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Boy Scouts for Uncle Sam

John Henry Goldfrap




  THE BOY SCOUTS FOR UNCLE SAM

  by

  LIEUT. HOWARD PAYSON

  Author of"The Boy Scouts of the Eagle Patrol," "The Boy Scoutson the Range," "The Boy Scouts and the ArmyAirship," "The Boy Scouts' Mountain Camp,""The Boy Scouts at the Panama Canal,"etc.

  Every eye watched the distant yacht anxiously.

  _(Page 75)_ _(The Boy Scouts for Uncle Sam)_]

  A. L. Burt CompanyPublishers New YorkPrinted in U. S. A.

  Copyright, 1912,byHurst & Company

  Made in U. S. A

  CONTENTS

  CHAPTER PAGE

  I. THE EAGLES AT HOME 5

  II. THE FACE AT THE TRANSOM 14

  III. AN OCEAN DERELICT 26

  IV. A MYSTERY OF THE SEA 36

  V. A MESSAGE FROM THE PAST 46

  VI. A STARTLING ADVENTURE 53

  VII. TRAPPED BY FLAMES 61

  VIII. A BOY SCOUT SIGNAL 69

  IX. THE BOYS MEET A "WOLF" 76

  X. A NEW RECRUIT 84

  XI. BARTON THE MACHINIST 95

  XII. THE SUBMARINE ISLAND 102

  XIII. DOWN TO THE DEPTHS 112

  XIV. FACING DEATH 120

  XV. THE STRANGE FLAG 129

  XVI. SCOUTING FOR UNCLE SAM 138

  XVII. ROB'S BRAVE ACT 146

  XVIII. THE ISLAND HUT 154

  XIX. A CHASE IN THE NIGHT 163

  XX. ON BOARD A STRANGE CRAFT 173

  XXI. OFF ON A SEA TRAIL 182

  XXII. A MIDNIGHT ADVENTURE 190

  XXIII. THE DEPTHS OF OLD OCEAN 198

  XXIV. ROB MAKES A DISCOVERY 209

  XXV. THE DEAD MAN'S HOARD 217

  XXVI. WHICH WILL WIN? 228

  XXVII. THE ENDURANCE RUN 238

  XXVIII. THE SUPREME TEST 248

  XXIX. INTO THE JAWS OF DEATH 263

  The Boy Scouts for Uncle Sam

  CHAPTER I.

  THE EAGLES AT HOME.

  "After all, fellows, it's good to be back home again."

  The speaker, Rob Blake, leader of the Eagle Patrol of Boy Scouts, spokewith conviction. He was a "rangy," sun-burned lad of about eighteen,clear-eyed, confident and wiry. His Boy Scout training, too, had madehim resourceful beyond his years.

  "Yes, and it's also good to know that we each have a good substantialsum of money in the bank as the result of the finding of the Dangerfieldfortune," agreed Merritt Crawford, his second in command, asunny-faced, good-natured looking youth a little younger than Rob andcrowned with a tousled mass of wavy brown hair.

  "Well, at any rate we've had plenty to eat since we've been back,"chimed in Tubby Hopkins, a corpulent youth who owed his nickname to hisfleshiness.

  "That's right, Tubby," laughed Paul Perkins, another bright-eyed young"Eagle"; "that's something we didn't always get in the Adirondacks. Ithought at one time that you'd fade away to a shadow."

  "Humph! Pretty substantial sort of shadow," grinned Hiram Nelson, who,besides Paul Perkins, was the inventive genius of the Eagles.

  The scene of these reminiscences was the comfortably furnished patrolroom of the Eagles, situated over the bank of the little town of Hamptonon the south shore of Long Island. Rob Blake's father, the president ofthe bank, was a patron of the Eagles, and had donated the room to theboys some time before.

  Boxing gloves, foils, baseball bats and other athletic apparatus dear toa boy's heart lay scattered about the room in orderly confusion. On thewalls were diagrams of the "wig-wag code" and the "Morse codesimplified," with other illustrations of Scout activities.

  But it was above the door that there was perched the particular pride ofthe Eagles' hearts--a huge American eagle, a bird fast disappearing fromits native haunts. With outstretched wings and defiant attitude it stoodthere, typifying the spirit of its young namesakes. The eagle had been apresent to the lads from Lieutenant Duvall, of the United States Army,whom they had materially aided some time before in various aerialintrigues and adventures. What these were was related in full in the"The Boy Scouts and the Army Airship."

