own fault. If he'd only drop his
+important airs and be more sociable, he'd get along all right."
+
+On and on rowed the two students. It was a clear, balmy day, and they
+hated to return to the school until it was absolutely necessary.
+
+"Let us row around Smith Island," suggested our hero, mentioning a
+small place in the middle of the stream, so named after a farmer who
+owned it. It was a rocky and somewhat barren spot, and seldom visited
+by anybody but fishermen.
+
+"All right, but we want to beware of the rocks," cautioned the big
+youth.
+
+The rowboat was headed up the stream, and soon they came in sight of
+the island. On one side were a number of bushes, overhanging the
+river.
+
+"Hello! look there!" cried Dave, a few minutes later, and pointed to
+the bushes.
+
+"What do you see?"
+
+"A motor-boat. I think it is Nat Poole's."
+
+"Is that so? What brought him here?" questioned Gus, with interest.
+
+"I am sure I don't know. But it's his boat, I am sure of that," went
+on Dave, after another look at the craft.
+
+"See anything of Nat?"
+
+"No, the boat is empty."
+
+"Let us row in a little closer and see what he is doing," suggested
+Gus.
+
+"He'll say we were spying on him."
+
+"Humph! Haven't we as much right as he has to visit the island?"
+
+"Of course."
+
+"Then what is the use of keeping away? He may be waiting to play some
+trick, or something like that."
+
+"Oh, I think not, Gus. Probably he just visited the island out of
+curiosity. But I'll go in if you say so."
+
+Slowly, so as to avoid the many rocks in that vicinity, the two
+students brought the rowboat close up to the motor-craft. They looked
+into the bushes and along the rocks beyond, but saw nothing of Nat.
+
+"Shall we call to him?" asked Gus.
+
+"What for? I don't want to see him."
+
+"Neither do I. His boat is tied good and fast. He must expect to stay
+on the island quite a while."
+
+The two boys rowed on, past the motor-boat. Then, as they turned a
+point of rocks, Dave gave a start.
+
+"Well, of all things!"
+
+"What is it, Dave?"
+
+"Look yonder--in between those bushes!"
+
+"Why, it's a rowboat."
+
+"Exactly, Gus, and do you see how it is painted, drab with blue
+stripes?"
+
+"Of course--a pretty ugly boat, I think."
+
+"Gus, that is the very rowboat used by that wild man--the one he was
+in when he got away from us that day!"
+
+"Do you really mean it?" gasped the big boy, staring hard at the
+craft.
+
+"I certainly do--I'd know that boat in a hundred. I never saw another
+just like it."
+
+"If that's the case, maybe the wild man is on the island!"
+
+"Just what I was thinking," answered Dave. "And I was thinking, too,
+that----" He stopped short.
+
+"What?"
+
+"Don't you remember how Nat was so anxious to know all about the wild
+man? And how upset he seemed to be when he heard that the fellow
+called himself the King of Sumatra?"
+
+"Yes, I remember that. Do you think he came here to find the man?"
+demanded Gus, quickly.
+
+"It looks so to me."
+
+"My gracious, Dave, I think you are right! Say, there is something
+mysterious about all this!" cried Gus.
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"Let us go ashore by all means and see what Nat is up to," urged the
+big youth.
+
+Dave was more than willing, now that he had discovered the rowboat
+used by the wild man. Perhaps this island was the home of that
+mysterious individual. If so, what was the money-lender's son doing
+there? Had he business with the strange creature?
+
+"Maybe we'd better not make any noise," suggested Gus, as the boat was
+turned in to a convenient landing-place. To this Dave did not reply,
+but they landed as silently as possible. Then the rowboat was hauled
+up out of sight between the bushes.
+
+From the craft used by the wild man a rude path ran up from the shore
+to the rocks beyond. A short distance from the shore the boys saw the
+marks of a wet foot, coming from the direction where lay the
+motor-boat.
+
+"That was made by Nat--he got his left foot wet," said Gus.
+
+"I think so myself," answered our hero.
+
+They followed the marks left by the wet foot over the rocks. They
+headed for the upper end of the island, where there was a small grove
+of straggly cedar trees. Here the marks faded away completely.
+
+"Well, we know he came this way, anyhow," remarked Gus. "He can't be
+very far off, for the island isn't very big."
+
+"I see a rude log cabin!" exclaimed Dave, and pointed through the
+cedars. "Maybe that is where the wild man lives."
+
+"If it is, we want to go slow, Dave. He may attack us."
+
+"But what of Nat, if he is there?"
+
+"He may know the man and have some influence over him."
+
+"I hardly think anybody could have any influence over that man. He is
+as crazy as can be, and not to be trusted."
+
+The two youths approached the old log cabin slowly, keeping as much as
+possible in the shelter of the trees. Nobody was in sight, nor did any
+sound reach their ears.
+
+Presently the students found themselves within fifty feet of the
+cabin, the door of which stood half open. Each looked at the other.
+
+"I'm going ahead," said Dave, resolutely. He and his companion had
+provided themselves with sticks, and Gus had also picked up two
+stones.
+
+"Oh! oh! oh!" came of a sudden, to their startled ears. "Oh dear me!"
+
+"It's Nat!" ejaculated Dave. "Something has happened to him!"
+
+"Maybe the wild man attacked him," added Gus.
+
+"We'll soon see," cried Dave, and started forward on a run.
+
+Soon our hero was at the door of the cabin, which he pushed wide open.
+Inside all was dark, for it was growing late, and the rude structure
+boasted of but one small window, stuffed with cedar boughs to keep out
+the wind.
+
+"Nat, where are you?" cried Dave, as his eyes sought to pierce the
+semi-darkness.
+
+"Who--who is that calling me?" came, in surprise, from the center of
+the cabin.
+
+"It is I--Dave Porter! Where are you, and what happened? Where is the
+wild man?"
+
+"Oh, I'm caught fast--in a trap!" groaned the money-lender's son. "Oh,
+help me out! My ankle is almost broken!"
+
+"But the wild man--?" queried Gus, who was close behind our hero.
+
+"I--I don't know where he is," gasped Nat. "Oh, say, won't you please
+help me? My ankle is fast in a trap! Oh, how it hurts!"
+
+"Wasn't the wild man here?" asked Dave, as he got out his match-box to
+strike a light.
+
+"No--at least, I haven't seen him."
+
+Dave soon had a match lit, and with it set fire to a cedar bough
+placed in the rude fireplace of the cabin. By the glare of this light
+he and Gus looked around them and at their fellow-student.
+
+The cabin was unfurnished excepting for a rude bench and a board
+placed on some piles of stones for a table. In the fireplace were a
+kettle and a frying-pan, and on the table the remains of a scanty meal
+of crackers, eggs, and apples. A tin pail, half filled with water, was
+also handy.
+
+When Dave and Gus turned their attention to Nat Poole they had to
+stare in wonder. Nat sat on the floor, nursing a bruised ankle that
+was caught fast between the jaws of an old-fashioned steel
+animal-trap. The trap was chained to the floor, and the release chain
+ran to a corner of the fireplace, several feet beyond the sufferer's
+reach.
+
+"However did this happen?" asked Gus, although he and our hero could
+easily guess the answer to the question.
+
+"Help me get loose first," groaned poor Nat. "This thing is sawing
+down to the bone."
+
+Dave saw the release chain, which was held firm by a hook. Stepping
+over, he unhooked it, and then it was an easy matter to pry the jaws
+of the steel-trap apart. As soon as this was done, Nat rose slowly to
+his feet, making a wry face as he did so.
+
+"I'll be lame for life--I know I will!" he groaned. "Oh dear, how it
+hurts!"
+
+"You take care that you don't get blood-poisoning from it," warned
+Gus. "When you get home wash it well, and put some peroxide of
+hydrogen, or something like that on it."
+
+"Blood-poisoning! Oh dear!" and Nat gave another groan.
+
+"Shall we help you back to your boat?" asked Dave.
+
+"If you will."
+
+"Where is the wild man?" questioned Gus, looking around.
+
+"I don't know, and I don't care--just now," answered Nat Poole.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE BANDANNA HANDKERCHIEF
+
+
+Nat Poole could hardly walk on the injured leg, so Dave and Gus
+supported him as the three left the rude cabin and headed for the
+shore of the island.
+
+"Do you know where the wild man is?" repeated Gus, who had not been
+satisfied by the reply given to the question before.
+
+"I do not," snapped the money-lender's son, with a touch of his former
+tartness. "I haven't seen him."
+
+"But you know that cabin is where he lives," put in our hero.
+
+"I thought so--but I wasn't sure of it."
+
+"Did you see him come ashore, Nat?"
+
+"No--that is, not to-day. I saw him land here yesterday."
+
+"And that is what brought you here to-day?" remarked Gus.
+
+"Yes, if you must know," was the somewhat cold answer.
+
+"See here, Nat, do you know this wild man?" asked Dave, abruptly.
+
+"Me? Know him? How should I know him?" demanded the money-lender's
+son, but his apparent astonishment did not, somehow, ring nor look
+true.
+
+"That is what I wanted to find out."
+
+"I don't know him--at least, I don't think I do. I've never seen him
+close enough to make sure. Maybe he's some fellow who belongs around
+here. I wanted to find out about him--just as everybody else wants to
+find out, that's all."
+
+"Want to have him caught and placed in an asylum?" asked Gus.
+
+"It's not my business to place him anywhere," cried Nat, hastily. "For
+all we know, he may be harmless."
+
+"Not when he stops young ladies on the road and catches folks in
+steel-traps," answered our hero, with a faint smile.
+
+"Well, that's right, too," grumbled the money-lender's son. "Maybe he
+ought to be in an asylum."
+
+"I think he is on this island now," went on Dave. "His rowboat is
+here, anyway."
+
+"Say, I'll tell you what we can do!" cried Gus. "Take his boat with
+us! Then he can't get away, and we can send the authorities over here
+to get him."
+
+"That's an idea, Gus!" cried Dave. "We'll do it."
+
+"Would that be fair to the man?" asked Nat. "He--er--he might starve
+to death--or try to swim to shore and get drowned."
+
+"He can't starve to death in one night, and I don't think he'll drown
+himself. The authorities can come over here early in the morning and
+round him up, if he is here."
+
+"I--er--I don't think much of your plan," murmured Nat, and seemed
+much disturbed.
+
+In about a quarter of an hour the boys reached the island shore, at
+the spot where Nat's motor-boat was tied up. They helped him get in
+and start up the engine. He had been told how they had come to the
+island.
+
+"If you want to, you can tie your boat fast to the stern and ride back
+with me," he said.
+
+"All right, Nat, we'll do it," answered Dave. "It is getting rather
+late and it's a pretty stiff row to the school."
+
+The motor-craft was started up and sent along in the direction where
+the boys had left the Oak Hall rowboat. Their course took them past
+the spot where the wild man's boat had been tied up.
+
+"Why, look, it's gone!" cried Gus, standing up and pointing to the
+place.
+
+"True enough," answered our hero. "He must have gone off in it while
+we were up to the cabin."
+
+"He can't be very far away, Dave."
+
+The boys looked up and down the river, but could catch no trace of the
+missing rowboat or the wild man. In the meantime, the motor-craft was
+moving forward, where the other boat had been beached among the
+bushes.
+
+"That is gone, too!" ejaculated Dave. "He has taken our boat!"
+
+"Oh, do you really think so?" asked Gus. He felt that he was
+responsible for the craft, as he had taken it from the school
+boathouse.
+
+"I certainly do think so," said Dave. "It was a neat trick to play."
+
+"It's a wonder he didn't take the motor-boat, too."
+
+"Maybe he didn't know how to run the boat and it was too heavy to
+start without the engine."
+
+"I guess you are right!" came suddenly from Nat. "Look here!"
+
+He had stooped down to pick something up from the grating on the
+motor-boat's bottom. If was a torn and dirty bandanna handkerchief.
+
+"The wild man's!" cried Dave. "I remember it."
+
+"I am glad he didn't get away with my boat," returned the
+money-lender's son, drawing a deep breath. "I'll keep this
+handkerchief to remember him by."
+
+"Is it marked in any way?" questioned our hero. "Perhaps it has his
+name or initials on it."
+
+"Oh, I don't think so," returned Nat. "Let us hurry up and get back to
+the school. If we are late, old Haskers will be after us."
+
+"Go on and run the boat as fast as you please, Nat," answered Dave.
+"But I want to look at that handkerchief."
+
+Rather unwillingly, the money-lender's son passed the bandanna over.
+It was now growing so dark that Dave could see but little.
+
+"Wait, I'll light a match," suggested Gus, and did so, and by the
+protected but flickering flare our hero looked the handkerchief over.
+In one corner there was a faint stamping.
+
+"Looks like 'Rossmore Sanitarium' to me," said Dave, slowly. "Or it
+may be 'Bossmore' or 'Crossmore.' The beginning is too faded to be
+sure."
+
+"Bossmore Sanitarium?" queried Nat, and then he became silent and
+thoughtful. A little later he asked for the bandanna and placed it in
+his pocket.
+
+The run in the motor-boat to the school dock did not take long. As
+soon as Nat's craft was properly housed, Dave and Gus assisted the
+money-lender's son up the walk and across the campus.
+
+"I suppose I've got to report the loss of the rowboat," said Gus,
+ruefully.
+
+"It wasn't your fault, Gus," answered Dave. "I'll go with you to
+Doctor Clay."
+
+"I can't go with my lame foot," put in Nat, and he hobbled up to his
+dormitory, eyed by several curious students, who wanted to know how he
+had gotten hurt.
+
+The boys found the master of Oak Hall getting ready for supper. He
+looked at them inquiringly as they entered his study, in answer to his
+invitation.
+
+"Well! well!" he exclaimed, after listening to their story. "This is
+certainly odd! I trust Poole was not seriously hurt."
+
+"I think he was more scared than hurt," answered Dave. "The trap
+scratched his ankle, that's all. I am sure it is not sprained or
+broken."
+
+"But the rowboat----" put in Gus. "I didn't mean----"
+
+"Do not worry about that, Plum. It was not your fault. I am glad the
+wild man did not harm you. I think you got off well. After this you
+must be careful about how you go out after this remarkable creature."
+
+The master of the school then asked for more particulars of the
+occurrence, and said he would notify the town authorities about the
+loss of the rowboat, and ask that a general hunt take place for the
+wild man.
+
+"They ought to be able to round him up sooner or later," he added.
+
+There was considerable excitement in the school when it was learned
+that the wild man had been heard of again. The boys looked for the
+strange individual and so did the town authorities and many farmers,
+but nothing came of the search. Nat was called on to exhibit the
+bandanna handkerchief and did so. Nobody could make out the first part
+of the name on it, for the handkerchief showed a small hole where the
+letters should be.
+
+"That is queer," said Dave, to Roger and Phil, when he heard of this.
+"That handkerchief did not have a hole there when I looked at it."
+
+"Maybe Nat put the hole there," returned the senator's son.
+
+"Why would he do that?" questioned Phil.
+
+"So that nobody would know what the name of the sanitarium really was.
+I believe with Dave that Nat knows the man, or knows about him, and is
+trying to keep something a secret."
+
+"Hum! Maybe you are right," mused the shipowner's son.
+
+Phil had perfected all his arrangements for his spread at the hotel,
+and his guests for that occasion had been duly invited and all had
+accepted the invitation. It had been arranged with Mr. Dale that the
+boys should drive to the hotel in the school carryall, and Horsehair
+was to have his supper in town and, later on, bring them home. No
+secret was made of the affair, for this was not necessary.
+
+"I am only sorry for one thing," said Phil to Dave. "That is that I
+can't have the whole school there. But that would go beyond my
+purse."
+
+"Well, you'll have enough, Phil, to insure a good time," answered our
+hero.
+
+The night was clear, with numberless stars glittering in the heavens,
+when the carryall drove around to the Hall door and the boys piled in.
+All were in the best of humor, and they left the campus in a burst of
+song.
+
+"I've been saving up for this!" cried Ben. "Haven't eaten a mouthful
+for two days!"
+
+"Say, that puts me in mind of a story," cried Shadow. "Once a poor
+street-boy was invited to a Sunday-school picnic. The ladies fed him
+all he could hold and then some. At last, when he couldn't eat another
+mouthful, and saw some cake and pie and ice-cream going to waste, what
+do you suppose he said?"
+
+"Give it up, Shadow."
+
+"He said, 'Say, missus, please save it fer me, won't yer? I won't eat
+fer a week, honest, an' then I'll come an' finish it all up fer
+yer!'"
+
+"Good for the street-boy!"
+
+"Say, Phil, you won't have to save anything for me! I'll eat my share
+right now!"
+
+"I've been in training for this feed!"
+
+"Shove the horses along, Horsehair; we don't want the soup to get
+cold."
+
+"I'm a-shovin' 'em along," answered the carryall driver. "We'll git
+there in plenty o' time."
+
+"Say, Phil, as far as I am concerned, you can have this affair pulled
+off once a month," remarked Buster.
+
+"Make it once a week," piped in Chip Macklin. And then Luke Watson
+commenced to sing a popular negro ditty and all joined lustily in the
+chorus.
+
+On and on rattled the carryall until the lights of Oakdale shone in
+the distance. The boys continued to sing, while one or two blew freely
+on the tin horns they carried. Here and there somebody would come
+rushing to a window, or door, to learn what was doing.
+
+"It's them Oak Hall boys!" cried one old farmer. "My, but they do have
+high times!"
+
+"So they do," returned his wife. "But they are good boys," she added,
+for some of them had once aided her in capturing a runaway bull.
+
+With a grand flourish the carryall swept around the last corner and
+came to a halt in front of the hotel. Phil had hoped to see some extra
+lights lit and was somewhat disappointed to see only the regular
+lantern burning.
+
+"I told him to light up freely and he said he would," he whispered to
+Dave.
+
+"Maybe he thought you meant the dining-room, Phil."
+
+The students piled out of the carryall and waited for Phil, as host,
+to lead the way into the hotel. All marched up the steps and into the
+broad hallway. There they were confronted by the hotel proprietor, who
+came to meet them in his shirtsleeves. He looked completely
+bewildered.
+
+"Well, we are here for that supper, Mr. Sparr!" cried Phil. "I hope
+you are all ready for us!"
+
+The hotel man looked at the boys in amazement. His jaw dropped. Then
+he gasped out the words:
+
+"Well, I'll be jiggered!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+AT THE HOTEL
+
+
+At once Dave and all the other students who had come to the hotel with
+Phil, expecting a fine spread, saw that something was wrong. They
+looked questioningly at the shipowner's son and at the hotel
+proprietor.
+
+"What's the matter?" demanded Phil, quickly.
+
+"Matter?" repeated Jason Sparr. "That's just exactly what I'd like to
+know."
+
+"You--you are ready for us, aren't you?" went on Phil, with a sudden
+catch in his voice.
+
+"Why should I be ready, when you called the whole thing off?" growled
+the hotel man. "Fine way to do, I must say," he continued, with strong
+anger in his voice.
+
+"Called the whole thing off?" repeated Phil. "Me?"
+
+"Yes, you!" shouted Jason Sparr. "And after we had everything in fine
+shape, too! Say, don't you think my stuff is too good to send to the
+Old Ladies' Home?" he demanded.
+
+"There must be some mistake here, Mr. Sparr," put in our hero. "Phil
+didn't call this spread off. We are here for it, as you can see."
+
+"But he did call it off--this noon," returned the hotel proprietor.
+"And he wasn't a bit nice about it, either. When I asked him what I
+should do with the extras I had ordered he told me to do as I
+pleased--send 'em to the Old Ladies' Home, or throw 'em away! He
+didn't act a bit nice."
+
+"Say, you chump, you!" shouted Phil, growing suddenly angry. "I didn't
+send you any word at all about calling it off. I----"
+
+"Don't you call me a chump, you young rascal!" shouted the hotel man,
+in equal heat. "I got your message over the telephone----"
+
+"I never sent any," interrupted Phil.
+
+"It must be a trick," cried Roger.
+
+"Who played it?" queried another student.
+
+"Maybe this is the work of some of the Military Academy fellows."
+
+"Like as not."
+
+"But how did they learn that Phil was going to give the spread?"
+
+"Give it up."
+
+"Maybe some of our own fellows did it--some who didn't get an
+invitation to attend," suggested Chip.
+
+"Would any one be so mean?" asked Buster.
+
+"Some of them might be," murmured Gus.
+
+"I didn't send you any word," went on Phil, in greater anger than
+ever.
+
+"Well, I got word, and so did Professor Smuller. He was mad, too,
+because he lost another job taking yours."
+
+"Why didn't you make sure the word was sent by Mr. Lawrence?" demanded
+Ben. "You could have done that easily enough."
+
+"I didn't think that was necessary. This fellow said----"
+
+"I tell you I didn't send word!" shouted Phil, growing more angry
+every instant. "You might have known it was a trick."
+
+"Of course, he might have known," added Ben. He lowered his voice.
+"Say, Phil, if he doesn't give us the supper make him give your money
+back."
+
+"Sure he's got to give me the money back," cried the shipowner's son.
+
+"See here, you can't bulldoze me!" cried the hotel proprietor. "I've
+had trouble enough as it is. I got ready for this spread and then you
+called it off, and you were mighty sassy about it, too. I've lost a
+lot of money."
+
+A wordy war followed, lasting the best part of a half an hour. Through
+this it was learned that the hotel man had prepared for the spread,
+and so had the professor of music. Just after noon telephone messages
+had come in, calling the whole affair off. Some hot words had passed
+over the wire, and the hotel man was considerably ruffled. The party
+talking to Jason Sparr had said that when the spread did come off it
+would be held elsewhere--intimating that a better place than his hotel
+could be found.
+
+"It's all some trick, to get my business away from me!" stormed the
+hotel man. "I won't stand for it!"
+
+"I didn't send the messages, and I either want the spread or I want my
+money back," declared Phil, stubbornly. And then more words followed,
+until it looked as if there might be a fight. Finally, in a rage,
+Jason Sparr ordered the students from his place.
+
+"All right, we'll go, but you haven't heard the end of this!" cried
+Phil.
+
+"You'll catch it, for treating us so meanly," added Ben.
+
+"Don't you threaten me, or I'll have the law on you!" roared Jason
+Sparr.
+
+"Perhaps I'll call on the law myself," answered Phil, and then, unable
+to control himself, he shook his fist at the hotel man. Then all the
+boys filed out of the place, some bystanders looking on in wonder.
+
+"Well, what do you think of this!" cried Gus, when outside.
+
+"Phil, I wouldn't say anything more just now--you are too excited,"
+said Dave, catching his chum by the arm.
+
+"Yes, but that fellow is as mean as--as dirt!" answered the
+shipowner's son.
+
+"He hasn't any right to keep Phil's money," said one student.
+
+"Then the feast is called off, is it?" said Buster, with something
+like a groan in his voice.
+
+"And somebody is going to have the laugh on us!" added Shadow. "Say,
+this puts me in mind of a story," he added, brightening. "Once some
+boys were going----"
+
+"Oh, stow it, Shadow!"
+
+"This is no time for stories!"
+
+"I'd rather go down to the cemetery and weep."
+
+"Nobody is going to have the laugh on me," cried Phil. "We'll get
+something somewhere."
+
+"Right you are!" cried Dave. "I've got it!" he added. "Let us drive
+over to Rockville and get something at the hotel there. I know the
+proprietor and he's a nice man."
+
+"Better telephone to him first and make sure," suggested Roger.
+
+"I'll do it," said Phil.
+
+The carryall was brought around again and all piled in and drove down
+to a drug store where there was a telephone booth. Into the booth
+went Phil, to communicate with the hotel in Rockville. He came out
+smiling.
+
+"It's all fixed up and I guess we'll have something this time," he
+said. "But just wait; I'll fix that mean Jason Sparr, see if I
+don't!"
+
+"It's quite a drive to Rockville," protested Horsehair, when they told
+the driver what was wanted.
+
+"Never mind, it will do the horses good," cried Roger. "They are
+getting too fat standing still."
+
+"Say, Phil," whispered Dave. "If you haven't got money enough along, I
+can let you have some."
+
+"Good," was the whispered return. "I was going to speak of that, as
+soon as I got a chance."
+
+The affair at the Oakdale hotel had put something of a damper on the
+crowd, and all the talk was of how Jason Sparr had acted and who had
+been mean enough to play such a trick.
+
+"Maybe it was Nat Poole," said Chip.
+
+"What makes you think that?" asked Phil.
+
+"Oh, he is mean enough for anything."
+
+"If Nat did this I'll--I'll mash him!" cried Phil, with energy.
+
+"Can't you find out?" asked Roger.
+
+"I'll try--but most likely the fellow who did it took care to cover up
+his tracks. Sparr didn't know where the messages came from."
+
+On and on rolled the carryall, until the lights of Rockville appeared
+in the distance. By this time all of the students were decidedly
+hungry. They rolled up to the little hotel and those with horns gave a
+couple of shrill blasts.
+
+This time there was a warm welcome by the host. He came out, bowing
+and smiling.
+
+"Did the best I could for you, on such short notice," he said, as they
+entered. "Next time, if you'll only give me a little more time----"
+
+"That's all right, let's have what you've got," cried Buster. He was
+hungry enough to eat anything.
+
+They were ushered into what was usually the private dining-room of the
+little hostelry. The table had been spread out and was tastefully
+decorated with paper chrysanthemums, made by the hotel man's daughter.
+A parlor-lamp and several others shed light on the scene.
+
+"This looks good!" murmured Roger.
+
+"Wait till you see what we get to eat," answered Sam. "It may be
+slim--on such short notice."
+
+But he was agreeably mistaken, the spread was all that could be
+desired. There were oysters on the half-shell, tomato soup, fried
+chicken, mashed potatoes, lettuce salad, olives, and also coffee, pie,
+and various cookies. It was served in home style, by the hotel man's
+daughter and a hired girl.
+
+"Say, this is fine!" cried Buster, smacking his lips.
+
+"Better, maybe, than if we had stayed at the other place," added
+Dave.
+
+"Only we haven't got the music," said Phil. He was glad that matters
+had taken such a nice turn, but still angry over what had gone
+before.
+
+As they had already lost so much time, the boys did not dare linger
+too long over the spread. Horsehair was given something to eat in
+another room, and then they set out on the return. Songs were sung and
+jokes cracked, and Shadow was permitted to tell half a dozen of his
+best stories. Yet, with it all, the edge had been taken off the
+celebration, and Phil knew this as well as anybody, and was
+correspondingly chagrined.
+
+"I'll make that man square up with me, see if I don't," he said to
+Dave, as they arrived at the school. "I'm not going to lose all that
+money."
+
+"Well, be careful of what you do, Phil," warned our hero. "Don't get
+into a fight."
+
+The next day the shipowner's son sent out two sharp letters, one to
+Jason Sparr and the other to Professor Smuller. He stated that he was
+not responsible for the trip-up that had taken place, and demanded his
+money be returned to him, otherwise he would put the matter in the
+hands of the law.
+
+To these letters came speedy replies. The musical professor said he
+was sorry a mistake had been made, and he returned the amount paid to
+him, and he further stated that if he could discover who had played
+the trick he would make that party settle up.
+
+"That's decent of him," said Phil. "I am going to send him back five
+dollars for his trouble." And this he did, much to Professor Smuller's
+satisfaction.
+
+The letter from Jason Sparr was entirely different. He berated Phil
+for the stand taken, and stated that he would pay back nothing. He
+added that he had learned how the crowd had gone to Rockville to dine,
+and said he was satisfied that it was all a trick to get patronage
+away from his hotel. He added that he had had trouble enough with
+people from Oak Hall school and he wanted no more of it.
+
+"I guess I'll have to sue him," growled Phil, on showing the letter to
+Dave and Roger.
+
+"I don't think I'd bother," answered Dave. "Put it down to Experience,
+and let it go at that."
+
+"If you sued him it would cost as much as you'd get, and more," added
+the senator's son.
+
+"Humph! I don't feel like swallowing it," growled Phil. "I'll get it
+out of him somehow."
+
+"He must have lost something--if he got ready for the spread," said
+Dave.
+
+"Oh, I don't think he lost much. He's a close one--to my way of
+thinking," responded the shipowner's son.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE BLOWING UP OF THE BRIDGE
+
+
+"Say, this is something fierce, Dave!"
+
+"I agree with you, Roger. I don't see how we are going to do such a
+long lesson."
+
+"Old Haskers is getting worse and worse," growled Phil. "I think we
+ought to report it to Doctor Clay."
+
+"Just what I think," came from Ben. "He keeps piling it on harder and
+harder. I think he is trying to break us."
+
+"Break us?" queried our hero, looking up from his book.
+
+"Yes, make us miss entirely, you know."
+
+"Why should he want us to do that?" asked Roger.
+
+"Then we wouldn't be able to graduate this coming June."
+
+"Would he be mean enough to do that?" asked Dave.
+
+"I think he would be mean enough for anything," responded Phil. "Oh, I
+am not going to stand it!" he cried.
+
+The boys had just come upstairs, after an extra hard session in their
+Latin class. All were aroused over the treatment received at the hands
+of Job Haskers. He had been harsh and dictatorial to the last degree,
+and several times it had looked as if there might be an outbreak.
+
+The next day the outbreak came. Phil sprang up in class and denounced
+the unreasonable teacher, and Ben followed. Then Dave and Roger took a
+hand, and so did Buster and several others.
+
+"Sit down! Sit down!" cried Job Haskers, growing white in the face.
+"Sit down, and keep quiet."
+
+"I won't keep quiet," answered the shipowner's son. "You are treating
+us unfairly, Mr. Haskers, and I won't stand for it."
+
+"Neither will I," added Ben.
+
+"Sit down, I tell you!" stormed the instructor.
+
+But none of the students obeyed him, and in a minute more the room was
+in an uproar. One of the under-teachers heard it, and quickly sent for
+Doctor Clay.
+
+As the master of Oak Hall strode into the classroom there was a pause.
+He mounted the platform and put up his hand, and soon all became
+quiet.
+
+"Young gentlemen, be seated," he said, in his strict but kindly
+fashion, and instantly every student sat down. Then he turned to the
+teacher. "Mr. Haskers, what is the trouble?" he asked.
+
+"The trouble is that certain students will not learn their lessons,"
+answered Job Haskers, sourly. "I had to take them to task for it."
+
+"Who are those students?"
+
+"Lawrence, Basswood, Porter, Morr, Beggs----"
+
+"That will do for the present. Lawrence, stand up," ordered Doctor
+Clay.
+
+Phil did as requested, and the eyes of the entire class were fastened
+on the shipowner's son.
+
+"Now, Lawrence, what have you to say for yourself?" went on the
+doctor.
+
+In a plain, straightforward manner, Phil told his side of the story.
+Several times Job Haskers wanted to interrupt him, but Doctor Clay
+would not permit this. Then Ben was questioned, and after that the
+master of the school turned to Dave.
+
+"Is your complaint the same, Porter?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"And yours, Morr?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"What have you to say, Beggs?"
+
+"The same. The lessons lately have been altogether too hard--we simply
+can't get through them. We never had such long lessons before."
+
+"I have given them only the regular lessons," put in Job Haskers.
+
+"Ahem! Let us go over them and see what can be done," responded the
+doctor. "If the students are willing to work we do not want to
+overburden them, Mr. Haskers."
+
+A discussion lasting over a quarter of an hour followed, and in the
+end the lessons were cut down, much to the satisfaction of the whole
+class, who felt like cheering the head of the school. The only person
+who was not satisfied was Job Haskers. He was invited to go out with
+the doctor to his private office, and came back some time later,
+looking anything but happy.
+
+"I'll wager he got a calling down!" whispered Phil to Dave. "I hope he
+did."
+
+He was right about the "calling down," as he expressed it. The master
+of Oak Hall had spoken very plainly to the instructor, and given Job
+Haskers to understand that he must get along better with the boys in
+the future, and treat them with more consideration, or he would be
+asked to resign from the staff of the school.
+
+Several days slipped by and during that time Dave paid close attention
+to his lessons. He had also a theme to write on "The Future of Our
+Country," and he devoted considerable time to this, hoping it would
+receive at least honorable mention, even if it did not win the prize
+offered for the best production.
+
+"Come on down to town!" cried Roger, one afternoon, as he rushed in,
+"Big excitement on! Going to blow the railroad up!"
+
+"Blow the railroad up?" queried our hero. "What sort of a joke is
+this, Roger?"
+
+"No joke, at all. You know the old stone bridge over the creek?"
+
+"Sure."
+
+"Well, the railroad wants to get rid of it and do it quickly, so they
+can build another, so the contractors are going to blow the old bridge
+up with dynamite at half-past four o'clock."
+
+"Let's go!" burst out Phil. "It will be a great sight--to see that old
+bridge go up."
+
+"Right you are!" cried Ben.
+
+All the boys were enthusiastic, and in the end fully fifty students
+got permission to go down to Oakdale to see the old stone bridge
+destroyed.
+
+"None of you must go very close," warned Doctor Clay, "for dynamite is
+powerful stuff--eight times more powerful than gunpowder."
+
+"We'll keep away, don't fear about that," answered several.
+
+"Dynamite isn't to be fooled with," added Dave.
+
+"Say, that puts me in mind of a story!" cried Shadow. "A Dutch laborer
+working on the railroad was much annoyed by the other laborers coming
+along and knocking his stiff old derby hat over his eyes. At last he
+got good and mad and when he saw a chance, he stole a stick of
+dynamite from the shanty where it was kept. He stuck the dynamite in
+his hat and then went around to the other laborers. 'Now, chust hit
+dot hat vonce again of you dare!' he said."
+
+"And nobody dared," added Roger, as a general laugh went up.
+
+"I once saw a fellow take a stick of dynamite and burn it like a
+torch," remarked Ben. "It gave me a cold chill to see him do it."
+
+"And it didn't explode?" queried Roger.
+
+"No. But I heard afterwards that if he had struck it ever so lightly,
+it might have blown us all as high as a kite."
+
+"It sure is great stuff," remarked Phil. "Say," he went on suddenly,
+"I wish they were going to blow up old Sparr's hotel instead of the
+bridge."
+
+"So do I," added Ben. "He's about as mean as they make 'em."
+
+"That man ought certainly to have something done to him," was Roger's
+comment.
+
+"Well, he won't make a success of his hotel if he treats everybody as
+he treated Phil," said Dave.
+
+"He doesn't deserve any success," growled the shipowner's son.
+
+When the students arrived in the vicinity of the old bridge they found
+a large crowd assembled, including many acquaintances from Rockville
+Military Academy, and people from the town. Red flags had been placed
+around, and nobody was allowed to get very close to the old
+structure.
+
+"There is where they have the dynamite stored," said Phil, pointing to
+a shanty not far away. "See the sign?"
+
+"That's a good spot to steer clear of," returned Dave, with a grin.
+
+"Oh, I'm not afraid of the stuff," answered the shipowner's son.
+
+In the crowd of men and boys the students became more or less
+separated. There was a great thrill when the word was passed that
+everything was in readiness for the blowing up of the old bridge.
+
+"She's going!" cried Roger to Dave.
+
+Boom! came the dull, heavy roar, and the boys saw the stones of the
+old bridge flying upward in all directions. The ground shook all
+around them, and the water from the creek was splashed on high. A
+great cloud of smoke and dust filled the air. Then came silence,
+followed by a wild cheering from the younger element.
+
+"Certainly a great sight," was Dave's comment.
+
+"Too bad it didn't last longer," sighed Buster.
+
+"It wasn't quite as big as I thought it would be," said Luke. "I
+thought some of the stones would fly about a mile high."
+
+"Good enough for a free exhibition," put in Gus. "Beats fireworks all
+hollow."
+
+The boys walked down to the ruins of the old bridge and hung around
+for the best part of a half an hour. Then, in groups of five or six,
+they walked to town, to look around there before returning to Oak
+Hall. Dave and his chums passed Jason Sparr's hotel. He was on the
+veranda and scowled at them, and Phil and some of the others scowled
+in return.
+
+"Have you done anything about that Sparr matter yet, Phil?" asked one
+of the lads.
+
+"No; but I will soon, you wait and see," was the growled-out reply.
+
+On the main street of the town some of the boys separated, to do a
+little shopping, and then some walked to the school, while others got
+in the carryall that happened to be at hand. As a consequence some of
+the students did not get back to Oak Hall until some time after the
+supper hour.
+
+Dave was alone when he entered the dining-hall and he was surprised to
+see that neither Phil nor Roger was present. Ben was also absent and
+likewise Shadow.
+
+"Didn't some of them come in with you?" he asked of Buster.
+
+"Gus and Luke did," was the reply. "I don't know where the others
+are."
+
+The meal was almost at an end when Phil, Ben, and Roger made their
+appearance. They had but little to say, but Dave could see that
+something was wrong.
+
+"Had another wrangle with Jason Sparr," explained Phil, after the
+meal. "He followed me to one of the stores, and I told him just what I
+thought of him."
+
+"And he threatened to have Phil arrested for defamation of character,"
+added Ben.
+
+"But he didn't dare to do it," declared the shipowner's son.
+
+"Better let him alone," advised Dave. "You'll gain nothing by keeping
+in hot water over it, Phil."
+
+That night all of the boys had to study hard, and consequently they
+retired to their dormitories early. The only exception was Polly Vane,
+who had to go to Oakdale to meet a relative who would stop off but who
+was going away again on the midnight train.
+
+The boys studied until ten o'clock and then retired. Dave was
+completely tired out and his head had hardly touched the pillow when
+he was sound asleep.
+
+He was awakened about two hours later by the sounds of excited
+talking. He opened his eyes to behold Polly Vane standing in the
+dormitory fully dressed, while Phil was sitting on the edge of the
+bed, and Ben and Roger and some others were just rousing up.
+
+"What's going on?" Dave asked, sleepily.
+
+"A whole lot, if what Polly says is true," answered the shipowner's
+son.
+
+"But it is true, upon my word!" cried the girlish student. "I heard
+the explosion myself."
+
+"What explosion?" asked several.
+
+"An explosion in Oakdale, to-night," answered Polly. "Somebody tried
+to dynamite Jason Sparr's hotel!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+A SERIOUS ACCUSATION
+
+
+Instantly there was great excitement in the dormitory, and all of the
+students crowded around Polly, to learn what he might have to say.
+
+"It was this way, don't you know," said the scholarly youth. "I went
+to Oakdale to see my uncle, who stopped off on his trip from Portland
+to St. Louis. He wanted to ask me about some family matters, and he
+didn't have time to come to the Hall. I went down in the buggy----"
+
+"Oh, never mind that, Polly, tell about the explosion," interrupted
+Roger.
+
+"Well, I had just seen my uncle to the midnight train and was getting
+into the buggy to come back when I heard a low boom! coming from the
+direction of Sparr's hotel. The station-master and I were the only
+people around, and I asked him what the noise meant, but he said he
+didn't know. Then he jumped into the buggy with me to find out. We
+drove to the hotel, and there was excitement enough, I can tell you.
+The girls and women folks were screaming wildly and Mr. Sparr and some
+men were running around, not knowing what to do. Soon a crowd began to
+collect, and then we found out that a wing of the building--where the
+dining-room is--had been blown up. Some men from the railroad said it
+had been done by dynamite--the kind used for blowing up that old
+bridge."
+
+"Was anybody hurt?" asked Dave.
+
+"Nobody but an old man who was sleeping in the house next to the
+addition. He got so scared he jumped from an upper window and sprained
+his ankle. Oh, that dining-room is a sight, I can tell you! One end is
+completely gone--the wall away from the main house--and all the tables
+and chairs and ornaments smashed! And the roof is full of holes!"
+
+"How was it done?" questioned Gus.
+
+"The dynamite was placed at the side of the dining-room foundation,
+according to the railroad men, and it was set off by some sort of
+clockwork," answered Polly.
+
+"And who did it?" asked Shadow.
+
+"They don't know, yet. But Sparr suspects Phil. That is why I woke him
+up as soon as I came in," continued the girlish student.
+
+"Suspects me!" exclaimed the shipowner's son.
+
+"Yes. He says you are the only one who would do such a thing--you and
+the crowd who have been backing you up."
+
+"Well, I never!"
+
+"Maybe he means me, too," murmured Ben.
+
+"He does, and all the others in the crowd, too. He thinks it's a plot
+to get square because he wouldn't give Phil his dinner money back."
+
+"I had nothing to do with it," declared Phil, stoutly.
+
+"Nor I," added Ben.
+
+"Well, I am sure I wasn't in it," said Dave. "I didn't dream of such a
+thing."
+
+"Nor did I," added Roger and some others.
+
+The news soon spread through several dormitories, and the boys
+discussed the startling happening in whispers. Phil was greatly
+disturbed.
+
+"I didn't do it, but I know he'll try to fasten it on me," he told
+Dave. He did not add that he had written to his father about the
+affair of the feast and his parent had sent a warning letter back,
+ordering his son to have nothing more to do with Jason Sparr.
+
+The next morning the news was all over the school. Nat Poole heard of
+it, and he and some of his cronies declared it as their opinion that
+Phil and some others were to blame. This brought on a fistic encounter
+between Ben and the money-lender's son, and the latter got a black eye
+in consequence.
+
+"You sha'n't say I did it--or had anything to do with it," said Ben,
+when Nat backed away, having had enough of the battle.
+
+"Humph! just wait till the law has its say!" retorted Nat. "Then maybe
+you'll get what is coming to you!"
+
+Some of the boys wanted to go to town--to see the damaged hotel--but
+Doctor Clay would not permit this. In the meantime the wreckage was
+being cleared away, and the authorities and Jason Sparr were doing
+their best to locate the author or authors of the crime.
+
+Then came a great surprise, in the shape of a letter delivered in a
+mysterious way to the hotel-keeper. He was seated in the hotel office
+in the evening, talking to one of the town constables, when a missive
+was hurled at him through an open window. He dodged at first, fearing
+more dynamite, but when he saw it was only a letter, he picked it up
+and turned it over. It was addressed to him and marked "Private and
+Personal."
+
+"Wonder what this is?" he mused, and walked over to the light to read
+the letter. It was written on a single sheet of paper, in lead pencil,
+and evidently in a disguised hand. It contained but a few lines, as
+follows:
+
+ "If you want to catch the fellows who blew up your hotel have
+ these boys of Oak Hall school arrested at once, Philip Lawrence,
+ Benj. Basswood, David Porter, Roger Morr, and Joseph Beggs. They
+ were together when it was done, and one or more of them surely did
+ it.
+
+ "One Who Knows."
+The hotel-keeper read this letter several times and then stuffed it
+into his pocket. Then he went into the next room and drew from a
+drawer several things wrapped up in a newspaper.
+
+"I am going down to see the squire," he said, to the constable. "You
+can come along, if you want to."
+
+"What was in the letter?"
+
+"The names of the rascals who blew up my hotel."
+
+"What! You don't mean it, Jason!"
+
+"Yes, I do."
+
+"Who sent the letter?"
+
+"That's a secret. But come on, we'll talk it over with Squire
+Thompson. Ain't no time to waste." And then the hotel man went off to
+interview the leading legal light of the town.
+
+The conference at the squire's office lasted the best part of two
+hours. At this Jason Sparr produced the contents of the package,
+several things picked up near the hotel at the time of the
+explosion--a tan glove, somewhat worn, two iron rings, an empty paper
+box marked, "L." in one corner, a whip handle, and a clock-like
+contrivance which had been used to set off the dynamite. He told of
+his trouble with Phil and his chums, of the threats made, and produced
+the letter received so mysteriously.
+
+"Looks kind of plain to me, Squire," he said. "Don't you think so?"
+
+"It isn't for me to say," replied the squire, cautiously. "But if you
+want to swear out warrants for those boys' arrest----"
+
+"Ain't I justified?"
+
+"Sure you are," put in the constable, who happened to be the squire's
+brother-in-law. "I wouldn't waste no time on it." He thought he saw in
+this a job for himself, with some fat fees.
+
+"If you have them arrested, you've got to prove your case," said
+Squire Thompson, slowly. "It's a serious business, Sparr."
+
+"But this letter says they are guilty."
+
+"Lock 'em up and make 'em confess!" broke in the constable. "Give 'em
+the third degree!" he added. He had read something of how city
+criminals were occasionally treated and he wished to air his
+knowledge.
+
+"I'll do it!" cried Jason Spar. "I'll show 'em they can't insult me
+and take away my trade and then try to blow up my hotel! I'll have 'em
+all locked up! Then we can examine 'em one by one, and get 'em
+tangled up and make 'em confess."
+
+After much trouble, the warrants for the arrest of Phil, Ben, Dave,
+Roger, and Buster were made out. The constable wanted to serve them at
+once, but it was decided at the last moment to wait until the next
+morning, to see if any new evidence regarding the crime might be
+forthcoming.
+
+The constable went home, sworn to secrecy, but he had to tell his wife
+and her sister of the affair, and the news got to the ears of a man
+who boarded with them. This fellow, who was named Andy Prime, chanced
+to know Dave quite well, our hero having once done him a favor. Early
+in the morning Prime drove past the school, and seeing Dave on the
+campus, hailed him.
+
+"Come over here, I want to tell you something, Porter," said Prime,
+mysteriously.
+
+"What do you want?" asked Dave, good-naturedly.
+
+"Ride a bit with me, will you? I don't want nobody to hear us," went
+on the man, lowering his voice.
+
+Wondering what was coming, Dave got up on the seat of the man's wagon
+and they drove to the far end of the Oak Hall grounds. There Andy
+Prime told of all he had learned.
+
+"Please don't say I told ye!" he pleaded. "It might git me in
+trouble. But you did me a good turn onct an' I ain't forgot it."
+
+"Thank you, Prime, I won't tell who told me," answered Dave.
+
+"Thet old skinflint o' a Sparr deserved to have his buildin' blown
+up."
+
+"Perhaps. But we didn't do it, I can assure you of that. If Mr. Sparr
+has us arrested, he'll get in hot water," answered our hero; and then
+he got out of the wagon and Andy Prime drove on.
+
+Dave at once carried the news to those immediately concerned. All were
+very indignant, and some were scared.
+
+"Say, I won't stand for being arrested!" cried Phil, in horror. "It's
+too much of a disgrace!"
+
+"My folks would never get over it," added Ben.