  In the first volume of this series, "The Boy Scouts of the EaglePatrol," it was told how the boys came to organize, and how theysucceeded in unravelling a kidnapping mystery, involving one of theirnumber. In the second volume, "The Boy Scouts on the Range," we followedthe boys' adventures in the far southwest. Here they encountered MoquiIndians and renegade cow-punchers. But through all their hardships andadventures they conducted themselves according to the Scout laws.

  The third volume was "The Boy Scouts and the Army Airship," referred toin connection with Lieutenant Duvall. In this book a military biplaneplayed an important part, as did the theft of a series of plans of agyroscope invention of Lieutenant Duvall's, who was an all-aroundmechanical genius.

  In the story that preceded the present account of the Eagle Patrol thelads found themselves in the Adirondacks on a strange mission. With acertain Major Dangerfield, a retired army officer, they searched for alost cave in which an old-time pirate, one of the Major's ancestors, hadhidden his loot when Indians threatened him. How the cave was locatedand the startling discovery made there, we have not space to describehere. But in the wildest part of the "land of woods and lakes" the boysencountered some thrilling adventures, not the least of which was Rob'sbattle with the moonshining gang that infested a lonely canyon.

  From this trip they had returned not more than two weeks before thescene in the meeting-room, which we have described, took place. Bronzed,clear-eyed and alert, they were already longing for action of some sort.How soon they were to be plunged into adventures of a variety even moreexciting than any they had yet encountered they little dreamed at themoment.

  - - - - -

  They were still laughing over the idea of the substantial Tubby's rotundform being compared to a shadow when there came a tap at the door ofthe room in which they were assembled.

  "Guess that's Andy Bowles," said Rob, referring to the only member ofthe Patrol who was not present; "wonder why he's so late."

  Then, in a louder voice, he cried:

  "Come in, Andy."

  But the voice that answered as the door was flung open was not Andy's.Instead, it was a deep, resounding bass one.

  "I'm not Andy; but I'll accept the invitation."

  As the owner of the voice, a tall, well-set-up man with a militarybearing, stepped into the room all the Scouts sprang erect at attention,and gave the Scout salute. Then they broke into three cheers.

  "Why, Lieutenant Duvall, what are you doing here?" exclaimed Rob, comingforward.

  The young officer shook hands warmly with the leader of the Boy Scouts.Then, while the others pressed closer to the lieutenant--the sameofficer who had conducted the aviation tests at the "tunnelledhouse"--he addressed Rob.

  "The fact is, I came down here to see if you are willing to tackle somemore adventures," he said.

  "Are we--" began Rob; but a roar from the Scouts interrupted him.

  "Just you try us, Lieutenant."

  "More adventures? Great stuff!"

  "I'm ready right now."

  "You can count on me."r />
  The air fairly bubbled with confusion and excitement.

  The Lieutenant roared with laughter.

  "I do believe if you boys were told to lead a forlorn hope up to a rowof machine guns you'd do it," he exclaimed; "but all this time I've beenleaving my friend outside. May I bring him in?"

  "Why ask the question?" exclaimed Rob. "This room is at the disposal ofthe United States Army at any time."

  "Well, in this case it must be at the disposal of the Navy also," smiledthe officer. Then, turning his head, he called to someone outside in thehallway, "Dan, the Eagles are prepared to receive the Navy."

  At the word, a stalwart young man of about Lieutenant Duvall's age,stepped into the room. He was deeply sun-burned, and had an alert,upright carriage that stamped him as belonging to Uncle Sam's service.

  "Scouts of the Eagle Patrol," said Lieutenant Duvall, with becomingformality, "allow me to present to you Ensign Daniel Hargreaves, of theUnited States Navy, just now detailed on special service."

  Once more came the Scout salute, and then, given with a will, the longdrawn "Kr-e-e-ee" of the Eagles.

  The naval officer's eyes twinkled.

  "These are Eagles that can scream with a vengeance," he exclaimed to hiscompanion.

  "Yes; and they can show their talons on occasion, I can assure you,"declared Lieutenant Duvall. "But 'heave ahead,' as you say in the Navy,Dan, and put your proposition before them."

  The boys greeted this announcement with wide-open eyes. Somehow or otherthey felt impressed immediately that they were on the verge of anotherseries of important adventures; that the unexpected visit of theofficers had something to do with their immediate future. And in thisthey were not the least bit out of the way, as will be seen.