+
+"It would just about kill my mother, if I was locked up," came from
+Buster.
+
+"Well, I'll stand it if I have to," said Roger. "But I'll make that
+fellow suffer for it later!" he added, bitterly.
+
+All thoughts of going to school that morning were abandoned by the
+five boys. They talked the situation over, and determined to go down
+the road and await the arrival of the constable, Andy Prime having
+said that Hickson would come by ten o'clock.
+
+"This is awful!" gasped Phil, shaking his head dolefully. "Say, Dave,
+I can't stand it!"
+
+"Wait until we hear what the constable has to say."
+
+"He won't say anything--he'll just drag us to the Oakdale lockup!" put
+in Ben.
+
+"I wonder what my dad will say to that, when he hears of it?" murmured
+Roger. "The newspapers are bound to make a spread of it. 'Son of a U.
+S. Senator Jailed for Blowing Up a Hotel!' or something like that. Oh,
+it makes me sick!"
+
+Plainly the majority of the students were very nervous. The only one
+who kept calm was Dave, and even he was much disturbed. All walked
+along the road, keeping a sharp eye out for the appearance of Paul
+Hickson.
+
+"Here he comes!" cried Phil, as a covered wagon came along the road,
+driven by the keeper of the Oakdale jail. On the front seat beside the
+driver were the constable and Jason Sparr.
+
+"Hi, you boys!" shouted the constable, as the wagon came closer. "I
+want to see you!"
+
+"What do you want?" demanded Dave, stepping to the front.
+
+"We want you, for one!" cried the hotel-keeper. "Be careful, Hickson,
+that none of 'em get away!" he added.
+
+"I don't know one from tudder," said the constable, doubtfully.
+
+"This is just the bunch we are after, unless I am mistaken," went on
+the hotel man. "That is Lawrence there, and Basswood, and this is
+Porter, and I think that is Morr," and he pointed to the various
+students.
+
+"Good enough. Boys, in the name of the law, I call on you to halt,"
+declared the constable, pompously.
+
+"Mr. Sparr, what does this mean?" demanded Dave.
+
+"It means that I am going to have the whole bunch of you arrested!"
+shouted the hotel man, harshly. "You blew up my hotel, and I can prove
+it! I've got the evidence against every one of you! I am going to have
+you arrested right now and sent to prison!" And he shook his fist at
+the boys.
+
+"The evidence against us?" faltered Phil.
+
+"Yes, sir, the plain, clear evidence," went on the hotel-keeper,
+dramatically. "I've got you just where I want you. I am going to send
+every one of you to prison for five or ten years!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE MEETING ON THE ROAD
+
+
+There was an intense silence, following the announcement of Jason
+Sparr that he intended to send Dave and his chums to prison for
+attempting to blow up the hotel. In the meantime the hotel man and the
+constable got down from the seat of the covered wagon.
+
+"I've got the warrants fer the arrest, boys," said Constable Hickson,
+somewhat importantly.
+
+"Mr. Sparr, I'd like a word with you," said Dave, as calmly as he
+could speak under the circumstances.
+
+"I ain't got no more to say than I've said," returned Jason Sparr,
+stubbornly. "You done it, and I can prove it! The constable is going
+to do his duty and arrest you!"
+
+"Dave, I--I won't stand for it!" whispered Phil, hoarsely. "It's
+terrible! I--I can't stand it!" And he began to back away.
+
+"Hi, there! stop!" yelled the hotel man. "Stop him, Hickson! Don't let
+him get away!"
+
+"You sha'n't arrest me for nothing!" cried the shipowner's son, and
+like a flash he turned around and started off on a run.
+
+"Come back here, Phil!" called out Dave. "Come back! You are making a
+mistake by running away!"
+
+But Phil did not hear, nor did Ben and Buster, who had also taken to
+their heels. Roger ran a few steps, then halted, and came back to our
+hero's side.
+
+"You are right, Dave," he said. "It's best to face the music."
+
+Phil, Ben, and Buster had turned towards Oak Hall. Phil was in the
+lead, but the others soon caught up to him.
+
+"Wha--what are you go--going to d--do?" panted Ben.
+
+"I'm not going to let them arrest me!" answered Phil. "I didn't do it,
+and I'm not going to jail."
+
+"Let us hide until we can get our folks to help us," suggested Buster.
+The thought of going to a lockup filled him with dread.
+
+"I'm going to notify my folks, too," said Ben.
+
+"The trouble is, I don't know where my folks are just now," came from
+the shipowner's son. "My father went on a trip on one of his vessels
+and mother is visiting relatives."
+
+The boys had kept on running on the road. But now, as they saw the
+constable after them, they turned and dashed into a side-path leading
+to the river.
+
+"A motor-boat!" cried Ben, a few seconds later.
+
+"It's the Kingsley boat," added Buster. "I know Tom will let us use
+it--he said I could do it once. Let us go across in it."
+
+All leaped on board, and Ben started up the engine while Buster took
+the wheel. There came a put! put! as the fly-wheel was turned over,
+and the little craft, which belonged to a boy living on the
+river-bank, headed out into the Leming River.
+
+In the meantime, while Constable Hickson was running after the
+fugitives, Jason Sparr and the driver of the covered wagon confronted
+Dave and Roger.
+
+"Don't you try to run!" bawled the hotel-keeper.
+
+"I'm armed," added the keeper of the town lockup, suggestively.
+
+"I don't intend to run, Mr. Sparr," answered Dave.
+
+"Why should we run, since we have done nothing wrong?" added the
+senator's son. He tried to follow Dave's example and remain calm, but
+he was tremendously disturbed.
+
+"Did those three fellows do it alone?" queried the hotel man,
+eagerly. "If they did, you had better confess to it, and clear
+yourselves."
+
+"None of us are guilty," answered Dave.
+
+"I know better."
+
+"You do not. Since we didn't do it, Mr. Sparr, I don't see how you can
+prove that we did,--unless you have manufactured some evidence against
+us," went on our hero, pointedly, a new idea coming into his head.
+
+"I ain't manufactured no evidence!" bawled Jason Sparr. "Didn't that
+young rascal of a Lawrence say he'd get square with me, and didn't all
+of you say the same? Wasn't you down to the blowing up of the bridge,
+right where they had all that dynamite stored? Wasn't some of the
+dynamite sticks stolen? Didn't you fellows come right by the hotel
+afterwards? Wasn't the blowing up done by clockwork, made to go off
+hours after it was set? You can't tell me! You are guilty. Besides, I
+got other evidence--I got a letter," added the hotel-keeper,
+shrewdly.
+
+"A letter? About us?"
+
+Jason Sparr nodded.
+
+"Saying we were guilty?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Who wrote it?"
+
+"Never mind that. You're guilty, and you know it. Just wait till
+Hickson comes back with them others and I'll show you a thing or
+two," continued the hotel man, harshly.
+
+"Mr. Sparr, I said I wanted to talk to you, and I do want to," said
+Dave, after a pause. "You will find it to your advantage to listen to
+me. You have got this whole thing settled in your own mind, but you
+are dead wrong. You intend to have us locked up for something we
+didn't do. To have us locked up will blacken our characters and
+blacken the reputation of Oak Hall. My folks are respectable people,
+and so are the folks of the other boys. Do you think they will stand
+for this sort of thing? And do you think Doctor Clay will stand for
+it? If you do, you are greatly mistaken. If you have us arrested on
+this charge, which is absolutely false, I'll get my folks to sue you
+for false imprisonment and defamation of character, and I know the
+other fellows will do the same. And you can rest assured that the
+charges against you will be pushed to the limits of the law."
+
+At this plain talk Jason Sparr's jaw dropped. Several times he was on
+the point of interrupting, but thought better of it.
+
+"Well, now--er----" he stammered when Dave had finished.
+
+"My father is a United States senator," said Roger. "You don't suppose
+he will let a matter like this pass unnoticed? If you do anything to
+besmirch our family name, you'll take the consequences."
+
+"Your father is a United States senator?" faltered Jason Sparr.
+
+"He is, and Dave's father is a rich man, and so is Phil Lawrence's
+father. Of course, our money has nothing to do with it, excepting that
+it will enable us to stand up for our rights in the courts, and get
+able lawyers to defend us. We are innocent of all wrongdoing. If
+anybody is in the wrong it is you, for you cheated Phil Lawrence out
+of the money he advanced to you for that spread we were to have at
+your hotel."
+
+"Cheated him!" cried the hotel-keeper.
+
+"That is what it amounted to, for you took his money and gave him
+nothing in return."
+
+"He called the spread off----"
+
+"He did not, and we can prove it," said Dave, following up what he
+thought looked like an advantage. "Why, if he wanted to do it, Phil
+could have you locked up for swindling."
+
+"What, me? Locked up?" cried the hotel man.
+
+"Certainly. Why not? It's as reasonable as your charge against
+us--more reasonable, in fact, for you kept his money and gave him
+nothing in return," went on our hero, warmly.
+
+"Well, now what do you know about that?" grumbled Jason Sparr, turning
+to the driver of the covered wagon. But the lockup man merely
+shrugged his shoulders. Privately he was of the opinion that the boys
+were not such rascals as had been pictured.
+
+"If those fellows wasn't guilty, why did they run away?" continued
+Jason Sparr, after an awkward pause.
+
+"Because you scared them," responded Roger. "I would have run away
+myself if it hadn't been for Dave."
+
+"Humph!"
+
+All looked along the road. Constable Hickson had disappeared, having
+followed the runaways down to the river. Presently he came back, out
+of breath from his exertions.
+
+"Did you get 'em?" queried the hotel-keeper, eagerly.
+
+"No, they got away in a motor-boat."
+
+"A motor-boat!" repeated Dave and Roger, and looked at each other in
+astonishment.
+
+"Yes, went up the river out of sight," said Paul Hickson. "Too bad!
+But we've got two of 'em, anyway," he added, looking at our hero and
+the senator's son.
+
+"I wanted Lawrence more than I did the others," grumbled Jason Sparr.
+He was doing some deep thinking and his face showed that he was much
+disturbed.
+
+"Mr. Sparr, just remember what I said," remarked Dave, pointedly. "If
+you go ahead, take my word for it, it will cost you dear."
+
+"Say, Hickson, we'll drop this matter for the present," said the
+hotel-keeper, in a low tone.
+
+"Drop it?" ejaculated the constable. "Ain't you goin' to have these
+two took up?"
+
+"Not just now. I--er--I want to get more evidence first, if I can. We
+can get them any time we want them."
+
+"But who is going to pay me for my trouble? I've got them warrants to
+serve right in my pocket, and----"
+
+"I'll fix that up with you," answered the hotel man, in a whisper.
+"Come on. We can come back later." And then the hotel man said
+something to the driver of the wagon. The latter merely nodded and got
+back to his seat. Jason Sparr climbed up beside him, and the constable
+slowly followed.
+
+"I don't understand----" went on the constable; but Jason Sparr merely
+pinched his arm, and he stopped short.
+
+"Just remember, this ain't settled yet!" cried the hotel-keeper, to
+Dave and Roger. "I'm going to look into it a bit deeper before I make
+a move, that's all. I know some of you done it, and I'll have you in
+prison for it yet, see if I don't!" And he shook his head grimly; and
+then the covered wagon was turned around, and the three men drove off
+in the direction of Oakdale.
+
+"Oh, Dave, do you think they'll come back?" cried Roger, when the men
+were out of hearing.
+
+"There is no telling what they will do, Roger. But you can make up
+your mind to one thing--Sparr won't come back until he has more
+evidence than he has at present."
+
+"But how can he get evidence? Surely you don't think Phil and the
+others guilty, even if they did run away."
+
+"No, I think Phil and the others are as innocent as we are. But I
+can't understand some things. Somebody used that dynamite and somebody
+wrote a letter to Sparr about us. The question is, Who was it?"
+
+"Could it be Nat Poole?"
+
+"I don't think Nat would be bad enough to try to blow up a hotel."
+
+"It certainly was an awful thing to do." Roger drew a long breath.
+"What shall we do now, go back to school?"
+
+"We might as well. If we don't, old Haskers will be after us again."
+
+"Do you think Phil and the others will come back?"
+
+"Why not? As soon as they have time to think it over they'll realize
+it is best to face the music," answered Dave.
+
+He and Roger returned to Oak Hall. They had missed one class, but
+fortunately that was one presided over by Mr. Dale, and he readily
+excused them when they said they had had some personal matters of
+importance to attend to, and would explain later.
+
+"It is bound to come out, sooner or later," said Dave to his chum. "So
+we might as well take Doctor Clay and Mr. Dale into our confidence."
+
+"I suppose you are right," answered the senator's son. Nevertheless,
+he heaved a deep sigh, as he thought of what might be the outcome of
+the trouble. What if, after all, Jason Sparr should concoct some sort
+of evidence against them and send them all to prison?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+LOOKING FOR THE RUNAWAYS
+
+
+When Dave and Roger went to the midday meal in the dining-room they
+looked all over for Phil, Ben, and Buster, but the three were not in
+sight.
+
+"Dave, they haven't come back yet."
+
+"So I see," returned our hero, and he was much disturbed. He ate
+sparingly, and the senator's son also had but little appetite for the
+meal.
+
+"Say, what's become of those chaps?" questioned Shadow.
+
+"I'll tell you later," answered Dave. "Don't say anything now--and
+tell the others to keep quiet, too."
+
+But such a happening could not be kept quiet, and soon it was
+whispered around that Phil, Ben, and Buster were missing. This
+presently got to the ears of Andrew Dale, and the head assistant
+teacher sought out Dave for an explanation.
+
+"I understand you went out with Lawrence, Basswood, and Beggs this
+morning, Porter," said the teacher. "They are not yet back. Do you
+know where they went?"
+
+"They went off in a motor-boat, that is all I know about that part of
+it, Mr. Dale. Roger Morr and I would like to speak to you and Doctor
+Clay in private. It is very important," went on our hero.
+
+"Very well. Come at once to the office and I will call the doctor."
+
+A little later found the two youths in the office with Doctor Clay and
+his head assistant. There, as briefly as he could, Dave told his
+story, and Roger corroborated what was said. The head of the school
+was deeply interested and not a little alarmed.
+
+"This is certainly serious," he declared, with a grave shake of his
+head. "It reflects not only on you but on this school. I must look
+into this at once." And then he asked many questions, and Andrew Dale
+did the same.
+
+"Running away makes it look bad for Lawrence, Beggs, and Basswood,"
+remarked Mr. Dale. "They should have stood their ground, as Morr and
+Porter did."
+
+"That hotel man and the constable probably scared them so they did not
+know what they were doing," returned Doctor Clay. He turned to the
+boys. "You have no idea where they went?"
+
+"No, sir, excepting that they went up the river in the Kingsley
+motor-boat. They know Tom Kingsley quite well and he lets them use the
+boat once in a while."
+
+"Do you think you could find them, if I let you off to do so?"
+
+"We could try, sir."
+
+"Then you may go at once. Tell them it was very foolish to run away,
+and urge them to come back at once," added Doctor Clay.
+
+A little more conversation followed, and then Dave and Roger left the
+office and started on the search for the runaways.
+
+"We ought to have a motor-boat ourselves, to follow them up the
+river--that is, if they went any distance," said the senator's son.
+
+"We might try to borrow one, Roger."
+
+"Not Nat Poole's--he wouldn't lend it to us."
+
+"I know that."
+
+The two students walked to the river and looked up and down the
+stream. A rowboat and a sailboat were in sight, but that was all.
+
+"There is Jack Laplow in his sloop," cried Dave, mentioning a riverman
+they knew. "The wind is blowing up the stream. Maybe he'll take us
+along."
+
+They hailed the riverman, who made a living by doing all sorts of jobs
+on the stream. He did not have much to do just then and readily
+agreed, for a small amount, to take them up the river and bring them
+back.
+
+"We want to find some fellows who are in the Kingsley motor-boat,"
+explained Dave. "Have you seen anything of them?"
+
+The riverman had not, but said he would help to watch out for the
+lads. Dave and Roger hopped aboard the sloop, and soon the little
+craft was standing up the Leming River, with Jack Laplow at the
+tiller.
+
+It was a warm, clear day, and had the boys not been distressed in
+mind, they would have enjoyed the sail immensely. But as it was, they
+were very sober, so much so in fact that the old riverman at length
+remarked:
+
+"What's wrong--somebody hurt, or are ye going to a funeral?"
+
+"No funeral," answered Dave, with a forced laugh. "But we are in a
+hurry to find those three fellows."
+
+"Well, I don't see no motor-boat yet," answered Jack Laplow.
+
+"One thing is certain: if it went up the river it's got to come down,"
+said Roger.
+
+"They may get out and send it back," answered our hero.
+
+"But, Dave, surely you don't think----" But Dave put up his hand for
+silence and nodded in the direction of the boatman; and the senator's
+son said no more.
+
+A mile and a half were covered, and they were just passing one of the
+many islands in the river, when Jack Laplow gave a shout.
+
+"There is the motor-boat now!"
+
+"Boat ahoy!" shouted Dave, and then, as they drew closer, he saw that
+it was really the Kingsley craft. He was chagrined to see that only a
+man was on board, a fellow who was running the boat very slowly.
+
+"Where are those boys who were aboard?" demanded our hero, as the
+motor-boat came closer.
+
+"Is this your boat?" asked the man on board, in return.
+
+"No, but my friends were on that boat. Where are they?"
+
+"Left the boat at Snog's Point, and hired me to bring her back. I
+don't know much about motor-boats, so I'm running kind o' slow,"
+explained the man.
+
+"Snog's Point?" repeated Roger. "Where were they going?"
+
+"Don't ask me, for I don't know. They was in a tremenjous hurry, I
+know that. It's all right, ain't it?" went on the man, quickly.
+
+"Oh, yes, it was all right," answered Dave. And then they allowed the
+man to go on his way.
+
+[Illustration: "THERE IS THE MOTOR-BOAT NOW!"--_Page 186_.]
+
+"Want to go up to Snog's Point?" asked the man of the sloop.
+
+"Yes,--and as quickly as you can get there," replied Dave.
+
+As the wind was in the right direction, it did not take long. The
+Point was a rocky cliff with a stretch of sand at its base. Here the
+boys jumped ashore.
+
+"Want me to wait for you?" asked the riverman.
+
+"Wait for half an hour," said Dave. "Then, if we are not back, you can
+go back;" and so it was arranged.
+
+In the sand our hero and Roger could plainly see the marks of the
+motor-boat and many footprints. They followed the footprints to a road
+leading through a stretch of woods, and then came out on a highway
+leading to Barrelton.
+
+"The town is about half a mile from here. Wonder if they went there?"
+mused Roger.
+
+"Maybe we can learn something at the nearest farmhouse," suggested
+Dave.
+
+They hurried on, and presently reached a farmhouse set close to the
+road, with a barn on the other side. At a grindstone a tall, thin boy
+was sharpening a sickle.
+
+"Yes, I saw them fellers," he drawled, when asked about the runaways.
+"They was walking to town to beat the cars. I thought they must be in
+one o' them cross-country races, or something like that."
+
+"Come on!" cried Dave to his chum. Then he turned back suddenly. "Do
+you know anything about the trains from Barrelton?"
+
+"Ain't many trains from there," answered the youth at the grindstone.
+
+"But do you know what there are?"
+
+"There's a train north jest about due now."
+
+"And what is next?"
+
+"A train south a leetle after four o'clock. An' the freight goes
+through at seven."
+
+"Hurry, Roger!" cried Dave.
+
+"Do you think they'd take a train, Dave?"
+
+"I don't know--I hope not."
+
+The two boys set off on a run, taking it easy at first, so as not to
+get winded. They passed a number of farms and presently came in sight
+of Barrelton, so called because of the barrel factory located there.
+From a distance they had heard the whistle of a locomotive, and knew
+that the north-bound train had stopped at the station and gone on.
+
+"There is the station!" cried Dave, pointing up the railroad tracks.
+They continued to run and did not stop until they gained the platform.
+Here they met the ticket agent.
+
+"The train just went, didn't it?" asked Dave, and as the agent
+nodded, he went on: "Did three young fellows like ourselves get on?"
+
+"If they did, I didn't see 'em," answered the man.
+
+"Oh!" cried Roger, "maybe they didn't take the train, after all."
+
+"Let us hope so."
+
+Somewhat out of breath, the two boys tramped around Barrelton, looking
+for Phil and the others, and asking about them. But nobody appeared to
+have seen the runaways, and not a trace of them was to be found
+anywhere.
+
+"All we can do is to get something to eat and take the other train for
+Oakdale," said Roger, after they had satisfied themselves that the
+runaways were nowhere in that vicinity. The walking around had made
+him hungry.
+
+They procured some pie and milk at a little stand near the station,
+and shortly after four o'clock took the way train for Oakdale and
+walked to the school. They went directly to the doctor's office. The
+master of Oak Hall listened patiently to what they had to tell.
+
+"I am sorry you did not find them," he said, gravely. "It was very
+foolish of them to run away, very. I trust they will come back of
+their own accord soon."
+
+"Will you see Mr. Sparr about the matter?" asked Dave.
+
+"Yes, Porter. And I wish you and Morr to go with me."
+
+The interview took place that evening, the boys and the doctor driving
+down to the hotel after supper. Jason Sparr treated the master of the
+Hall politely but said very little.
+
+"When I make my next move I'll have a lawyer," he said. "I know
+somebody tried to blow up my hotel, and I think it was some of your
+boys--that Lawrence boy especially. But I ain't going to have 'em
+arrested until I can prove it."
+
+"Very well," answered Doctor Clay. "And in the meantime, you had
+better keep quiet, or you may have a suit for damages on hand."
+
+On the day following there was something of a sensation. The weekly
+newspaper issued in a nearby town came out with a thrilling account of
+the dynamiting of the dining-room of the hotel. In the account
+appeared the following:
+
+ "There is strong evidence pointing to the fact that the outrageous
+ deed was perpetrated by some schoolboys who held a grudge against
+ Mr. Sparr. They are known to have been present at the blowing up
+ of the old stone bridge, and were seen near the shanty where the
+ sticks of dynamite were kept, and one boy of the town says he saw
+ a young man coming from the shanty with something in his hand. Mr.
+ Sparr has the authorities at work and is piling up his evidence,
+ and the arrest of the rascally schoolboys may be hourly expected.
+ It is said that some of the boys have run away, but the
+ authorities have an idea where they can be located. The town
+ committee is thinking of offering a reward for the capture and
+ conviction of the rascals. For the safety of our citizens, the
+ Weekly Globe-Leader hopes the evil-doers will soon be
+ apprehended."
+
+No names were mentioned in this account, but everybody in Oakdale and
+vicinity knew that the boys of Oak Hall were alluded to, and there was
+much talk over what might be done. Doctor Clay felt the disgrace
+keenly, and Dave and Roger were equally affected.
+
+"What are we going to do, Dave?" asked the senator's son.
+
+"I don't know," returned our hero. "But we've got to do something,
+that's certain."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+THE WILD MAN AGAIN
+
+
+"Roger, I have an idea!"
+
+"What is it, Dave?"
+
+"I may be mistaken, but I've been thinking that perhaps that wild man
+did the blowing up at the hotel."
+
+"What makes you think that?" questioned the senator's son, putting
+down the book he had been trying to study.
+
+A day had passed after the events recorded in the last chapter, and so
+far no word had come in concerning Phil and the other runaways. Doctor
+Clay had sent for a private detective to assist in locating them and
+also to try, if possible, to clear up the mystery concerning the hotel
+affair.
+
+"Well, in the first place, it would be just like a crazy man to do
+such a thing, wouldn't it?"
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+"In the second place, I have heard that the wild man was seen around
+when the bridge was blown up."
+
+"Is that so? Who saw him?"
+
+"Mr. Tyson, the farmer who lives near the bridge."
+
+"Why didn't he try to capture the fellow?"
+
+"He did, but in the excitement of the blowing up the wild man slipped
+him. And that isn't all. Mr. Tyson saw him coming from the vicinity of
+that shanty where the dynamite was kept."
+
+"Say, that is certainly interesting!" cried the senator's son. "When
+did you learn all this?"
+
+"Less than an hour ago. Mr. Tyson brought some vegetables to the
+school and I had a talk with him."
+
+"Did he think the wild man blew up the hotel?"
+
+"No, he didn't connect the two."
+
+"Hum! What do you think of doing about it?"
+
+"I hardly know. I wish we could round up the wild man."
+
+"Plenty of folks wish that."
+
+"I think he hangs out somewhere along the river, or on one of the
+islands."
+
+"Maybe Nat Poole knows."
+
+"I hardly think so--although I am sure Nat wants to find the
+fellow--why, I can't imagine."
+
+During those trying days, Job Haskers was as harsh and dictatorial to
+Dave and Roger as ever, and several times he passed sneering remarks
+about those who were missing.
+
+"You may think as you please, Doctor Clay," said he to the master of
+the Hall. "I feel sure in my mind that Lawrence and those other boys
+are guilty. I do not think Mr. Sparr would accuse them if he was not
+pretty sure of his ground."
+
+"Well, he has not dared to have those warrants served," replied the
+doctor, dryly.
+
+"Because he is afraid there will be a great deal of money used in the
+case to fight him."
+
+"Mr. Haskers, do you stand up for Mr. Sparr? I thought you had had
+some difficulty yourself with him once?"
+
+"That was but a small affair. I think he is perfectly honest and that
+he wants to do what is right."
+
+"Possibly. But he did not treat Lawrence very fairly in the matter of
+that dinner that was ordered."
+
+"That was a mistake, and Mr. Sparr lost as much as he got. Yes, I
+think those boys guilty, and in the end you will find out that I am
+right," added Job Haskers as he went off, smiling grimly to himself,
+as if it was a pleasure to him to have the boys thus accused.
+
+The next morning came another surprise. On getting up Dave noticed
+that something was missing from the dormitory. Phil's suit-case was
+gone, likewise a portion of his clothing, and also the valises of Ben
+and Buster, and part of their outfits.
+
+"Well, this beats the Dutch!" exclaimed Roger, on learning the news.
+"Who took them, do you suppose?"
+
+"Don't ask me, Roger."
+
+"Maybe they came themselves and got them," suggested Sam.
+
+"If they did, wouldn't we hear them?" asked Gus.
+
+"Talk about a mysterious disappearance," cried Shadow. "Say, this puts
+me in mind of a story. Once some fellows----"
+
+"Oh, stow it, Shadow!" cried the senator's son. "Let's get busy and
+try to find out what this means. Maybe they are back at the school."
+
+All of the boys dressed hastily and took a look around. But they could
+find no trace of the runaways. Yet the traveling-bags and the clothing
+were certainly gone.
+
+"If I didn't know better, I'd say the place was haunted!" cried Luke.
+
+"Oh, don't say that!" exclaimed Polly Vane, looking scared. "I don't
+wish to see any ghosts."
+
+Doctor Clay was informed of what had occurred, and he had another
+search conducted. But it was all to no purpose--the things were
+missing, and that was all there was to it.
+
+It may well be imagined that with so much going on it was next to
+impossible for Dave and Roger to study. Yet they did their best, not
+wishing to drop behind again as they had during the trip to Cave
+Island. Job Haskers did not let up on them, and many a time they
+wished he would leave Oak Hall and that they might never see him
+again.
+
+One afternoon Roger came to Dave in great haste and beckoned for him
+to come outside.
+
+"I think we had better follow Nat Poole," said the senator's son. "I
+think there is something in the wind."
+
+"What makes you think that?"
+
+"Nat has been packing a valise and he has put in the strangest
+things--some clothing, some bottles of medicine, some rope, and a
+thing that looks like a crown made of brass."
+
+"A crown made of brass? Oh, Roger, maybe that wild man--who calls
+himself the King of Sumatra----"
+
+"That's the idea, Dave, I see you've caught on. Come on, before Nat
+gets away from us."
+
+Our hero needed no further urging, and soon he and Roger were on their
+way to the gymnasium, where the senator's son had, by pure accident,
+seen Nat Poole packing the things mentioned in his handbag.
+
+As they approached, they saw the money-lender's son trundle out a
+bicycle he owned and mount it, swinging his valise over his shoulder
+by a strap. He looked back to see if he was being observed, but Dave
+and Roger were on guard and quickly dove out of sight behind some
+bushes.
+
+"We'll have to follow on our own wheels," said Dave.
+
+Their old bicycles were still in the gymnasium. They were not in very
+good condition, but the tires were air-tight and that was enough.
+Without delay, they trundled the machines out, and leaping into the
+saddles, pedaled after Nat.
+
+The course of the money-lender's son was along the river road, and he
+followed this for the best part of a mile. Then he branched off on a
+side-road leading to what were known as the Chester Hills. It was hard
+work pushing the machine up the hills, but Nat kept at it steadily,
+and Dave and Roger followed. Strange to say, the money-lender's son
+did not once look back after leaving the school. Evidently he was of
+the opinion that nobody had observed his departure, or, if so, had
+taken no particular notice of it.
+
+From the top of one of the hills, Nat struck off on another side-road,
+leading to a little valley. Here was a brook, and at a point where it
+widened out, a small and really beautiful island. In the center of the
+island a cabin had been built by some sportsman, and a rustic bridge
+connected the resort with the shore.
+
+Reaching the rustic bridge, Nat dismounted, and with his valise still
+over his shoulder, walked towards the cabin. As he did this Dave and
+Roger came quite close and they, too, dismounted, keeping in the
+shelter of some trees near by.
+
+"Stop! I command you, in the name of the King of Sumatra, to stop!"
+
+The call came from the cabin, and a second later the wild man
+appeared. He was clad in a blue pair of trousers and over his shoulder
+was thrown a big red blanket. On his head rested a crown made of a tin
+pail cut into sharp points.
+
+"I salute you, King of Sumatra!" called out Nat, making a low bow.
+
+"Ha! it is my servant that speaks," said the wild man. "Bow low, bow,
+I tell you!" and he flourished a wooden sword that he held in one
+hand.
+
+"It is the wild man, sure enough!" whispered Roger, in great
+excitement.
+
+"And evidently he has been expecting Nat," returned Dave. "Let us get
+closer and see what is up."
+
+They advanced with care until they were behind a tree at the very foot
+of the rustic bridge. In the meantime Nat had gone forward, bowing low
+at every step.
+
+"I have brought you something, my king!" cried the money-lender's
+son. "Something of great importance to you."
+
+"What is it?" demanded the wild man, his curiosity excited.
+
+"A new crown. It is of gold, a beautiful crown."
+
+"Ha! ha! that is well! The King of Sumatra needs a new crown!" cried
+the wild man, strutting up and down in front of the cabin. "Give it to
+me, that I may see if it fits." And he held out his empty hand.
+
+"Let us go into the cabin, and you can sit in your chair of state
+while I place it on your head," said Nat, in a soothing, persuasive
+voice. "You will like it, I know."
+
+"Did you bring your army with you?" demanded the wild man,
+suspiciously.
+
+"No, I am all alone--the army is at Oakdale," answered Nat.
+
+"Again 'tis well. Come in, and I will sit on the throne," and with a
+sweeping gesture of welcome, the wild man stepped back into the cabin,
+and Nat Poole followed.
+
+"Now, what do you make of this?" whispered Roger, looking at Dave in
+wonder.
+
+"I have an idea, Roger," answered our hero. "Nat knows that man; in
+fact, he is well acquainted with him. I think he is going to try to
+make him a prisoner."
+
+"A prisoner? Oh, I see; for the glory of it, eh?"
+
+"No, to get him back to some sanitarium as quietly as possible. I
+think Nat would like to do it without anybody around here being the
+wiser."
+
+"Oh! Then maybe the fellow is some relative of the Pooles."
+
+"Possibly, or a close friend. But come on, let us see what happens. We
+ought to try to capture the man ourselves."
+
+"To be sure. But I don't see how we are going to do it. We are
+unarmed, and they say crazy folks are fearfully strong."
+
+"We'll have to watch our chances."
+
+The cabin had a window as well as a door, and to the former the two
+boys crawled. Peering through a vine that grew over the opening, they
+saw that the wild man had seated himself on a rude bench which he
+called his throne. It was covered with a tattered carpet and some
+cabalistic signs in blue chalk. Nat had placed his valise on the
+ground and was opening it. He brought out the crown and also the rope,
+but took care to conceal the latter under his coat.
+
+"Now you must close your eyes and sit perfectly still while I place
+the crown on your head," said the money-lender's son. "I will have to
+do it from behind, for that is the way they do it in England and
+Germany."
+
+"Do they do it in Russia that way, too?" demanded the wild man, and
+his eyes took on a glowing look as he gazed at the brass crown.
+
+"Of course."
+
+"Then let it be so." And the wild man sat back on the bench and closed
+his eyes, and stroked his straggly beard.
+
+Quickly Nat stepped behind the man, and while he fumbled with the
+crown with one hand, he brought out the rope with the other. He was
+greatly excited and his hands trembled.
+
+"Now sit perfectly still while I count fifty," said the money-lender's
+son. "Then when I----"
+
+He did not finish, for at that instant the wild man let out a sudden
+yell and leaped to his feet. He ran to the doorway; and the next
+moment came face to face with Dave and Roger.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+SOMETHING OF A CLEW
+
+
+"Ha! ha! you are the army sent to capture me, are you? But I am not to
+be captured! Take the cannons away! Bring up the artillery! Forward
+the light brigade! Victory for the King of Sumatra! Oh, if only I had
+a company of trained monkeys I would show you how to fight!"
+
+Thus speaking, the wild man danced around before Dave and Roger,
+swinging his wooden sword close to their heads. Indeed, our hero had
+to dodge back, to keep from being hit.
+
+"Hello, you here?" cried Nat, coming from the cabin. "You followed me,
+did you?" He scowled deeply. "It's just like you, Dave Porter!"
+
+"Nobody shall follow the King of Sumatra!" went on the wild man, with
+a cunning look at the three students. "Away! Out of my sight!" he
+yelled.
+
+He dashed past Dave and Roger, moving towards the rustic bridge. Our
+hero caught him by the arm, but received a blow in the face that
+staggered him. Roger also tried to catch the man, but he was too
+quick, and a second later was on the bridge.
+
+"Come back!" bawled Nat. "Come back, Uncle Wilbur! Don't you know me?
+Come back, please! We won't hurt you!" And then he set off after the
+wild man, who was running along the road beyond the bridge.
+
+"Dave, did you hear that?" gasped the senator's son. "He called the
+wild man Uncle Wilbur!"
+
+"Yes, I heard him," returned our hero. "No wonder he has been after
+him, Roger. Come on, let us see if we can't catch him."
+
+The chums started after the wild man and the money-lender's son. The
+way was along the road, but presently the wild man turned into a
+stretch of woods. He could run like a trained athlete, and easily
+outdistanced Nat, who kept calling after him.
+
+When Dave and Roger came up they found the money-lender's son leaning
+against a tree, out of breath and much disgusted.
+
+"Couldn't get him, eh?" queried Roger.
+
+"No, you fellows scared him off," growled the money-lender's son.
+
+"I am sorry if we did that," said Dave.
+
+"You had no right to butt in," grumbled Nat. "What did you follow me
+for, anyway?"
+
+"Because we thought you were after the wild man, that's why," answered
+Roger.
+
+"Humph!"
+
+"So he is your Uncle Wilbur," went on our hero, after a pause, and he
+turned a look of sympathy at Nat as he spoke.
+
+"Who told you that?"
+
+"You called him Uncle Wilbur."
+
+"I--I guess you are mistaken," stammered Nat, growing red in the
+face.
+
+"No, we heard you as plain as day," put in the senator's son.
+
+"You haven't any right to pry into my affairs, Roger Morr! You nor
+Dave Porter either!"
+
+"Perhaps not," answered Roger.
+
+"Look here, Nat, if we can help you we'll do it," came from Dave. "I
+suppose, if that man is your uncle, you wish to get him back to
+the--er--the sanitarium as quickly and as quietly as possible; is that
+so?"
+
+"Wouldn't you want to do that, if he was your uncle?" asked the
+money-lender's son, flushing deeply.
+
+"Certainly. But it looks, now, as if you couldn't do it alone."
+
+"I might have done it, if you hadn't come up and queered my game."
+
+"He didn't see us until he ran out of the cabin," said Roger. "He just
+got a wild streak on, that's all. I don't think you could have
+managed him alone. He wouldn't let you tie him up with that rope."
+
+"Well, he's gone, that's sure," grumbled Nat. "I'm going back to the
+cabin for my valise."
+
+"He may come back," suggested Dave.
+
+"I don't think so. But I'll wait and see. I hung around once for
+him--on that island--but he never came back. It isn't often he visits
+the same spot twice. That's the reason the authorities around here
+haven't caught him."
+
+"What is his name, Nat?"
+
+"Wilbur Poole, if you must know. He is my father's half-brother."
+
+"Where did he come from?"
+
+"From the Blossmore Sanitarium, in New York state. It's a private
+place, near Lake Erie. He lost a lot of money several years ago in a
+speculation in Sumatra tobacco and that made him crazy, and that is
+why, I suppose, he calls himself the King of Sumatra."
+
+"Did you know he was missing when you heard of the wild man?"
+questioned Dave, with interest.
+
+"No, I did not, for the sanitarium people did not notify us that he
+had gotten away. I suppose they thought he would stay near the
+institution and that they would be able to get him again. I can't
+imagine what brought him away out here, excepting that I went to see
+him once, when he was somewhat better, and I told him about Oakdale
+and our school. I knew he called himself the King of Sumatra, and that
+is why I got interested in the wild man as soon as I heard you mention
+that name. Then, when the handkerchief was found, I was sure the man
+was my uncle."
+
+"And you put the hole in the handkerchief," said our hero.
+
+"Yes, because--well, I didn't want folks to find out from the
+Blossmore authorities that the man was my uncle," answered Nat,
+casting down his eyes. "I thought I might be able to catch him and
+send him back on the quiet. I didn't want the whole school talking
+about it."
+
+"I can understand your feelings, Nat," said our hero, kindly. "And if
+I can help you in the matter, I'll do it."
+
+"I suppose you'll tell everybody he's my uncle," came bitterly from
+the money-lender's son.
+
+"No, I won't. But I think Doctor Clay ought to know it."
+
+"And what of your folks?" asked Roger. "Do they know?"
+
+"I sent my dad a letter about it last week. But he is away on
+business, so I don't know when he'll get it or what he'll do. I didn't
+let the Blossmore folks know because I don't think my uncle ought to
+go back to that place. He ought to be put in an institution where they
+are more strict, so he can't get away again."
+
+"You are right there," said Dave.
+
+"Nat, don't you know it is highly dangerous to allow that man at
+large?" asked the senator's son, after a pause, during which the three
+boys turned their footsteps towards the island cabin.
+
+"Oh, I don't think he is as dangerous as some folks imagine," was the
+reply. "He has never actually harmed anybody yet. But he scares 'em."
+
+"He may have committed some deeds of which you know nothing."
+
+At these suggestive words from the senator's son Nat turned pale.
+
+"What do you mean? Have you heard anything, Roger?"
+
+"I hate to hurt your feelings any further, Nat, but I must be honest
+with you. Dave and I have an idea that he was the one who blew up the
+dining-room of Sparr's hotel."
+
+"Oh, impossible!"
+
+"What Roger says is true," said Dave, gravely. "I am sorry for you,
+Nat, but that is the way it looks to us. He was seen around the old
+stone bridge when it was blown up, and around the shanty where the
+dynamite was kept, and he has been in Oakdale several times, so we
+have heard."
+
+"Oh, he wouldn't do such a thing! He couldn't!" cried the
+money-lender's son, in genuine distress.
+
+"An insane man is liable to do anything, Nat," said Roger. "Why, he
+might have set off that dynamite without realizing the consequences.
+The best thing we can do is to organize a regular search for him, and
+round him up as quickly as possible."
+
+"I suppose that is so," groaned Nat. "But, oh, how I do hate the
+exposure!"
+
+"You mustn't take it too hard, Nat," said Dave. "Remember, neither you
+nor your family are responsible for his condition of mind."
+
+It did not take the three students long to reach the little cabin.
+While Nat was packing up the things he had brought along, Dave and
+Roger looked over the place. The wild man had had but few things, none
+of them worth mentioning. There was a newspaper and an old magazine,
+showing that Wilbur Poole occasionally indulged in reading.
+
+"Hello, look here!" cried Roger, as he turned the magazine over.
+"Well, I declare!"
+
+"What is it?" asked Dave and Nat, in a breath.
+
+"Here's a picture, drawn in blue pencil. It is marked Fort, but it
+looks like Sparr's hotel."
+
+"And look what it says!" cried Dave, eying the crude drawing. "'Powder
+House to be blown up'! That's the dining-room, as plain as day!"
+
+"And down here it says, 'Dynamite will do it easily,' and signed,
+'King of Sumatra.' Dave, he did it, and this proves it."
+
+"It certainly looks that way, Roger."
+
+"Let me see that drawing!" burst out Nat, and would have snatched it
+from Roger's hand had not Dave stopped him.
+
+"You can look at it, Nat, but you must give it back," said our hero.
+
+"What for? My uncle drew that and I have a right to it."
+
+"No, I am going to hand this over to Doctor Clay and then to the
+Oakdale authorities. It may be needed to clear Phil, Ben, and
+Buster."
+
+"Hurrah, Dave, that's the talk!" cried Roger, with sudden enthusiasm.
+"I didn't think of it, but that is just what is needed to clear 'em!
+We'll knock Jason Sparr's accusations into a cocked hat!"
+
+"You let me see that drawing!" shouted Nat, making another grab for
+it. "I've got a right to it--if my uncle made it."
+
+"You can look at it, but you can't handle it," said Dave, and he gave
+Roger a look that the senator's son well understood. Both knew that
+the money-lender's son could not be trusted with such an important bit
+of evidence.
+
+The drawing was held up, but Nat was not permitted to get too close to
+it. He looked it over carelessly and then his lip curled.
+
+"Huh! I don't think my uncle drew it," he said.
+
+"And we think he did," returned Dave.
+
+There was a sudden silence after this. Each boy was busy with his
+thoughts. Dave felt particularly light-hearted.
+
+"This ought to clear Phil and the others," he reasoned. "And they can
+come back to school without delay and finish the term and graduate."
+
+Having packed up his things, Nat got out his bicycle and prepared to
+ride back to Oak Hall, and the others did the same.
+
+"Going to give me that drawing?" asked the money-lender's son, just as
+he was ready to start off.
+
+"No, we are going to turn it over to Doctor Clay," said Roger.
+
+"All right, have your own way," growled Nat.
+
+As in coming to the cabin, the money-lender's son took the lead in the
+return to Oak Hall. Dave and Roger kept close behind and occasionally
+spoke of the happenings in guarded tones. When the school was reached
+all left their bicycles in the gymnasium.
+
+"Going to Doctor Clay now?" demanded Nat.
+
+"We might as well," said Dave. "The sooner he knows of this, the
+better for everybody."
+
+"All right."
+
+Doctor Clay was somewhat surprised to see the three boys, dusty and
+tired-looking, enter his private office. He listened with close
+attention to their tale of visiting the cabin and encountering the
+wild man, and looked completely astonished on learning that the man
+was Nat's uncle.
+
+"I am sorry for you, Poole," said he, kindly. "But such things will
+happen and you must make the best of it. It is not your fault."
+
+Then Dave and Roger told of the finding of the old magazine with the
+drawing and writing, and Doctor Clay shook his head sorrowfully.
+
+"Too bad! Too bad!" he murmured.
+
+"But this clears Lawrence, Basswood, and Beggs," cried Dave. "And it
+clears Roger and myself."
+
+"Yes! yes! so it does, Porter!"
+
+"Don't you believe it, Doctor Clay!" cried Nat, leaping to his feet.
+"It does nothing of the sort! That paper is no kind of evidence at
+all!" And thus speaking, the money-lender's son glared defiantly at
+Dave and Roger.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+AFTER THE RUNAWAYS
+
+
+"Why, Nat, what do you mean?" demanded Dave.
+
+"I mean just what I say!" declared the money-lender's son. "This is a
+frame-up, nothing more! I understand it all now, although I didn't at
+first."
+
+"What do you mean by 'a frame-up,' Poole?" demanded Doctor Clay.
+
+"I mean that they took this magazine and the drawing to the cabin,
+that is what I mean, Doctor Clay. They found out somehow that
+my--er--that the wild man was there, and they got up this scheme to
+make it look as if he had blown up the hotel,--and they did it just to
+clear their cronies and themselves."
+
+"Nat, you know that is not true!" exclaimed Roger. "I found the
+magazine with the drawing on a shelf in the cabin."
+
+"Yes, that is what you said, but I don't believe it, Roger Morr. I
+think you put the magazine there yourself--you or Dave Porter."
+
+"We did nothing of the kind," cried our hero.
+
+"I think you did--and I think Jason Sparr will think so, too, when he
+hears the story. It's a frame-up, just to clear yourselves and your
+cronies," added Nat, with a sneer.
+
+"Nat, you ought to be----" began Roger, in high anger, when Dave
+stopped him. Our hero looked at Doctor Clay.
+
+"What Roger says is the absolute truth, Doctor Clay," said our hero.
+"He found that magazine on a shelf in the cabin where the wild man was
+staying, and that drawing and the wording were on it, just as you see.
+More than that, we can prove that the wild man was around the old
+shanty where the dynamite was kept, and that he was seen in Oakdale
+several times."
+
+Dave was interrupted here by Nat, and a wordy war lasting several
+minutes followed. Finally Doctor Clay said he would take the magazine
+and keep it, and that he would notify the authorities in what locality
+the wild man might be found, provided he had not gone away further
+than expected.
+
+"I am inclined to believe the story told by Morr and Porter," said he
+somewhat sternly to Nat Poole. "But this matter cannot be cleared up
+until we find your uncle. When captured, the unfortunate man will most
+likely speak of the blowing up in some way or another, if he is
+guilty."
+
+"I don't think so," answered Nat; but his manner showed that he was
+much disturbed. Then Dave and Roger were dismissed, and the master of
+the school took Nat with him to Oakdale, to see what could be done
+towards rounding up Wilbur Poole in the near future.
+
+"Well, Dave, what is the next move?" asked the senator's son, as the
+two were alone in the lavatory, washing up after the long bicycle
+ride.
+
+"I wish I could find Phil and the others and get them to come back
+here," responded our hero. "It is a great mistake for them to stay
+away."
+
+"I believe you--it looks just as if they were guilty. I wonder that
+they don't come back on their own account, now they have had a chance
+to think it over."
+
+"I think they saw that article in the newspaper, Roger, and it scared
+them worse than ever. Maybe they imagine the officers of the law are
+waiting to gobble them up."
+
+"If we only had some trace of them!"
+
+"I've got an idea I am going to follow up."
+
+"What sort of an idea?"
+
+"I was thinking of that baggage that left here. Maybe it was shipped
+to some point."
+
+"You'll have a job tracing it up."
+
+"I can try it, anyway," answered our hero.
+
+A day slipped by and nothing more was said about the affair by Doctor
+Clay or Nat Poole. Then Nat left the school, telling some friends he
+was going home for a week's rest.
+
+"Most likely he is after his uncle," was Roger's comment, and Dave
+agreed with him.
+
+As soon as he could get the time Dave went to Oakdale to see if he
+could find any trace of the baggage belonging to Phil and the others
+who had run away. He made many inquiries but without success, and was
+on the point of returning to the school when he happened to think of
+an old man named Dowling, who did some trucking and who knew Buster
+Beggs very well.
+
+"We'll go around to Dowling's place," said he to his chum.
+
+They found the old man in a little shanty behind his house which he
+called his office. It had an old easy-chair and a desk, and on the
+wall was a telephone.
+
+"How do you do, boys," he said, politely. "What can I do for you? Want
+some baggage shipped?"
+
+"No, I came for some information, Mr. Dowling," said Dave. "Have you
+shipped any baggage for Buster Beggs lately?"
+
+At the mention of the fat student's name the old expressman started.
+
+"What do you want to know that for?" he demanded.
+
+"I've a very good reason, Mr. Dowling. I want to do Beggs a favor."
+
+"Reckon you want to find him, eh?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"So do some other folks;" and the old man chuckled.
+
+"Well, we are his friends, and we want to find him for his own good."
+
+"Who be you, if I may ask?"
+
+"I am Dave Porter, and this is Roger Morr. Buster Beggs is our friend,
+and so are Phil Lawrence and Ben Basswood. They ran away and it was
+foolish for them to do it. Now we want to find them and get them to
+come back here."
+
+"It was foolish for 'em to run away--I said thet all along," murmured
+the old expressman.
+
+"Then you know where they are?" put in Roger quickly.
+
+"No, I don't."
+
+"But you took their baggage away, didn't you?" questioned Dave, for he
+could see that the old man was holding something back.
+
+"I allow as how I moved some things for 'em, yes," was the cautious
+reply.
+
+"When they ran away?" pursued Dave.
+
+The old expressman nodded.
+
+"Who got those bags from Oak Hall?" asked Roger.
+
+"Thet's a secret," and now the old man really chuckled, as if he
+thought it was a good joke.
+
+"You did!" declared Dave, bound to get at the truth.
+
+"No, I didn't. Buster did--carried 'em down on his back, one at a
+time, in the middle o' the night, an' nobuddy knew it! Say, they could
+walk off with yer hull school if they wanted to!" And the old
+expressman chuckled again.
+
+"You were waiting for him?" continued Dave.
+
+"Might be as I was."
+
+"And you took the baggage to the depot?"
+
+"Maybe I did."
+
+"And had them checked on railroad tickets?"
+
+"No, Buster went one way, and the bags went tudder--leas'wise so I was
+given to understand. Maybe he done it to put me off the track,"
+continued Isaac Dowling.
+
+"But where did the bags go to?" demanded Dave. "Come, out with it, Mr.
+Dowling. I give you my word that I am acting for Buster's good. I
+wouldn't get him into trouble for the world. He is my chum, and so are
+those other boys my friends."
+
+"Well, you look honest, boy, so I'll tell ye. The baggage was sent by
+express to a place called Camptown Falls, in Maine."
+
+"Camptown Falls!" cried Roger. Then he looked at Dave, who nodded, to
+show that he understood.
+
+"Did Buster say he was going elsewhere?" queried Dave.
+
+"He didn't say so, exactly. But he mentioned Boston, an' I thought he
+was goin' there."
+
+"He left on the train?"
+
+"No, he didn't! He went off in the darkness, an' that's the last I see
+o' him," concluded Isaac Dowling, as a hail came for him to come into
+the house.
+
+"Camptown Falls," said Dave, when he and Roger were alone. "Can they
+have gone to that out-of-the-way spot?"
+
+"It would be the place Buster would pick out, Dave. He has often
+spoken of going camping up there."
+
+"He must have mentioned Boston just to throw old Dowling off the
+track."
+
+"More than likely. And to think he took those bags away while we
+slept!"
+
+"I wonder where Phil and Ben were at the time?"
+
+"I don't know. Maybe they were at that camp."
+
+Much excited over what they had learned, Dave and the senator's son
+returned to Oak Hall. They had expected to interview Doctor Clay and
+were chagrined to learn that he had gone to New York on important
+business and would not return for two days. Mr. Dale had been left in
+charge of the school.
+
+"Roger, do you know what I think of doing?" said our hero. "I've a
+good notion to get permission to leave the Hall and go after Phil and
+the others. I think I can get them to come back."
+
+"Want me to go along?"
+
+"That will hardly be necessary. Besides, I'd like somebody to stay
+here and watch Nat Poole, if he comes back. Do you know, I've a notion
+that Nat knows more about this affair than he would like to tell."
+
+"He certainly acts that way."
+
+"I am going to see Mr. Dale."
+
+Our hero had a long talk with the head assistant, and the upshot of
+this was that he got permission to go to Maine, to look for the
+runaways. He was to be gone no longer than was absolutely necessary.
+
+It did not take our hero long to prepare for the trip. He packed a few
+things in a suit-case and then he was ready. He consulted a map and
+some timetables, and found he could leave Oakdale on the first train
+in the morning, and by making two changes, reach Camptown Falls about
+two o'clock in the afternoon. Nobody but Roger and Mr. Dale knew that
+he was going away.
+
+"Got money enough, have you, Dave?" questioned the senator's son.
+
+"Yes, Roger."
+
+"It's a wild kind of a spot, so Buster told me."
+
+"I am not afraid of that--if only I can locate the boys," answered our
+hero.
+
+"How are you going to look for them?"
+
+"I don't know yet--I'll find out after I get there."
+
+It must be confessed that Dave slept but little that night. His mind
+was filled with what was before him. He felt that he had quite a
+mission to perform, first in locating the runaways and then in
+persuading them to return to Oak Hall to face the music.
+
+He had an early breakfast, Roger eating with him, and then the buggy,
+driven by Horsehair, was brought around and he got in, and a minute
+later he was off, the senator's son waving him an adieu from the porch
+of the school.
+
+Dave found the first train he rode on but half filled with passengers,
+and he had a double seat to himself. He changed at the Junction, and
+about noon reached Lumberport, where he was to take the train on the
+little side-line for Camptown Falls. At Lumberport he got dinner, at a
+hotel frequented by lumbermen. He sat at a long table with half a
+dozen men and listened to their talk with interest when he heard
+Camptown Falls mentioned.
+
+"Yes, they tell me there is great danger of the dam giving way just
+above Camptown Falls," one of the men said. "Doxey reported it hasn't
+been safe for a week."
+
+"Say, if that dam gave way it would do a lot of damage below the
+Falls," said another.
+
+"It certainly would," replied a tall lumberman. "It would wipe out
+some of those camps on Moosetail Island. I rather guess the water
+would cover the whole island."
+
+"Somebody ought to warn the campers," said another.
+
+"Oh, I guess they know it already," was the answer.
+
+Dave arose from the table feeling very uneasy. He remembered the name,
+Moosetail Island, now. Buster had once mentioned it, stating he had
+camped there and would like to go again. Were the runaways there now,
+and in danger of the dam, should it break?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+AT THE CAMP
+
+
+At last the train came that was to take our hero to the railroad
+station of Camptown Falls. It was merely a flag station, but the
+conductor said he would stop there for any passenger who might wish to
+get off. The railroad was a single-track affair, running through the
+woods and across the country stretches, and the train consisted of one
+passenger car and several freights.
+
+Dave looked at the passengers and counted them. There were just an
+even dozen, and of these, ten were men, farmers and those in the
+lumber business. One, a bright young fellow, sat near our hero, and
+Dave resolved to ask him if he knew anything about Camptown Falls and
+the summer camps in that vicinity.
+
+"Yes, I know all about the Falls," said the young lumberman. "I work
+not over three miles from there--at Cropley's--the station this side
+of Camptown. There ain't any town, not since the Jewell Lumber Company
+busted up. Some folks camp out there, down along the river and on
+Moosetail Island, but there aren't near as many as there used to be."
+
+"Somebody said the dam above Camptown Falls was dangerous?" said
+Dave.
+
+"I think it is myself, and I can't understand how they allow folks to
+camp along the river and on that island. If that dam ever broke it
+would be good-by to anybody on the island, I'm thinking."
+
+"Have you been up to the island lately?"
+
+"I was there about a week ago."
+
+"Who were there then, do you know?"
+
+"A couple of men from Portland and half a dozen young fellers from
+Springfield. There was another camp, with some women in it, but I
+didn't get around to that, I only heard of it. There are half a dozen
+camps along the right bank of the river, but they are on high ground,
+and if the dam broke it isn't likely the water would reach 'em,"
+continued the young lumberman.
+
+The train rolled along at a rate of twenty miles an hour, making stops
+at stations and crossroads. Here and there a person got on or off, and
+by the time Camptown Falls was reached Dave had the passenger car
+almost to himself.
+
+The train halted for but a minute and our hero alighted, suit-case in
+hand. Much to his surprise, not a soul was about the little depot,
+which looked old and dilapidated. There was a stretch of fields
+beyond the track, and farther on he made out the glistening waters of
+the river, and in the center the woodland stretch known as Moosetail
+Island.
+
+"Well, this surely is Lonesome Land!" Dave murmured to himself, as the
+train rumbled out of sight and he was left utterly alone. "And not
+another train until eight o'clock to-morrow morning! I'll have a fine
+time of it to-night if I don't meet those fellows, or run across some
+camp where they will take me in."
+
+Dave looked at the sky and this did not tend to increase his good
+spirits. When he had left Oakdale it had been warm and clear; now dark
+clouds were forming overhead and it looked as if it might rain before
+long.
+
+"Well, I've got my raincoat and a waterproof cap, and that is one
+comfort," he told himself. "But I had better hurry up and see if I
+can't find Phil and the others before it gets too dark. I wish there
+was somebody here who could tell me where to go."
+
+He looked around for a sign of some habitation. Far across the river
+he saw a column of smoke, coming up from among the trees, but that was
+all. The only building in sight was the deserted depot.
+
+There was something of a path leading from the depot to the river, and
+Dave followed this. But soon the path seemed to divide, and the
+various branches became more indistinct at every step, especially as
+it was rapidly growing darker and darker.
+
+"I'll strike a straight course for Moosetail Island," Dave said to
+himself. "I'll surely find some people camping out there, and they may
+be able to tell me about the boys, if they are here."
+
+As he approached the river, going down a small hill, the way became
+stony, and he had to walk with care, for fear of going into some hole,
+or twisting an ankle. It was hard work, especially with the suit-case,
+and he half wished he had hidden the baggage somewhere near the
+depot.
+
+"I was a big chump that I didn't bring some lunch along," he reasoned.
+And then he had to smile at himself, as he remembered how he had
+imagined that he might put up at some hotel in Camptown Falls! He had
+not dreamed that the place would prove such a lonely one. It was
+certainly an ideal spot for runaways who wished to remain
+undiscovered.
+
+Presently Dave found himself at the bank of the river, a wide but
+shallow stream, filled with sandbars, rocks, and piles of driftwood.
+Not a great distance off was the end of Moosetail Island.
+
+It was now so dark that our hero could see but little. As he stood at
+the edge of the river, he heard a patter on the leaves of the trees
+and knew it had begun to rain.
+
+"Wonder how they get to the island?" he mused. "They must either use
+canoes, or else wade across, or ford along the stones."
+
+He moved along the river-bank, and soon came to a point where the
+stones in the river seemed to stretch in a line from the bank to the
+island.
+
+"I guess I'll try it here," he told himself. "But I think I had better
+leave the suit-case behind."
+
+He placed the case in a tree, sheltering it as much as possible from
+the rain, which was now coming down at a lively rate. Then, donning
+his raincoat and waterproof cap, he set out over the rocks in the
+river, leaping from one to the next and heading for the island.
+
+It was no easy journey, and when but half-way to Moosetail Island Dave
+slipped and went into the stream up to his knees. He floundered around
+for a moment, splashing the water into his face and over his coat and
+cap.
+
+"Phew! this is lots of fun!" was his grim comment, as he at length
+found himself on a flat rock, catching his breath. "Well, I am
+half-way over, anyway."
+
+The remainder of the distance proved easier traveling, and ten minutes
+later our hero stood on the island. It was now raining steadily, and
+the darkness of the storm had settled everywhere.
+
+"I guess the best thing I can do is to move right around the shore of
+this island," he reasoned. "By doing that I am bound to strike one of
+the camps, sooner or later."
+
+He moved along as rapidly as the rocky shore of Moosetail Island
+permitted. He had to proceed with care, for there were many dangerous
+pitfalls.
+
+At length his heart was gladdened by the sight of a rude log cabin,
+set in the trees a little back from the water. He hurried to it and
+found the door and window closed. Evidently the spot was deserted.
+
+"Nobody here," he murmured, and his heart sank for the moment, for he
+could see that the camp had not been used for a long time. Then he
+went on, the rain in the meanwhile coming down harder than ever. The
+downfall made him think of the dam that was said to be weak. What if
+the present storm should make that structure give way?
+
+"I wish we were all out of this," he murmured. "I wonder if it would
+do any good to call?"
+
+He set up a yell and listened, and then he yelled again. From a long
+distance came an answering cry.
+
+"Hurrah, that's somebody, anyway!" he exclaimed. "I hope it was one of
+the boys!"
+
+He stumbled in the direction of the cry. Then he yelled once more, and
+again came the answering call. But now Dave was sure it was a man's
+voice, and he was somewhat disappointed.
+
+"Where are you?" he called out, a moment later. "Where are you?"
+
+"This way! Come this way!" was the reply, and soon Dave passed through
+a patch of timber and around some rocks and reached a spot where there
+was a tiny cove, with a stretch of fine sand. Facing the cove was a
+neat log cabin with a small lean-to, the latter containing a tiny
+stove.
+
+A tall, good-natured man stood in the lean-to, peering out into the
+rain. He watched Dave's approach with interest. He looked to be what
+he was, a camp-cook and general worker.
+
+"Hello!" he exclaimed, as Dave hurried in out of the rain and shook
+the water from his cap. "I thought you were one of our crowd."
+
+"What camp is this?" questioned our hero, eagerly.
+
+"Well, it ain't no camp in particular," answered the man, with a grin.
+"It's jest a camp."
+
+"But who is stopping here?"
+
+"Three young fellers and myself."
+
+"Are their names Beggs, Lawrence, and Basswood?"
+
+"You've struck it. Maybe you are a friend to 'em?" went on the man,
+inquiringly.
+
+"I am, and I have come a long distance to find them," returned Dave,
+and his tone of voice showed his relief. "Where are they?"
+
+"They left the camp right after dinner an' they ain't back yet. When
+you called I thought it was one of 'em, although they didn't expect to
+be back much before supper-time. But now it's rainin' I guess they'll
+come back sooner."
+
+"How long have they been here?"
+
+"Most a week now, I guess. I didn't come till day before yesterday. I
+didn't have nothin' to do an' they give me a job, cookin' an' like
+that," returned the man.
+
+He invited Dave to make himself at home, and our hero was glad enough
+to go inside and take off the wet raincoat and also his shoes and
+socks. The baggage belonging to Phil and the others was in the cabin,
+and he helped himself to dry garments and a dry pair of slippers.
+
+"We are all school chums," he told the man. "My name is Dave Porter."
+
+"Oh, I heard 'em talkin' about you!" cried the camp-worker, and then
+said his own name was Jerry Blutt, and that he was from Tegley, just
+across the Canadian border.
+
+"We are not far from the border here, are we?" asked our hero.
+
+"About six miles, thet's all," answered Jerry Blutt, and this reply
+gave Dave another idea. More than likely Buster and the others had
+chosen this spot so that, if pursued by the officers of the law, they
+could flee into Canada.
+
+Jerry Blutt said the three lads had spent their time in various ways,
+occasionally going fishing and swimming. They had also written some
+letters and gone to the railroad station to mail them in the box
+placed there for that purpose.
+
+"Have they been having a good time?" asked Dave, curiously.
+
+"I can't say as to that, Mr. Porter. They did seem mighty worried over
+something," answered the camp worker, and from this our hero felt
+certain that the man had not been let into the secret of why the
+runaways were there at all.
+
+Half an hour went by and it continued to rain as hard as ever, while
+the sky remained dark and the wind blew with more or less violence.
+Time and again Dave went to the cabin door, to peer out into the
+storm, but each time he turned back disappointed. His chums were not
+yet in sight.
+
+"They'll be surprised to see me," he thought. "I wonder if they will
+listen to reason and go back with me? Supposing they refuse to return?
+I'd hate to go back alone."
+
+Then he questioned Jerry Blutt about the dam above the Falls. The man
+shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"It ain't safe, so they tell me," he said. "But it's been that way a
+long time, so maybe it won't break away yet awhile. But I'd hate to be
+on the river when she does go."
+
+"Are there any other camps on this island?" went on our hero.
+
+"Not now. There was some other folks, two or three parties, I was
+told, but they all moved out yesterday an' the day before. Maybe they
+got afraid o' the dam," concluded the camp-worker.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+OUT IN THE STORM
+
+
+"This is getting to be something fierce!"
+
+It was Dave who uttered the words, about five o'clock in the
+afternoon. He was looking out of the door of the cabin, and beside him
+stood Jerry Blutt.
+
+The storm had kept up without intermission, the rain coming down in a
+perfect torrent, and the wind blowing in fitful gusts from the east.
+It was raw and depressing, and our hero could not help but shiver as
+he looked out on the turbulent waters of the river.
+
+"It's a pity them fellers ain't got back," said the camp-worker, with
+a slow shake of his head. "It ain't nice to be out in sech a downpour
+as this, an' with sech a wind! Might a tree blow down on 'em!" And he
+shook his head again.
+
+Dave was even more distressed than the man. He could not get that dam
+out of his mind. Such a heavy fall of rain would certainly cause a
+great flow of water, and if the structure was weak, most anything bad
+was liable to happen.
+
+"As soon as the boys get back I'll urge them to leave here," he told
+himself. "If that dam breaks we want to be on high ground, where the
+flood can't reach us."
+
+"'Pears to me like the river was gittin' putty high," remarked Jerry
+Blutt, a little later, as he watched the water in the cove closely.
+
+"Well, it would rise some with all this rain coming down," returned
+Dave.
+
+"So it might,--but I don't know. I wish this camp was on the shore,
+instid o' this island."
+
+"So do I," answered Dave, bluntly.
+
+A fire had been started in the stove and a lantern lit, and Jerry
+Blutt rather reluctantly began preparations for the evening meal. But
+he kept peering out of the doorway of the cabin, and from the lean-to,
+and his eyes always rested on the river, with its rain-swept, swollen
+surface.
+
+"I don't like it at all!" he said, finally. "I wish we had moved over
+to the shore."
+
+"Don't you think it is safe to stay here?"
+
+"It ain't as safe as it might be. If I was alone----" The man stopped
+short.
+
+"What would you do?"
+
+"I hate to say it, but I think I'd go over to the shore, till the
+storm was over and I knew jest how thet dam was a-goin' to act."
+
+"Well, I don't blame you," answered Dave. "And if you want to go, go
+ahead."
+
+"Want me to go alone?"
+
+"If you wish to go, yes."
+
+"But it ain't no safer fer you than it is fer me."
+
+"That's so, too. But I want to see those other fellows--in fact, I
+must see them. If I went to the shore I might miss them."
+
+"You could come back later on."
+
+"But I want to warn them of the danger from the dam."
+
+"You could write a letter and stick it up where they couldn't help but
+see it. Then---- What's that?"
+
+The camp-worker stopped short, as a distant cry reached their ears,
+sounding out above the wind. An instant later the cry was repeated.
+
+"That is Ben Basswood's voice!" cried Dave. "They must be coming
+back!"
+
+Soon another voice sounded out, and our hero recognized Buster Beggs's
+tones. He ran to the cabin door. All was dark outside, and the rain
+was being driven in sheets by the wind.
+
+"Hello! hello!" he yelled, and catching up the lantern, he swung it
+out in one direction and another. Then he saw two forms approaching on
+the run, each dripping with water.
+
+"Ben! And Buster!"
+
+"Why, if it isn't Dave!"
+
+"Where in the world did you come from?"
+
+"Where is Phil?" demanded our hero.
+
+"He is somewhere behind us," answered Buster. "Oh, what a time we've
+had!" and entering the cabin, the fat youth sank down on a bench all
+but exhausted.
+
+"We've had to tramp for over two miles in this rain," explained Ben.
+"And of course we had to ford to the island. Say, the current is
+something fierce now! And the water is getting higher every minute!"
+he added.
+
+"Did you say Phil was behind you?" demanded Dave. He still held the
+lantern on high.
+
+"I thought he was--sure, he must be," answered Ben. "Give him a hail,
+will you? I'm too tired," and he sank on the bench beside Buster.
+
+"Phil! Phil!" yelled our hero, at the top of his lungs. "This way!
+This way!" and he swung the lantern to the right and left.
+
+"Did you say the river is rising?" demanded Jerry Blutt. "How high is
+it? Over the White Bar yet?"
+
+"Yes, the Bar is a foot under water," answered Ben. "Oh, this is a
+great storm!"
+
+"A foot under water!" murmured the camp-worker. "Say, we better git
+out! First thing you know this hull island will be under! An' if thet
+dam breaks----"
+
+"Oh, the dam!" gasped Buster. "I forgot about that! They say it isn't
+safe at all! That is why all the other campers got out! Yes, we must
+leave the island and go to the shore." He turned to Dave. "Did you
+come alone?"
+
+"Yes, Buster. I'll tell you all about it later. But now we must find
+Phil."
+
+"I thought he was right behind me," came from Ben. He looked greatly
+distressed. "I wonder if anything happened to him? Maybe he slipped
+off the rocks into the river!"
+
+"We must look for him!" cried Dave, and reached for his coat and cap.
+"Show me the way you came, Ben."
+
+Ben was nothing loath, and side by side the two chums ran outside into
+the storm, and in the direction of the upper end of the island. They
+had gone but a short distance when they reached a low spot and here
+suddenly found themselves in water several inches deep.
+
+"Hello, you are taking me into the river!" cried Dave.
+
+"This isn't the river!" answered Ben, with a gasp. "Gosh! how the
+water is rising! This was dry when I came over it before!"
+
+"Dry!" ejaculated our hero. "Ben, are you sure?"
+
+"Positive! Say, the water is rising to beat the band! I guess we had
+better get out! If we don't we'll have to swim for it!"
+
+"Phil! Phil! Where are you?"
+
+Standing in water up to his ankles, our hero called again and again,
+and Ben joined in the cry. The lantern was flashed in all directions.
+But nothing was seen or heard of the missing student.
+
+"I am sure he started to follow us across the river," said Ben.
+"Buster was in front, I came next, and Phil was in the rear. I asked
+him twice if he was all right and he said he was. Then it blew so
+hard, and the rain got so heavy, none of us said any more. Oh, Dave,
+what shall we do?"
+
+"I don't know Ben--wish I did."
+
+"Do you think he slipped off the rocks and was--was--drowned?"
+
+"I hope not."
+
+"If he was, wouldn't it be terrible?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+A cry came from behind them, and Buster appeared, followed by Jerry
+Blutt.
+
+"Where is Phil?" demanded the stout youth.
+
+"We don't know."
+
+"The water is terribly high, and Jerry thinks we had better move to
+the shore. He says we might be drowned if that dam should break."
+
+"Don't you think we ought to find Phil first?"
+
+"Sure--if we can. Maybe he went back, when he found out how the water
+was rising," went on the stout youth, hopefully.
+
+"I don't think he'd desert us," answered Ben. "That isn't Phil's
+style."
+
+"You're right, Ben," said Dave.
+
+All splashed around in the water for several minutes, but without
+making any discovery of importance. The river was now rising more
+rapidly than ever, and the camp-worker showed increased nervousness.
+
+"Ain't no two ways about it--the dam's bust!" he cried, at last. "I'm
+goin' to git out, an' I advise all o' you to do the same. If you want
+me to carry anything to shore I'll do it."
+
+"We can't carry any trunks in such a hurry," said Buster.
+
+"Let us carry our suit-cases and bundles," said Ben.
+
+With heavy hearts, Dave and the others returned to the cabin. The
+water in the cove had now risen so high that it swept the edge of the
+lean-to.
+
+"Can we get to shore?" asked Buster. "We haven't any boat," he added,
+turning to Dave.
+
+"We can if you'll hurry," replied Jerry Blutt. "Every minit lost makes
+it jest so much more dangerous."
+
+In great haste Ben and Buster and the camp-worker gathered together
+such belongings as they could conveniently carry. The other things
+were placed in a trunk and hoisted by ropes into a big tree. Then a
+lantern was tied on a post in front of the cabin and to it was
+fastened a brief note, for Phil's benefit, stating they had gone to
+the shore.
+
+"Oh, I hope he is safe!" murmured Dave, anxiously.
+
+"So do I," added his chums.
+
+Jerry Blutt led the way along the shore of the island and then out
+into the stream. They had the second camp lantern with them, one
+belonging to Jerry. He led the way from rock to rock, and they
+followed in single file, Dave bringing up the rear. Ever and anon our
+hero looked back for some sign of Phil, but without avail.
+
+Once out in the river, all were certain that the dam above Camptown
+Falls had burst. The water ran with great rapidity and was filled with
+dirt and debris of various kinds. On the rocks that were low they had
+all they could do to keep their footing.
+
+The most dangerous part of the river had yet to be passed--a section
+close to the shore, where the water was deep and the rocks for fording
+few.
+
+"Mind your footin' here!" sang out the camp-worker. "An' if you slip,
+look out thet you don't hurt yourselves!"
+
+He was splashing along in water up to his knees, sometimes on the
+rocks and then again on a sandbar running in that direction. Then he
+had to make a turn, to avoid a deep portion of the stream, where the
+current was rapid.
+
+Ben was behind the man and Buster was just ahead of Dave. As all
+struggled along, there came an extra heavy blast of wind, followed by
+a perfect deluge of rain.
+
+"Oh!" screamed Buster, an instant later, and peering through the rain,
+Dave saw him suddenly throw up his arms and slip from a rock. There
+was a splash, and poor Buster disappeared from view.
+
+"Buster is in the river!" yelled our hero, and then he leaped for the
+rock from which the stout youth had fallen. He looked down and saw an
+arm and a head come up.
+
+"Help! hel----" came from the unfortunate one, and then the swift
+current caught him and turned him over, out of sight.
+
+"Help!" yelled Dave, to attract the attention of those ahead. And
+then, as he saw Ben turn back, he slipped down on the rock and into
+the swirling river and struck out after Buster.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+PERILS OF THE FLOOD
+
+
+"Dave! Dave!" yelled Ben, as he saw our hero disappear into the
+swiftly-flowing river. "Look out, or you'll both be drowned!"
+
+"What's the trouble?" yelled Jerry Blutt, as he turned back for the
+first time since leaving the island.
+
+"Buster slipped in, and Dave went after him," answered Ben. "Oh, what
+shall we do?" he went on, despairingly.
+
+"Here--we'll throw out the rope!" answered the camp-worker, and took
+from his shoulder a rope he carried.
+
+In the meantime Dave had come up and was striking out with might and
+main for his chum. Our hero realized that Buster must be hurt,
+otherwise he would swim to save himself.
+
+"Must have struck on his head, when he went over," he thought, and he
+was right, poor Buster had done just that and now lay half-unconscious
+as the current swept him further and further from his friends.
+
+It was too dark to see much, and Dave had all he could do to keep in
+sight of the unfortunate one. But presently the stout youth's body
+struck against a rock and was held there, and our hero came up and
+seized the lad by the arm.
+
+"Buster! Buster!" he called out. "What's wrong? Can't you swim?"
+
+"Hel--help me!" gasped the fat youth. "I--I got a knock on the head.
+I'm so--so dizzy I do--don't know what I--I'm do--doing!"
+
+The current now tore Buster away from the rock, and he and Dave
+floated along on the bosom of the river for a distance of fifty yards.
+It was impossible to do much swimming in that madly-rushing element
+and Dave wisely steered for shore. He continued to support his friend,
+who seemed unable to do anything for himself.
+
+At length, when our hero was all but exhausted, his feet struck a
+sandbar. At once he stood up, finding himself in water that reached to
+his waist. He caught up Buster and placed the weakened lad over his
+shoulder. In a dim, uncertain way he saw the shore loom up in front of
+him, and struck out in that direction.
+
+It was a short but hard struggle. Twice Dave went down, once losing
+his hold on his chum. But he got up each time and went after Buster in
+a hurry. Then he made a final dash, came in contact with some bushes,
+and hauled himself and his burden to temporary safety.
+
+All was dark around the two boys, and the rain came down as pitilessly
+as ever. But for this they did not, just then, care. They had been
+close to death, and now they were safe, and that counted for
+everything.
+
+Poor Buster had received a severe bump on the forehead and had a
+swelling there of considerable size. But the stunning effect was
+passing, and he was able to sit up and peer around him.
+
+"Oh, what a crack I got, when I fell over!" he murmured, and then he
+added, gratefully: "It was a fine thing for you to jump in after me,
+Dave!"
+
+"Well, I couldn't stand there and see you drown, Buster," answered our
+hero. "I had to do something."
+
+"Where are the others?"
+
+"Up the stream--unless they went overboard, too."
+
+"Then I suppose we ought to walk that way."
+
+"We will--after we get our breath and you feel strong enough."
+
+"Maybe you can call to them?"
+
+"I'll try."
+
+Dave yelled at the top of his voice, not once but several times.
+Presently an answering hail arose from a distance, and then Ben came
+running up, followed by Jerry.
+
+"Dave! Buster! Are you safe?"
+
+"Yes," answered both.
+
+"Oh, I am so glad! We were afraid you were both drowned! How did it
+happen?"
+
+The two told their story, and then the others told how they had thrown
+out the rope and had seen Dave disappear in the darkness after
+Buster.
+
+"I would have jumped in, too, but I didn't see how I could do any
+good," went on Ben. "Jerry said we had better come ashore and look for
+you down here. So we did that. My! but it's a fearful flood, isn't
+it!"
+
+"Yes. I wish we knew where Phil was," and Dave heaved a deep sigh. Had
+their chum lost his life in that rapidly-rising river?
+
+"Ain't no ust to stay here--gitting wetter an' wetter," said the
+camp-worker, after a pause. "Besides, if that flood gits wuss it is
+bound to come up here. We better git further back--up the hill."
+
+"Is there any shelter around here? I mean on high ground?" asked
+Dave.
+
+"Yes, I know of a cabin up on the hill," answered Buster. "I don't
+know if I can find it in the rain and darkness, but I can try."
+
+He walked along, through the trees, until he reached a footpath
+running up from the shore. They followed the path for about a hundred
+yards, and then came in sight of a long, low, rambling cabin, the home
+in years gone by of some lumbermen. It was in a dilapidated state,
+with doors and windows gone, but it would provide a roof over their
+heads, and that was something.
+
+Entering, the lantern was hung on a nail, and they looked around them.
+There was a fireplace, with some dry sticks handy, and soon they had a
+fire started, which added much to the comfort of the surroundings.
+They hung up the majority of their wet garments and sat close to the
+blaze, drying themselves.
+
+"If I only knew where to look for Phil, I'd go after him," said Dave.
+"But to look for him in the darkness is like looking for the
+proverbial needle in the haystack."
+
+"We'll have to go out first thing in the morning," returned Ben.
+
+"Yes, as soon as we can see," added Buster.
+
+The boys who had run away were anxious to learn what Dave had to say
+about affairs at Oakdale, and in a low voice, while the camp-worker
+was preparing hot coffee and something to eat, he related what had
+happened since their departure.
+
+"You made a big mistake to run away," he said, earnestly. "Just
+because you did that, many folks feel sure you must be guilty. You
+ought to go right back and face the music."
+
+"I guess you are right, Dave," answered Ben, shamefacedly. "But when
+Phil said 'run,' I didn't stop to think, but just got out."
+
+"And that is what I did, too," added the stout youth. "But I don't
+blame Phil any more than I blame myself," he added, hastily.
+
+"Nor do I," said Ben. "We made a big mistake. We should have stood our
+ground, like you and Roger did."
+
+"Well, you come back with me, and we'll face this to a finish," went
+on our hero. "But, of course, we've got to find Phil first."
+
+Only the camp-worker slept well that night. The boys were restless,
+and several times one or another got up, to go to the doorway and
+listen, thinking he had heard a call from Phil. But the calls were
+only imaginary, and morning dawned without a sign of the missing one.
+
+It was still raining, but not so hard as before, and by eight o'clock
+the clouds broke away and the sun commenced to shine. All had an early
+breakfast, from the stores brought along, and then the party hurried
+down to the river.
+
+That the dam above Camptown Falls had broken was plainly evident on
+all sides. During the night the river had risen seven or eight feet,
+bearing on its bosom many trees and bushes, with here and there the
+remains of camps that had been located on low ground. Moosetail Island
+had been swept from end to end, only the higher spots escaping the
+flood. The waters were now going down, the rush from the broken dam
+having spent itself.
+
+The boys gave scant heed to the destruction effected by the rain and
+the broken dam. All their thoughts were centered on Phil. What had
+become of their chum? Was he dead or alive?
+
+"I wonder if it wouldn't be best to get over to the island and look
+around?" suggested Dave. "Most likely he went there--thinking you
+would be at the cabin."
+
+"But how are we to get to the island?" asked Buster. He had no desire
+to fall into the turbulent stream again.
+
+"Oh, the water is going down rapidly, Buster. I think we can make it
+by noon."
+
+All walked up and down the river bank, looking in vain for some trace
+of the shipowner's son. Once they met some people from another camp
+and asked about Phil. But these folks shook their heads.
+
+"Didn't see a soul," said one of the men.
+
+Jerry Blutt had been looking the situation over carefully, and he said
+he thought they could get to the island by going up the river a
+distance.
+
+"Then the current will help us along, and we won't have to fight so
+hard," said the camp-worker. He did not like the idea of crossing the
+water, but did not wish to desert the boys.
+
+On the trip they carried the rope, with Jerry at the head and Dave at
+the rear. All took tight hold, so that if one slipped the others might
+pull him up.
+
+"Now, take it easy," cautioned the camp man. "This water is runnin'
+putty swift, even yet."
+
+He had mapped out a course with his eye, and proceeded slowly and
+cautiously. Once away from the shore, they felt the full force of the
+onrushing waters and were all but swept from their feet. It was well
+that they were a good distance above Moosetail Island, for to reach
+this spot by going straight out in the stream would have been
+impossible.
+
+It was a long, hard, and dangerous trip, and all drew a deep breath of
+relief when they finally set foot on the island. At times they had
+been in water up to their waists and it had looked as if they must
+surely be swept away. Once a tree branch, coming swiftly along, had
+caught Dave and literally carried him off his feet for several yards.
+
+They landed at one end of the island, at a point where the bushes were
+still two feet under water. The evidences of the flood were on every
+hand, and the water was muddy and filled with broken-away brushwood
+and trees.
+
+"I guess we had better strike out for the camp," said Dave. "Phil
+would go there if he went anywhere."
+
+As they advanced one or another gave a loud call. But no answer came
+back, and this made them look gravely at each other. Was the perilous
+trip to the island to prove a vain one?
+
+In a quarter of an hour they came in sight of the camp. The cove had
+been blotted out, and the water was eddying around the cabin to a
+depth of several inches. Mud was everywhere, inside the place and out,
+and this showed that the flood had swept the spot at a height of
+several feet.
+
+"We might have stayed here," was Buster's comment. "It didn't hurt the
+big tree."
+
+"But we didn't know how bad it was going to be," answered Ben. "It
+might have washed away the whole island."
+
+"Let us go up to the high ground and look for Phil," suggested Dave.
+"Maybe he went to the highest spot he could find."
+
+The others agreed, and leaving the camp-worker at the cabin, the boys,
+led by Buster, tramped through the wet and mud to a little hill. Again
+they set up their calls, but, as before, no answer came back.
+
+"I don't believe he came here," said Ben, at last. "If he was here he
+would surely hear us."
+
+"Unless he was hurt and couldn't answer," returned Dave.
+
+From the top of the little hill they could see both ends of Moosetail
+Island and also both shores of the river. As they gazed about them,
+Dave suddenly gave a shout.
+
+"Look! look!" he cried, pointing to the shore which they had left but
+a short while before. "There is somebody waving a handkerchief at
+us!"
+
+"It's Phil!" returned Ben.
+
+"Are you sure?" questioned Buster. "I can see it is a man or a boy,
+but that is all."
+
+"It looks like Phil," said Dave. "Oh, I hope it is!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+BACK TO THE SCHOOL
+
+
+They waved frantically to the person on the shore, and he waved
+frantically in return, and at last all were convinced that it must
+really be their missing chum.
+
+"He must think I am Jerry," said Dave. "Won't he be surprised to see
+me!"
+
+"He will be, unless he was at the cabin last night and read the note,"
+returned Buster.
+
+"The note wasn't touched," said Ben. "I noticed that it was exactly as
+we left it."
+
+All gave a parting wave and pointed to the shore, and then left the
+hill. They made their way down to the cabin, and told the camp-worker
+what they had seen.
+
+"It must be Lawrence," said Jerry Blutt. "Maybe he'll come over here,
+instead of waiting for us to go to him."
+
+"Gracious, I never thought of that!" cried Buster.
+
+"We'll be like the men in one of Shadow's stories," said Ben. "One was
+upstairs in a big office building and one downstairs. The man
+upstairs went down, and the downstairs man went up, and they kept that
+up until both stopped, tired out, one upstairs and one down." And the
+others had to smile at the brief yarn.
+
+All journeyed to the lower shore of the island, where they could get a
+better view of the spot where the person they thought was Phil had
+been. They saw the party walking up the river bank, looking for a good
+place to ford. All shouted loudly and waved their hands to keep him
+where he was, and he nodded his head deeply, to show that he
+understand.
+
+"It must be Phil," said Dave. "Oh, how thankful I am that he wasn't
+carried away by the flood!"
+
+The boys were impatient to get back to the shore, and Jerry Blutt did
+not blame them. To carry any of the stuff over was still out of the
+question, and they did not attempt it.
+
+"You can come and get it some day, Jerry," said Buster. "You can ship
+it to us by express, and we'll pay you for your trouble;" and so it
+was arranged.
+
+It was as hard to gain the shore as it had been to reach the island,
+and all were well-nigh exhausted when they finally left the water, not
+to return again. Phil saw them coming, and when he made out Dave he
+was almost dumfounded.
+
+"Where in the world did you come from?" he demanded, as he caught our
+hero by the hand.
+
+"From Oakdale, Phil."
+
+"Did you run away, too?" demanded the shipowner's son.
+
+"Hardly," answered Dave, with a grin. "I came to bring you fellows
+back. But first tell us, how did you get out of the flood last
+night?"
+
+"Oh, I had a fierce time of it. I tried to get back to the camp, but
+stumbled over some tree-roots and went down in a hole and hurt my
+ankle. When I got up I couldn't see the others, and I must have lost
+my way. Then it began to rain and get dark, and I didn't know which
+way to turn. I yelled dozens of times, but I didn't hear any answer. I
+tried to locate the cabin, but I must have been completely turned
+around, for I came out on the shore. Then the flood came along, and
+before I knew it I was floating down the river. I hit a tree and clung
+to that, and we drifted a mile or more before the tree got stuck on a
+sandbar. I stayed there, in the rain and darkness, until morning and
+then waded and swam ashore. I was so tired out I had to rest for
+awhile, and then I came up here, to try to find out something about
+our crowd. I was thinking of getting over to the island again when I
+saw you on the top of the hill. Of course, I thought Dave was
+Jerry."
+
+"We were scared to death, thinking you had been drowned," said Ben.
+
+"Well, I came pretty close to it," was the serious reply. "No more
+such flood for me!"
+
+All turned towards the cabin where four of the party had spent the
+night, and there Jerry was called on to prepare the best meal their
+limited stores afforded. On the river-bank they had picked up some
+fish cast up by the flood, and these were broiled, making a welcome
+addition to the meal.
+
+While the meal was being prepared, and after it had been eaten, Dave
+had a serious talk with Phil and the others, and all realized the
+folly they had committed in running away from Oak Hall. Phil in
+particular, was much disturbed and said he had been thinking of coming
+back.
+
+"But we saw that article in the newspaper, and it scared us," went on
+the shipowner's son. "Of course, it didn't mention any names, but we
+knew it was meant for us. I know now, just as well as the others, that
+it was a mistake to run away."
+
+"Then, you'll go back with me?" questioned Dave, eagerly.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And you'll go back, too, Ben and Buster?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I am mighty glad to hear it--and I feel that this thing will come
+out all right in the end," returned Dave.
+
+"By the way, there is one thing I haven't told you, Dave," said
+Buster, a minute later. "The general excitement drove it clean out of
+my head. We know who it was that spoiled the feast Phil got up for the
+crowd."
+
+"You do?" asked our hero, with interest.
+
+"Yes. It was Nat Poole. He went to Rockville and sent those telephone
+messages to Jason Sparr and that musical professor, calling the whole
+affair off. He did it because he wasn't invited to take part."
+
+"How did you learn this?"
+
+"I heard it the night I went to the Hall to get our baggage. When I
+was in hiding, waiting for a chance to go to the dormitory, I saw Nat
+Poole come in, along with that new student, Will Fasey. They had been
+out somewhere having a good time, and Nat was telling Fasey how he had
+sent the telephone messages and queered the feast. I would have
+pitched into him then and there only I didn't dare expose myself,"
+went on the stout youth.
+
+"But he'll get what is coming to him from me, when I get back to the
+school," put in Phil. "It was a contemptible piece of business, and I
+want everybody to know it. Besides, he has got to pay for what I lost
+by the transaction."
+
+"If it wasn't for that, maybe we wouldn't have been suspected of
+blowing up the hotel," said Ben. "Then you really think the wild man
+did it, Dave?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But what of that letter Jason Sparr got, saying our crowd was
+guilty?"
+
+"I don't know what to make of that, Ben. I don't think the wild man
+could write that."
+
+"Would Nat Poole be bad enough to do it?"
+
+"Maybe. But it was an awful thing to do. I didn't think Nat would be
+as mean as that."
+
+The boys had dried and pressed their clothing as best they could, and
+put on clean collars, cuffs, and neckties, and therefore looked quite
+presentable once more.
+
+"As soon as we get to town we can get cleaned up a little better,"
+said Dave. "So we won't look quite like tramps when we return to the
+Hall."
+
+"I hate to face Doctor Clay," remarked Phil, dubiously.
+
+"So do I," added Ben and Buster.
+
+"Well, it has got to be done," answered Dave. "So make the best of it.
+The doctor understands the situation, so I don't think he'll be hard
+on you."
+
+"I hope they have got the wild man, and that they prove he blew up the
+hotel," said Phil, wistfully. "That is the only thing that will
+really clear us."
+
+"Oh, they are bound to get the wild man sooner or later," answered
+Dave, hopefully.
+
+It was decided to take the one afternoon train from Camptown Falls,
+and at the proper time the boys walked to the little depot, Dave with
+his suit-case, and the others with some hand baggage. Instructions
+were left with Jerry Blutt regarding the other baggage, and the man
+was paid for his services. He said he was glad that nobody had been
+drowned in the flood, and added that he was going up to the
+broken-away dam later on to see how matters looked.
+
+It was a rather quiet crowd that got aboard the train when it came
+along. The conductor wanted to know how they had fared in the flood,
+and they told him. At Lumberport the boys had to wait an hour for the
+next train to Oakdale Junction, and they spent the time in getting a
+good supper, and in having their shoes shined, and in brushing up
+generally.
+
+"I'll be glad to get back late at night," said Phil to Dave. "I'd hate
+to have the whole crowd staring at us when we came in."
+
+At the Junction they waited but a few minutes, and the run to Oakdale
+did not take long. They were the only ones to get off at the depot,
+and the spot was all but deserted. But they had telegraphed ahead,
+and Horsehair was on hand, with a carriage, to meet them.
+
+"Glad to see you young gents back, indeed I am," said the school
+driver.
+
+"Any news, Horsehair?" asked Dave, as they piled into the carriage.
+
+"Not as I know of."
+
+"Have they got that wild man yet?" questioned Phil.
+
+"No, sir. But they seen him--along the river--day before yesterday. He
+was sleepin' in a barn. But he got away before the farmer and his man
+could git him."
+
+"Where was that?" questioned Ben.
+
+"Up to the Morrison place."
+
+"The Morrison place," mused Buster. "I know that family. When I get a
+chance I am going to ask them about this," he added.
+
+When the boys arrived at Oak Hall they found Doctor Clay sitting up to
+receive them. He smiled at Dave, but was somewhat cold towards the
+others.
+
+"It is too late to listen to what you have to say to-night," said he.
+"All of you may report in my office directly after our opening
+exercises in the morning."
+
+When the boys went upstairs there were a good many exclamations of
+surprise, and Roger and the others wanted to ask innumerable
+questions. But a monitor cut all talk short, and Dave and the
+runaways got to bed as quickly as possible.
+
+All were up early, and Dave, Phil, and the others had to tell their
+story before going down to breakfast. Roger and those who had been
+left behind with him listened eagerly to the tale of the flood and the
+other happenings.
+
+"I guess Dave got there just in time," said the senator's son. "How
+about it, Buster?"
+
+"He sure did," said the stout lad, and shuddered to think how close he
+had been to drowning.
+
+It can well be imagined that Phil, Ben, and Buster did not have much
+appetite for breakfast. Phil looked around for Nat Poole, but the
+money-lender's son had not yet returned to the school.
+
+"Now, tell me everything," said Doctor Clay, when the boys at length
+filed into his office. "As they say in court, we want the truth, the
+whole truth, and nothing but the truth."
+
+"And that is what I'm going to give you, Doctor Clay," answered Phil.
+"I made a big mistake in running away, and I am glad Dave came to
+bring us back. I haven't done anything wrong, and I am here to face
+the music, as the saying goes."
+
+"And so am I," came from Ben and Buster.
+
+Then the boys told their story in detail, omitting nothing, and Dave
+related how he had gone to Camptown Falls, and how the flood had
+caught him. In the midst of the narrative came a sharp knock on the
+door.
+
+"Come in," said the doctor, and one of the servants entered.
+
+"A man to see you, sir," said the servant. "He says it is very
+important--something about that wild man, sir! He's terribly excited,
+sir!"
+
+"The wild man again!" murmured the master of the school, while the
+boys looked at him and the servant with interest. "Show the visitor in
+and I will hear what he has to say."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+THE TRAIL THROUGH THE WOODS
+
+
+In a minute the servant ushered in a farmer whom the boys recognized
+as Henry Morrison, a man who had a farm along the river-front, about a
+mile from Oak Hall.
+
+"Good-morning, sir," said the farmer, bowing to the doctor and then to
+the boys. "Excuse me for being in such a hurry, but I thought you
+would like to know."
+
+"I'll be glad to hear what you have to say, Mr. Morrison," replied the
+master of the school. "Sit down," and he pointed to a handy chair.
+
+"It's about that wild man, Doctor Clay!" exclaimed the farmer,
+dropping into the seat and mopping his forehead with his handkerchief.
+"It's something terribul, the way he carries on. He 'most scared my
+wife to death!"
+
+"He has been to your place again?"
+
+"Yes, sir, last night. He was in the barn, and he jumped out at my
+wife and said he was going to blow the fort to pieces! She got so
+scared she dropped her pailful of milk and ran to the house. I got
+mad and got my shotgun, but the fellow had skipped out before I could
+catch sight of him."
+
+"What time was this?"
+
+"Just about six o'clock. But that ain't all. This morning I started
+for town, intending to tell the constable and the justice about it,
+when all of a sudden, when I was passing the end of your property, I
+see the wild man down there, behind a tree."
+
+"Just now?" asked Dave, eagerly.
+
+"Not more'n a quarter of an hour ago. That's why I stepped in here.
+He's a dangerous man, Doctor Clay, and I think he ought to be rounded
+up!" went on Henry Morrison, earnestly.
+
+"You are right, he certainly ought to be put under restraint,"
+answered the master of Oak Hall. "I will see to this at once. Will you
+assist in the hunt, Mr. Morrison?"
+
+"Of course--if I don't have to go alone. I don't think it is safe for
+anybody to tackle him alone, he's that wild and dangerous."
+
+"Can we take part in the search?" asked Phil, eagerly. "Oh, do let us
+do it, Doctor Clay!" he pleaded.
+
+"I suppose so, if you will promise to be careful. Mr. Morrison, can
+you point out the exact spot where you saw the man?"
+
+"Of course I can."
+
+"Then we will at once make up a searching party."
+
+Doctor Clay could act quickly when the occasion demanded, and inside
+of ten minutes a searching party was made up, composed of Dave and his
+chums, Mr. Dale, Horsehair, and several men who chanced to be working
+around the grounds.
+
+"Oh, I hope we catch him and are able to prove that he blew up the
+hotel dining-room," said Phil to Dave.
+
+"So do I, Phil."
+
+Henry Morrison led the way, and it was not long before the spot was
+gained where he had seen Wilbur Poole. From that point a path ran from
+the river back into the woods.
+
+"Maybe he took that path," suggested our hero, and several thought the
+same.
+
+"I think we had better scatter," suggested Mr. Dale, who had been
+placed in charge by the doctor. "By doing that we can cover a wide
+range of territory in a comparatively short space of time. And keep as
+quiet as possible, for should he hear us he will most likely start and
+run."
+
+"If he didn't run when he saw Mr. Morrison," murmured Buster. "He may
+be miles away already."
+
+The crowd separated into pairs, Dave and Phil going together and Roger
+going with Ben, and Buster with Horsehair. All had armed themselves
+with sticks, and Mr. Dale carried a pair of handcuffs, and one of the
+hired men had a rope.
+
+Deeper and deeper into the woods went the party, spread out in a long
+line. They had examined the river-front and felt fairly certain that
+the wild man had not left by boat.
+
+"Looks like a wild-goose chase," remarked Phil, with a sigh, after a
+half an hour had passed.
+
+"Oh, we don't want to give up yet," answered Dave. "Why, it isn't much
+after ten o'clock. We can stay out till noon, at least."
+
+"I'd stay out all day, if I thought we could catch him," returned the
+shipowner's son, promptly.
+
+Presently the boys espied a small stone house, standing beside a brook
+which flowed through the woods into the river. In the house lived an
+old man who made his living by making baskets and fancy articles of
+birch bark.
+
+"Let us see if old Herick is around," suggested Dave. "He may be able
+to tell us something."
+
+They found the old man hard at work on a fancy basket. He looked
+surprised when thus suddenly confronted by the students.
+
+"Did I see a wild man?" he queried, in reply to their question. "I
+guess I did,--at least he acted queer enough. He danced up here, made
+a deep bow, and told me the army would be along in four minutes. Then
+he made another bow and walked off, as stiff as a drum-major."
+
+"When was this?" demanded Dave.
+
+"About half an hour ago."
+
+"And which way did he go?" put in Phil, eagerly.
+
+"That way," and the old basket-maker pointed up the brook. "Walked
+right in the water, too. I was going to follow him at first but then I
+didn't think it was any use."
+
+The boys waited to hear no more, but telling old Herick to watch for
+the other searchers and tell them about the wild man, they set off up
+the brook as fast as they could travel.
+
+As the chums progressed they looked to the right and left, wondering
+if Wilbur Poole had kept to the tiny watercourse or taken to the
+woods, which were now exceedingly dense.
+
+"I see his footprints!" cried Phil, as they passed a sandy stretch.
+"Anyway, those marks look fresh."
+
+"I fancy you are right, Phil, and if so, he can't be very far ahead of
+us."
+
+They went on, following the windings of the stream until it became
+less than a foot wide. It came to an end at a number of springs among
+the rocks.
+
+"Fine, cold water," announced Dave. "Here is a chance for a good
+drink, Phil."
+
+Both were drinking their fill when a loud voice suddenly challenged
+them.
+
+"Ha! What are you doing at my fountain?"
+
+Both looked up hurriedly and saw the wild man standing on the highest
+of the rocks. He had his arms folded and was glaring at them sternly.
+
+"Oh!" murmured Phil. "Say, Dave, there he is! What shall we do?"
+
+"Let us try to make friends with him," suggested Dave. "If we don't,
+he may run away, and he can easily do that in these thick woods."
+
+"If we could only notify the others!"
+
+"You can go back if you wish, while I talk to him."
+
+"Aren't you afraid?"
+
+"Oh, I reckon I can take care of myself," answered Dave.
+
+"Do you not know I gave a million dollars for these fountains?" went
+on the wild man.
+
+"Well, they are worth it," answered Dave, calmly. "It is very good
+water. Why don't you have it bottled, Mr. Poole?"
+
+"Who calls me Poole? I am the King of Sumatra. My army is following
+me."
+
+"To blow up another fort, I suppose," said Phil, as he commenced to
+back away.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then I must go, for I don't want to be blown up," and, so speaking,
+Phil commenced to retreat.
+
+"The fort is not here--it is in Oakdale, close to the other fort,"
+said the wild man, and now he came down from the big rock and stood
+quite close to Dave. There was a strange look of cunning in his eyes,
+and Dave had to shiver, although he did his best to keep calm.
+
+"In Oakdale," said Dave, slowly. "Say, you blew up that hotel fort in
+fine shape, didn't you?"
+
+"Ha! ha! so I did! But I was discovered, worse luck, I was
+discovered!" continued the wild man, with a sad shake of his head.
+"The enemy saw me!"
+
+"Somebody saw you?" queried our hero, with interest.
+
+"Yes, worse luck. But it shan't happen again. Next time I shall go
+masked. I have my mask here." And Wilbur Poole pulled from his pocket
+a mask made of a bit of blue cloth. "I will show you how I wear it."
+And he fastened it over his face by means of a couple of strings.
+
+"Fine! fine!" cried Dave, in pretended delight. He wished to humor the
+man until Phil returned with the others. "It couldn't be better. You
+ought to patent that kind of a mask."
+
+"I will patent it soon, after the other fort is down."
+
+"You just said somebody saw you when you blew up the other," continued
+our hero. "Who was it?"
+
+"Ha! that is a state secret. Only the cabinet must know of it--the
+cabinet and the man who makes shoes."
+
+"I am sorry you won't let me in on your secrets," said Dave. "I want
+to help you. Won't you hire me as a clerk?"
+
+"How much do you want a week?" demanded the wild man, in a
+business-like tone.
+
+"How much will you give?"
+
+"To a good clerk forty dollars."
+
+"Then I'll take the job."
+
+"Very good. Your name is Crusoe, isn't it--Robinson Crusoe?"
+
+"You've got it."
+
+"If I give you the job, you must have your hair shaved off," continued
+the wild man, looking at Dave's hair critically.
+
+"All right, I'll have that done when we reach a barber shop."
+
+"It isn't necessary to wait!" cried Wilbur Poole. "I am a barber."
+
+"You?"
+
+"To be sure--I have a certificate from the Emperor of Siam. See
+here!"
+
+The wild man put his hand into an inner pocket and suddenly brought
+forth a pair of long shears.
+
+"I can cut your hair and shave you," he announced. "Just sit down on
+yonder throne and I'll start to work." And he pointed to a flat
+rock.
+
+The sight of the sharp-pointed shears was not a pleasant one, and when
+the wild man invited him to sit down Dave felt very much like running
+away. The man evidently saw how he felt, and suddenly caught him by
+the arm.
+
+"Sit down!" he thundered. "I won't hurt you. I am an expert barber."
+
+"Let us talk about the job first," said Dave, trying to keep his wits
+about him, although he was terribly disturbed. He wondered how long it
+would be before Phil would return.
+
+"What do you want to know?"
+
+"Will you cut my hair in the latest fashion?"
+
+"I never cut hair in any other way."
+
+"And will you curl the ends? I like curls."
+
+"If you want them, although they make a man look girlish," answered
+the wild man.
+
+"And will you----" went on Dave, when Wilbur Poole suddenly grabbed
+him by both arms and forced him backwards on the flat rock.
+
+"I'll go to work at once!" cried the wild man. "Sit still!" And he
+flourished the shears before our hero's face.
+
+Dave felt a chill run down his backbone. But a moment later he felt a
+thrill of relief, as from the bushes behind the wild man stepped Phil,
+Mr. Dale, and several others.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+THE CAPTURE OF THE WILD MAN
+
+
+"Now then, you may go to work," said our hero, as he saw Mr. Dale come
+up close behind the wild man. "But sharpen the scissors first,
+please."
+
+"I will," was Wilbur Poole's answer, and he opened up the shears and
+commenced to stroke them back and forth on a rock near by.
+
+An instant later the wild man was jerked over backwards and the
+dangerous shears were snatched from his grasp. He commenced to
+struggle, but the whole crowd surrounded him, and before he could
+realize the situation his hands were made fast.
+
+"It is treachery, base treachery!" he groaned. "My army has betrayed
+me!" And he commenced to weep.
+
+"What a terrible state of mind to be in!" murmured Roger. "He is
+certainly as crazy as they make 'em!"
+
+"I guess you are right," answered Phil. "But I am glad we have got
+him."
+
+"He spoke about the blowing up of the hotel," said Dave. "And he said
+somebody saw him do it."
+
+"Who was it?"
+
+"He didn't mention any names."
+
+"Maybe he was simply wandering in his mind," suggested Ben.
+
+"I don't think so," returned Dave. "I think, if he was questioned long
+enough, we could get the truth out of him. He doesn't seem to be crazy
+all the time."
+
+"It's a terrible thing for the Poole family--to have such a crazy man
+in it," was Buster's opinion; and the other lads agreed with him.
+
+The prisoner was marched along the brook, past the home of old Herick,
+and then down the river-road. By this time all the searchers had come
+together, including Henry Morrison and some outsiders.
+
+"I'm mighty glad you've got him," said the farmer. "And I hope he
+don't get away from you."
+
+"He won't get away," answered Mr. Dale.
+
+"The women of this district have been afraid to go out alone," went on
+Henry Morrison. "They'll be glad to know he's been captured."
+
+"We'll have to let the Pooles know right away," said Dave.
+
+"I fancy Doctor Clay will send a telegram," answered Mr. Dale. "And
+in the meanwhile we'll have to take the prisoner to the Oakdale
+lockup."
+
+It was nearly noon when the crowd reached Oak Hall. The wild man had
+but little to say. His capture had evidently broken his spirit, and he
+was inclined to cry. But when Doctor Clay asked him if he would like
+to have something to eat, he brightened up wonderfully.
+
+"It is a sad case," said the master of the Hall. "But under proper
+treatment I think he can be cured."
+
+The news quickly circulated throughout the school that the wild man
+had been caught and that he was Wilbur Poole, an uncle to Nat, and all
+the boys were anxious to catch a sight of the strange individual. The
+teachers and servants were likewise curious, and looked at him as he
+ate his dinner in a corner of the dining-hall, surrounded by those who
+had captured him and who were watching, to see that he did not get
+away. He was not allowed to use a knife and fork, but his food was cut
+up for him and served with a spoon.
+
+The only person at Oak Hall who did not come in to see the wild man
+was Job Haskers. When asked about this, the dictatorial teacher
+shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Some of the boys are wild enough for me," he said. "I want nothing to
+do with the insane."
+
+"It is a sad case," said the teacher who was addressing Job Haskers.
+
+"There are many just as bad," responded the other, coldly. "It is up
+to the Poole family to look after that man and see that he doesn't
+break out again."
+
+It was decided to take the wild man down to Oakdale in the school
+carryall, to be driven by Horsehair. Mr. Dale was to go along, and so
+were Phil, Dave, Ben, Buster, and Doctor Clay.
+
+The carryall was brought around to the side entrance of the school,
+and Wilbur Poole was told that he was about to take a ride through the
+country. He walked through the hallway willingly enough, but suddenly,
+on turning a corner, set up a shout.
+
+"You! you! I have found you at last!" he cried, rushing forward. "You
+are the one who exposed me! Base soldier that you are! You have ruined
+the whole army!" And in a sudden fit of passion he ran up to Job
+Haskers and caught him by the throat.
+
+"Le--let g-g-go!" gasped the teacher, and tried to shake the man off.
+Then the others ran up, and Wilbur Poole was dragged back and
+handcuffed.
+
+"Do you know that man?" asked Dave, struck by a sudden idea.
+
+"Yes! yes!" groaned the wild man. "He exposed me! The army is lost!"
+
+"How did he expose you?"
+
+"He saw me do it."
+
+"Do what?"
+
+"Blow up the fort-hotel. Oh, what a base villain he was to look on!"
+groaned the wild man, and suddenly commenced to weep.
+
+"What is--the--er--man talking about?" stammered Job Haskers, and all
+saw him turn pale.
+
+"He says you saw him blow up Sparr's place," said Dave, pointedly.
+
+"It is false, absurd!" said the teacher. "I--er--I never saw the
+rascal before."
+
+"He isn't a rascal, Mr. Haskers. He is simply out of his mind,"
+remonstrated Mr. Dale. "He is not accountable for his actions."
+
+"Well, he ought not to say such things," returned the dictatorial
+teacher.
+
+"You saw me--you know you did!" cried Wilbur Poole. "You spoiled
+everything! I might have blown up many forts if it hadn't been for
+you!" And he shook his head dolefully.
+
+"Take him away," said the teacher, and turned his back on the wild
+man.
+
+"Dave, I think the wild man speaks the truth!" whispered Phil to our
+hero.
+
+"Possibly, Phil. I think the matter will bear investigation."
+
+"And if old Haskers saw the thing done, why didn't he tell about it.
+Do you think that letter--"
+
+"It struck me that such might be the truth, Phil. But don't say
+anything until you are sure."
+
+"He was down on us--ever since we mentioned that affair with the Widow
+Breen," went on the shipowner's son.
+
+"I'd like to see that letter Jason Sparr got--saying we were guilty,"
+returned our hero. "Maybe Doctor Clay can get hold of it."
+
+All the way to Oakdale the boys spoke of the case in whispers. Phil
+was quite sure Job Haskers had seen Wilbur Poole blow up the hotel and
+equally sure that the dictatorial teacher had written the letter to
+the hotel-keeper stating he, Dave, and their chums were guilty.
+
+"He thought we'd be locked up, or at least that we'd be sent away from
+the school and he would be rid of us," said Phil. "He is growing
+afraid of us! Oh, if we can prove that he did it, I'll make it hot for
+him!"
+
+"If he did such a thing as that, he ought to be discharged from Oak
+Hall," was Ben's comment.
+
+"I'll get my father to sue him for damages," put in Buster.
+
+"Well, don't be hasty," advised Dave. "There may be some
+mistake--although I think not."
+
+At Oakdale, Wilbur Poole was turned over to the authorities, who
+placed him in a comfortable room attached to the lockup. As it was
+known that he was insane, he could not be counted a criminal, and the
+majority of the people pitied him and hoped that some day he would be
+restored to his right mind.
+
+A telegram was sent to the Poole family, and the next day came a reply
+that some men would come to take Wilbur Poole away to a sanitarium. It
+was established beyond a doubt that he had used the dynamite to blow
+up the dining-room of Sparr's hotel, and, consequently, our hero and
+his chums were cleared of that charge, much to their satisfaction.
+
+"I wonder if Nat will come back?" said Shadow. "I should think he
+would hate to do it."
+
+"I don't think he will," said Luke.
+
+"What will you do if he does come back, Phil?" asked Gus.
+
+"I don't know, Gus. Of course, I'll let him know what I think of him
+for spoiling my plans for a spread. But I hate to be hard on him,
+because of this disgrace about his uncle."
+
+"Yes, that's a terrible thing," was Chip Macklin's comment. "I'd hate
+to have a crazy man in my family."
+
+"Well, such things can't be helped," put in Polly Vane. "The Poole
+family will have to make the best of it."
+
+It was several days later when Nat Poole showed himself. Phil and Dave
+did not see him until later, and both were struck by the change in his
+appearance. He looked haggard and much older, and his arrogance was
+completely gone.
+
+"Got back, eh?" said Phil, walking up to him.
+
+"Yes," returned the money-lender's son, and his voice sounded hollow.
+
+"What have they done with your uncle, Nat?" asked Dave, kindly.
+
+"Put him in another sanitarium, where he will have the best of care
+and doctoring."
+
+"I hope he gets well."
+
+"We all hope that." Nat swallowed a lump in his throat and then looked
+gloomily at Phil. "Well, you got the best of me," he said, shortly.
+
+"How the best of you?" demanded the shipowner's son.
+
+"I understand you found out about that spread."
+
+"I did."
+
+"Well, I'll pay for the damage done--as soon as I get the money. I
+haven't any now--Dad's got too much to pay on Uncle Wilbur's account."
+Nat swallowed another lump in his throat. "I'm sorry I did it now,
+Phil, honest I am," he went on, brokenly.
+
+"Well, if that's the case, let us drop the matter, Nat," was the
+instant reply. "I don't believe in hitting a fellow when he is down.
+You haven't got to pay me anything. The whole thing is past and
+gone,--and that ends it."
+
+"Thank you." Nat wanted to say something more, but his voice suddenly
+broke and he turned away to hide his emotion, and then walked away.
+
+"He's hit and hit hard," said Roger, in a low voice.
+
+"And you did well to drop that matter, Phil," added Dave. "Maybe Nat
+has learned a lesson he won't easily forget."
+
+Dave was right about the lesson Nat Poole had learned. He was deeply
+humiliated, both by the exposure concerning the feast and by what had
+been learned concerning his insane uncle, and for a long time was
+quite another boy.
+
+It may be added here that at a new sanitarium, and under first-class
+medical treatment, a marked change came over Wilbur Poole, and in less
+than a year he was completely cured of his weakmindedness. With a
+nurse as a companion he went into the country to rest both body and
+mind, and later on came out into the world again as well as anybody.
+Strange to say, he remembered nothing of calling himself the King of
+Sumatra, nor of blowing up Jason Sparr's hotel. But others did not
+forget about the blowing up, and the damage done had to be settled for
+by Mr. Aaron Poole, who was his brother's guardian and manager of his
+estate for the time being.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+A BIT OF EVIDENCE
+
+
+"Dave, what do you make of this?"
+
+"Well, to tell the truth, Phil, I don't think much of it."
+
+"You don't think it is a clew?"
+
+"Do you?"
+
+"It's rather faint, I must confess."
+
+"Oh, I don't think there is anything to it," declared Ben.
+
+"There is something, but not a great deal," came from Roger. "I don't
+see how you are going to follow it up."
+
+This talk between the boys occurred after Dave, Phil, Ben, Roger, and
+Buster had called upon Jason Sparr and the justice and insisted on
+seeing the letter the hotel man had received which stated that the
+boys were guilty of blowing up the dining-room of his hostelry.
+
+The hotel man had treated them kindly, for he was in dread that the
+boys would get their folks to sue him for damages. He had offered to
+pay back the money taken from Phil for the spread, and the
+shipowner's son had taken the amount, to which he was justly
+entitled.
+
+The examination of the letter had revealed next to nothing. It was
+evidently written in a disguised hand, but some of the letters looked
+like Job Haskers's handwriting. In the corner of the paper some sort
+of an advertisement had been torn off, only the letters, "_blisher_"
+showing.
+
+"I think those letters are part of the word, '_Publisher_,'" Dave had
+said. "This letter was evidently penned by somebody who used some
+publisher's blank."
+
+"Maybe Job Haskers had those blanks," Phil had exclaimed. "Remember,
+he said he published or was going to publish something once upon a
+time."
+
+The boys talked it over, but could reach no conclusion. Jason Sparr
+told how the letter had come to him, but this added no new light on
+the subject.
+
+"Well, it was a nasty trick, no matter who played it," said Dave.
+
+"I sha'n't rest until I find out who did it," retorted Phil.
+
+All were resolved to watch Job Haskers and also Nat Poole. But while
+doing this they had to turn once more to their studies. Phil, Ben, and
+Buster had to work harder than ever, and so did Dave, to make up for
+the time lost during their absence. But Doctor Clay was kind to them,
+and for once Job Haskers did not say anything, although he showed that
+he expected them to "toe the mark," as Roger expressed it.
+
+Several weeks slipped by, and during that time Oak Hall played several
+games of ball. One game of importance was won, and this was celebrated
+in a befitting manner. Dave attended the games, and so did Phil and
+Roger, but none of the three allowed the sport to interfere with their
+studies. All were "in the grind," and resolved to graduate that coming
+June with the highest possible honors.
+
+During those days Dave received many letters from home. His folks and
+friends were glad to know that the wild man had been captured and the
+mystery of the blowing up cleared away. Jessie sent him a very warm
+letter in particular, congratulating him for bringing back the
+runaways, and saying she hoped he would have no more trouble during
+the final term at Oak Hall. She added that she and all the others
+expected to come to the school at graduation exercises.
+
+"Now it is up to me to make good," said Dave, after reading this
+letter several times. "Dad expects it, and Jessie, and everybody, and
+I am not going to disappoint them."
+
+But it was no light task to remain at the top of the senior class, or
+even near it, for there were bright seniors in plenty, including the
+studious Polly Vane, who seemed the brightest of all. But Dave plugged
+away, day after day, resolved to keep at it until the very last. He
+was writing on his theme and had it about half finished.
+
+"One month more and it will all be over but the shouting," said Roger
+one day, as he came into the room where Dave was studying.
+
+"All over but the shouting or weeping," returned Phil, who was
+present. "I am afraid some of the fellows will do more weeping than
+cheering," he added, grimly.
+
+"Let us hope that everybody passes," said Dave, looking up with a
+quiet smile.
+
+"Such a thing has never been done," said Ben. "Somebody is bound to
+drop by the wayside--I hope it isn't yours truly," and he sank his
+head again into his book.
+
+"I think old Haskers is commencing to tighten the screws again," said
+Buster. "He let up for a while, after the wild man was caught, but
+yesterday and to-day--phew! we caught it, didn't we?"
+
+"We sure did!" cried Phil. "I can't understand that man. Why is he a
+teacher when he just naturally hates boys?"
+
+"That's a conundrum that can't be answered," said the senator's son.
+
+"Well, we won't weep on leaving him," remarked Luke, dryly.
+
+"Say, that puts me in mind of a story," said Shadow. "Once on a time a
+man in an auto ran into a boy carrying a cat in a basket. He didn't
+hurt the boy much but he killed the cat. Says he, 'I am sorry, my boy,
+and I'll pay you for the cat. How much?' 'I--I don't know,' blubbered
+the boy. 'Will two dollars do?' asked the man. 'Yes,' says the boy,
+and took the money. 'Were you taking the cat home?' asked the man,
+when he was ready to drive on. 'No,' said the boy. 'I was going to
+take him down to the canal and drown him!'" And there was a smile over
+Shadow's yarn.
+
+It had been a blustery day, and as night came on the wind increased in
+violence, until it fairly howled around Oak Hall. It tore through the
+branches of the oaks that gave the place its name, until it looked as
+if some of the trees might be broken off by the fury of the elements.
+
+"My gracious! I never saw such a wind!" cried Roger, as he came in
+from a trip to the gymnasium.
+
+"It must be fierce at sea," returned Dave, who was with him. "I am
+glad I am on shore. The newspapers will tell about wrecks along the
+coast to-morrow."
+
+Nobody thought of going out that evening, and the boys put in the time
+studying and reading. The windows rattled, and occasionally a shutter
+banged, and a good night's rest seemed out of the question.
+
+"My, what a night for a fire!" remarked Phil, while he and his chums
+were undressing.
+
+"Don't mention such a thing!" returned Ben, with a shiver. "It would
+burn down everything!"
+
+At last the boys retired. A few dropped off to sleep, but Dave was not
+one of them. He had studied hard and was restless, and the fury of the
+elements added to his nervousness.
+
+At last he could stand it no longer to remain in bed, and got up to
+sit in an easy-chair for awhile.
+
+He was just crossing the dormitory floor when there came an extra
+heavy blast of wind outside, followed by a crash, as one of the giant
+oaks standing close to the school building was broken off near the
+top. Then came another crash, a jingling of glass, and a sudden wild
+cry for help.
+
+"Hello, something's gone through a window!" Dave muttered. "Maybe it's
+in the next room!"
+
+He ran to the window and looked out. Just below the window-sill he saw
+some branches of the broken tree. He looked down and noted that the
+tree-top had gone into the window of the room below.
+
+"What's the row?" cried Roger, springing up and rubbing his eyes.
+
+"Is the roof caving in?" asked Phil.
+
+"Some tree-branches came down and went through the window right below
+us," answered Dave. "Listen!"
+
+All did so, and heard the cry for help repeated.
+
+"It's Job Haskers calling!" said the senator's son. "He uses the room
+below us now."
+
+"Let us see if he is hurt," suggested another of the boys.
+
+Clad in their pajamas, the boys flocked out into the hallway, there to
+be joined by others. Word was passed around of what had occurred, and
+all made their way to the door of the instructor's apartment. They
+heard him yelling for help with all his might.
+
+The door was locked, and Dave and some others put their shoulders to
+the barrier and forced it open. All was dark in the room, and the wind
+was rushing around, sending books, pictures, and other things in all
+directions.
+
+Several matches were struck, and at last a sheltered light was lit.
+Doctor Clay, Mr. Dale, and some of the other teachers had now arrived,
+and instructors and students gazed curiously at the scene before
+them.
+
+The top of the tree had come straight through the big window of the
+apartment, crashing down on a bureau and a writing-desk, smashing both
+flat. Some branches of the tree rested on the side of the bed, pinning
+Job Haskers against the wall, as if in a cage.
+
+[Illustration: "HELP ME! SAVE ME!" SPLUTTERED THE TERROR-STRICKEN
+TEACHER.--_Page 287_.]
+
+"Help me! Save me!" spluttered the terror-stricken teacher. "I am
+being crushed to death!"
+
+"All hands to the tree!" shouted Mr. Dale, and showed what he meant.
+Boys and men took hold of the tree-branches and pulled them to one
+side.
+
+"Are you much hurt, Mr. Haskers?" asked Doctor Clay, kindly.
+
+"I--I don't know, I think so!" gasped the teacher. His face was white
+and he was shivering from fright.
+
+"Can't you crawl under the branches?" asked Mr. Dale. "Here, come this
+way."
+
+He showed how it could be done, and trembling from head to feet, the
+scared teacher got out from under the tree-top. His face and one
+shoulder were scratched, but otherwise he appeared to be unhurt. But
+all were forced to acknowledge that he had had a narrow escape.
+
+"You had better take one of the spare rooms, Mr. Haskers," said Doctor
+Clay, as another blast of wind swept through the room. "You cannot
+remain here, with this tree-top in the room. And I am afraid we shall
+have to saw it up to get it out again. You can be thankful that your
+life has been spared."
+
+"The furniture is smashed!" murmured the teacher.
+
+"Never mind the furniture, so long as you are not hurt. It can be
+mended, and all the window needs is some new sash."
+
+"My things have been scattered," grumbled the teacher. "A perfect
+mess!"
+
+"Leave it until morning--you can do nothing to-night," said the
+doctor; and so it was finally decided, and teachers and pupils trooped
+off to bed. The broken-in door was closed, but it could not be
+locked.
+
+The boys had scarcely gotten back to the dormitories when Dave called
+Phil, Ben, Roger, and Buster to one side.
+
+"Now is our chance," he whispered. "Did you notice that the bureau and
+the writing-desk in Haskers's room were smashed? It may not be the
+most honorable thing to do, but I think we are justified in looking
+his things over and seeing if we can't find some clew to that letter
+Jason Sparr received."
+
+"Right you are!" declared Phil, promptly, and the others said
+practically the same.
+
+They waited until the other boys had retired once more, and then, at a
+signal from Dave, all filed silently into the hallway again and
+tiptoed their way to the room below. Soon, they were inside and had
+the light lit, and also a lantern which belonged to Ben's bicycle,
+and which he had chanced to have on hand.
+
+Silently and with great care the boys went over the many things that
+had been scattered over the floor--wearing apparel, books, pads,
+papers, and various articles of more or less value. Presently Phil
+gave a low cry.
+
+"Look at this!" And he held up several sheets of paper. In one corner
+were the words:
+
+ LATIN MADE EASY
+
+ _JOB HASKERS, Publisher,_
+
+ ALBANY, N. Y.
+"It's the same paper!" cried Dave. "He tore the corner off so that
+just the letters '_blisher_' remained."
+
+"That's pretty good evidence," said Roger.
+
+"I should say it was!" cried Ben. "Wonder what he will have to say
+about it, when we confront him with it?"
+
+"Let us look for more evidence, while we are at it," came from Buster.
+And then the midnight search continued.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+THE EXPOSURE--GOOD-BY TO OAK HALL
+
+
+"Doctor Clay, we must see you about something that is very
+important."
+
+Thus spoke Dave, the next morning, as he and his chums filed into the
+doctor's private office after the opening of the school. Job Haskers
+was not at his class, but in his room, straightening out his things,
+while some men had been sent up, to get rid of the tree-top and repair
+the window. The storm was a thing of the past, and no other damage of
+importance had been done.
+
+"Very well, boys," returned the master of the school, kindly. "Come in
+and let me know what it is."
+
+The students came in, rather awkwardly it must be admitted, for they
+had much on their minds and did not know just how the worthy doctor
+would take it. But they had decided on a course of action, and they
+had given their word to stick together to the end. Dave, as the
+natural leader, had been chosen spokesman.
+
+"Doctor Clay, we want to bring up a subject of great importance,"
+said Dave. "Important to us, and to you, and to the whole school. The
+boys have asked me to speak for them and for myself."
+
+"About what?" demanded the master, somewhat shortly.
+
+"About Mr. Haskers and how he has treated us."
+
+"What has he done now?"
+
+"It isn't what he has done now, Doctor Clay, it is what he did some
+time ago--did his best to get us into grave trouble," answered Dave,
+warmly. "You'll remember the letter Mr. Sparr got, stating we were
+guilty of trying to blow up his hotel. We are now satisfied that Mr.
+Haskers penned that letter--in fact, we have the evidence to prove
+it."
+
+"Impossible!"
+
+"No, sir, it is true, and I dare him to deny it. It is an absolute
+fact, Doctor Clay, and we have come here this morning to inform you
+that we can no longer attend a school where he is a teacher," went on
+Dave, firmly.
+
+"But--but you--er--you astound me, Porter! Tell me what you know, or
+think you know."
+
+In a plain, straightforward manner Dave mentioned the letter and the
+printing that had appeared on it. Then he told how he and his chums
+had searched the bedroom after the tree-top crash and found the
+sheets of paper with that same printing, and he produced them.
+
+"And we also found these, in a corner of the broken writing-desk," he
+continued. "Some writing by Mr. Haskers, in which he practiced
+backhand. This writing is just like that which appears in the letter
+Mr. Sparr got. Compare the two and you will see we are right. Wilbur
+Poole said Mr. Haskers saw him blow up the hotel, and he told the
+truth, even if he is weak-minded."
+
+"But why should Mr. Haskers do such an outrageous thing?" asked the
+master of Oak Hall.
+
+"I will tell you why, sir," returned Dave, and related the affair of
+the Widow Breen. "That made him very sore on us, and he wanted to get
+us out of the school. At first he tried it by overworking us in our
+lessons, and when he found that that didn't work he tried this game of
+making out that we were criminals."
+
+"Yes, but--but would a teacher of mine stoop so low?" murmured the
+worthy doctor, shaking his head doubtfully.
+
+"No ordinary teacher would, Dr. Clay. But Mr. Haskers is not an
+ordinary man--he is very dictatorial and harsh, and he hates boys even
+though he has to teach them. He isn't a bit like Mr. Dale, or the
+others."
+
+"We never had any trouble with any teacher but Haskers," put in
+Phil.
+
+"And if we have to leave Oak Hall I'm going to get my father to sue
+Haskers for damages," added Roger.
+
+A talk lasting the best part of an hour followed, and at last the
+worthy doctor had his eyes opened to the unworthiness of his
+assistant. He scanned the sheets of paper and the writing the boys had
+brought with interest.
+
+"You are right--this is Mr. Haskers's hand," he said, slowly. "But is
+it the same hand that wrote that villainous letter to Mr. Sparr?"
+
+"Compare the two and you will see that we are right," answered Dave.
+
+"I will," answered the doctor; and a little later he set off for
+Oakdale in his buggy, going alone.
+
+The boys walked down to the gymnasium, resolved to keep out of all
+classes until the matter had been settled. They had impressed it on
+Doctor Clay's mind that either Job Haskers must leave the school or
+they would do so.
+
+It was nearly noon when the master of Oak Hall came back, driving
+slowly and looking very thoughtful. The boys met him at the entrance
+to the grounds and he told them to come to the office, and closed the
+door carefully behind them.
+
+"You were right," he said, almost brokenly. "I have been deceived by
+this--this--I do not know what to call him! It will make a great stir
+when the truth is known--and it will hurt the school," he added, with
+a sigh.
+
+"Why should we make a stir about it?" asked Dave, quickly. "Let him
+go, that is all we ask. He can resign."
+
+"No, the truth must come out," was the firm reply. "He shall not
+shelter himself behind you, even for the benefit of the school. I have
+already told the authorities the facts in the case. If they wish to
+arrest him they can do so, and you may appear against him, if you
+wish."
+
+"When will you tell him?" asked Phil, as there came a brief pause.
+
+"At once! And I wish you to be present and hear what is said,"
+returned Doctor Clay. He rang a bell and a servant appeared. "Tell Mr.
+Haskers to come here immediately."
+
+There was silence after this, the boys not knowing what to say, and
+the master of the school being busy with his thoughts. Presently the
+door opened and Job Haskers came in, with a look of curiosity on his
+face.
+
+"You sent for me, Doctor?" he inquired.
+
+"I did, Mr. Haskers," was the cold reply. "I want your resignation,
+and I want it at once!"
+
+The master of Oak Hall had gotten to his feet and the two men stood
+facing each other. Doctor Clay had his jaw set, and never had the
+students seen him look so determined. He was no longer a kindly
+schoolmaster, he was a judge, and a stern judge at that.
+
+"You--you want my resignation?" faltered Job Haskers.
+
+"Yes, and at once."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because you are not fit to teach here--you are not fit to teach
+anywhere!" thundered the doctor. "I want your resignation, and then I
+want you to leave just as soon as you possibly can."
+
+"But--but--I want you to explain. I want----"
+
+"It is not necessary for me to explain, Haskers. You have been found
+out. You are a despicable villain, and you ought to be in jail. I
+trusted you, and you have deceived me. More than that, you have tried
+to get these young gentlemen into serious trouble. Don't deny it, for
+it will do no good. We have the absolute proof against you, and those
+proofs are also in the hands of the law. If you don't want to be
+arrested, you will leave this school as soon as you can get your
+baggage packed."
+
+"Sir, I want you to know----" commenced Job Haskers, but stopped
+short, for Doctor Clay had taken a stride forward and was shaking a
+finger in the teacher's face.
+
+"I will not argue with you, Haskers. For a long time I have not been
+satisfied with your work, for you did not seem to have the students'
+interest at heart. You have a good education. But a teacher must have
+more than that--he must have a heart for his work. Now you are found
+out, and I want nothing more to do with you. I will give you a check
+for what is due you up to to-day, and you will sign a receipt in full,
+and also your resignation, and then I never want to see or hear of you
+again."
+
+"And suppose I won't resign?" snarled the teacher. "I have a
+contract----"
+
+"If you don't get out, you'll go to jail."
+
+"And we'll sue you," Dave could not help putting in.
+
+"That's right, we'll push the case as far as the law allows," added
+Phil.
+
+"Ha! you think you are smart, but you don't know it all," snarled the
+teacher, but his manner showed his uneasiness. He attempted to argue,
+but Doctor Clay would not listen, and when he said he would send for a
+constable, Job Haskers quickly capitulated, signed his resignation,
+took his check, and hurried away to pack his baggage. He left about an
+hour later, by the back way, so that none of the students saw him go.
+An hour after that a man came for his trunks and bags; and that was
+the last seen or heard of him at Oak Hall.
+
+"Hurrah!" cried Dave, when the affair was at an end. "How glad I am
+that Haskers is gone! I feel as if a weight had been taken from my
+head!"
+
+"I guess everybody will be glad," returned Roger, and he was right.
+Some of the students wanted to get up a celebration in honor of the
+unpopular teacher's departure, but this was not permitted. But the
+boys had a time on the quiet, and thoroughly enjoyed it.
+
+With the going away of Job Haskers, and the clearing up of the mystery
+surrounding the letter, Oak Hall settled down once more to its normal
+condition. Another teacher came to take the place of the man who had
+left, and he proved popular all around, and made Doctor Clay wonder
+why he had not made a change long before.
+
+With their minds free from worry, Dave and his chums buckled down to
+their lessons, and our hero spent much time over his paper on "The
+Future of Our Country." Soon the examinations started, and then the
+boys fell to worrying over how they would fare in this final test.
+
+"Well, I hope I pass," remarked Phil, when the last examination was
+over. "I don't expect to be near the top. I lost too much, going to
+Cave Island, and when I ran away."
+
+"Me for the passing mark, too," chimed in Ben.
+
+"Well, I am hoping for something better," said Roger.
+
+"What about you, Dave?" queried Buster.
+
+"I am like Roger, hoping for something better," answered our hero,
+with a smile. "But I'm prepared to take what comes," he added.
+
+At last came the day when the announcements were to be made. Dave had
+sent in his theme and he expected to hear from this as well as from
+his studies. In the meantime, preparations were going forward for the
+graduation exercises, and visitors were expected from far and near.
+Nearly all the folks from Crumville were coming, and also the parents
+of Phil, Roger, and the other seniors.
+
+The big assembly room was crowded when the announcements were made.
+The passing mark was seventy-five per cent., and many of the boys
+dreaded to think that they might be below that.
+
+"I will read the names in the order of merit," said Doctor Clay, after
+the opening exercises. "Only two boys have failed to pass for
+graduation, and they will be conditioned, if they so desire. I am
+proud of the record." And then the master of the school proceeded to
+read the list. Polly Vane and Dave had each ninety-six per cent.,
+Roger had ninety-four, Shadow ninety, Sam and Luke each eighty-eight,
+Phil eighty-seven, Gus eighty-six, and so on down to Buster, who
+squeezed through with seventy-eight. The boys who had failed to pass
+were Nat Poole, who had only sixty-eight, and one of his cronies, who
+was marked sixty-nine.
+
+"It ain't fair! I did as well as lots of 'em," said Nat, when the
+reading was over. But nobody listened to him, for all knew that the
+examinations had been just in every particular.
+
+"I will now announce the prizes for the best themes on the subject,
+'The Future of Our Country,'" went on Doctor Clay. "The reading of the
+nine papers handed in has afforded me great pleasure, for all are good
+and many of them excellent. But I think the best of all is that
+written by David Porter, and the committee of teachers who have
+examined the papers agree with me. Porter, I congratulate you, and I
+will now ask you to come forward and read your meritorious composition
+to your fellow-students."
+
+And amid a general handclapping our hero went to the platform and
+commenced to read the theme. Everybody listened with close attention,
+and loud was the applause when he had concluded. It was certainly a
+fine paper, and later on Doctor Clay had it published in one of the
+school journals, where it attracted not a little attention.
+
+Dave was certainly happy and he had good reason to be. He sent word
+home that night of how he had fared and the next day received several
+messages of congratulation. One message from Jessie he prized very
+highly, for she wrote, "You deserve a big hug for coming through so
+finely. My very best wishes." The other boys also got congratulations;
+and that night and the night to follow were "bonfire nights," in more
+ways than one.
+
+"Well, we are rid of Haskers, and also Merwell and Jasniff," remarked
+Roger to Dave. "We ought to be happy, eh, Dave?"
+
+"Yes, and especially over coming out so well for graduation," answered
+Dave.
+
+"Do you think we'll ever see Haskers or Merwell again?" questioned
+Phil.
+
+"I don't know--I trust not," answered our hero. But his wish was not
+fulfilled. He did meet the pair, and in a most unexpected fashion, as
+will be related in the next volume of this series, to be called "Dave
+Porter in the Gold Fields; or, The Search for the Landslide Mine," in
+which we will learn how Dave went West with some of his chums, and
+joined an old prospector in a hunt for a lost mine that had been
+willed to Roger Morr's mother.
+
+The graduation exercises at Oak Hall that year formed a gala event
+long to be remembered. The school and the campus were crowded, and
+Dave and his chums surprised even Doctor Clay by "chipping in" and
+hiring a brass band to play outside, after the exercises were over.
+The boys also presented their teachers and the master with some
+volumes of history and poetry, and received numerous gifts in return.
+From his father Dave got a bank-book, with an amount written therein
+that was a complete surprise. His sister gave him a neat stickpin and
+his uncle a set of books, and from Jessie and her folks came a desk
+set, of solid silver, suitably engraved.
+
+"Well, I think I ought to be the happiest boy alive," said Dave, after
+the exercises were over, and he had his diploma, tied with a broad
+ribbon. "I feel just as if I was walking on air."
+
+"And I am glad, too," said his sister Laura, warmly.
+
+"We are all glad," put in Jessie, and gave him her brightest smile.
+
+"Glad and proud, Dave," said his father. "My boy, you have done very
+well."
+
+And then the whole party went down to the gymnasium, where
+refreshments were being served to the visitors. And here let us leave
+Dave Porter, wishing him well.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+DAVE PORTER SERIES
+
+By EDWARD STRATEMEYER
+
+"Mr. Stratemeyer has seldom introduced a more popular hero than Dave
+Porter. He is a typical boy, manly, brave, always ready for a good
+time if it can be obtained in an honorable way."--Wisconsin,
+Milwaukee, Wis.
+
+"Edward Stratemeyer's 'Dave Porter' has become exceedingly popular."
+--Boston Globe.
+
+"Dave and his friends are nice, manly chaps."--Times-Democrat,
+New Orleans.
+
+DAVE PORTER AT OAK HALL
+ Or The School Days of an American Boy
+
+DAVE PORTER IN THE SOUTH SEAS
+ Or The Strange Cruise of the Stormy Petrel
+
+DAVE PORTER'S RETURN TO SCHOOL
+ Or Winning the Medal of Honor
+
+DAVE PORTER IN THE FAR NORTH
+ Or The Pluck of an American Schoolboy
+
+DAVE PORTER AND HIS CLASSMATES
+ Or For the Honor of Oak Hall
+
+DAVE PORTER AT STAR RANCH
+ Or The Cowboy's Secret
+
+DAVE PORTER AND HIS RIVALS
+ Or The Chums and Foes of Oak Hall
+
+DAVE PORTER ON CAVE ISLAND
+ Or A Schoolboy's Mysterious Mission
+
+DAVE PORTER AND THE RUNAWAYS
+ Or Last Days at Oak Hall
+
+DAVE PORTER IN THE GOLD FIELDS
+ Or The Search for the Landslide Mine
+
+DAVE PORTER AT BEAR CAMP
+ Or The Wild Man of Mirror Lake
+
+DAVE PORTER AND HIS DOUBLE
+ Or The Disappearance of the Basswood Fortune
+
+DAVE PORTER'S GREAT SEARCH
+ Or The Perils of a Young Civil Engineer
+
+DAVE PORTER UNDER FIRE
+ Or A Young Army Engineer in France
+
+DAVE PORTER'S WAR HONORS
+ Or At the Front with the Fighting Engineers
+
+For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by
+the publishers.
+
+LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO. BOSTON
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Dave Porter and the Runaways, by Edward Stratemeyer
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DAVE PORTER AND THE RUNAWAYS ***
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