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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12728 ***
+
+The High School Boys' Canoe Club
+or
+Dick & Co.'s Rivals on Lake Pleasant
+
+By H. Irving Hancock
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTERS
+ I. The "Splendid" War Canoe
+ II. "RIP" Tries Out His Bargain
+ III. Buying Fuel for a Bonfire?
+ IV. Hiram Pries a Secret Loose
+ V. Birch Bark Merchants
+ VI. Meeting the Fate of Greenhorns
+ VII. "Danny Grin" is Silent
+ VIII. What an Expert Can Do
+ IX. Dick Trembles at His Nerve
+ X. Putting Up a Big Scheme
+ XI. All Ready to Race, But-----
+ XII. Susie Discomfits a Boor
+ XIII. The Ripley Heir Tries Coaxing
+ XIV. The Liar has a Lie Ready
+ XV. At the Greatest of Feasts
+ XVI. A Scalp-Hunting Disappointment
+ XVII. The Good Word by Wire
+XVIII. "Won't Win Against a Mudscow"
+ XIX. What Ailed Gridley?
+ XX. "Dinky-Rat Hot Sail!"
+ XXI. Nature Has a Dismal Streak
+ XXII. Fred is Grateful---One Second!
+XXIII. Trentville, The Awesome
+ XIV. Conclusion
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE "SPLENDID" WAR CANOE
+
+
+"It's the wreck of one of the grandest enterprises ever conceived
+by the human mind!" complained Colonel W.P. Grundy, in a voice
+broken with emotion.
+
+A group of small boys grinned, though they offered no audible
+comment.
+
+"Such defeats often---usually, in fact---come to those who try
+to educate the masses and bring popular intelligence to a higher
+level," was the colonel's declaration, as he wiped away a real
+or imaginary tear.
+
+On a nearby lot stood a large show tent, so grayed and frayed,
+so altogether dingy as to suggest that it had seen some summers
+of service ere it became briefly the property of Colonel Grundy.
+
+Near the entrance to the tent a temporary platform had been built
+of the board seats taken from the interior of the tent.
+
+Near the platform stood a grim-visaged deputy sheriff, conversing
+with an auctioneer on whose face the grin had become chronic.
+
+Some distance from the tent stood a group of perhaps forty men
+of the town of Gridley.
+
+"The whole outfit of junk won't bring five hundred dollars," predicted
+one of these men. "How much did you say the judgments total?"
+
+"Seventeen thousand four hundred dollars," replied another. "But
+the man who attached the show has a claim for only six hundred
+and forty dollars, so he may get most of his money."
+
+Here the auctioneer stopped talking with the deputy sheriff long
+enough to go over to the platform, pick up a bell and ring it
+vigorously. A few more stragglers came up, most of them boys
+without any money in their pockets.
+
+Off at one side of the lot six boys stood by themselves, talking
+in low tones, casting frequent, earnest glances toward the platform.
+
+These youngsters were Dick Prescott, Dave Darrin, Greg Holmes,
+Tom Reade, Dan Dalzell and Harry Hazelton. Collectively they
+were known in the boydom of Gridley as Dick & Co.
+
+Our readers are already familiar with every one of these lads,
+having first been introduced to them in the "_Grammar School Boys
+Series_," with its four volumes, "_The Grammar School Boys of
+Gridley_," "_The Grammar School Boys Snowbound_," "_The Grammar
+School Boys in the Woods_" and "_The Grammar School Boys in Summer
+Athletics_." The varied and stirring exploits of Dick & Co.,
+as told in these books, stamped the six chums as American boys
+of the best sort.
+
+Then, in "_The High School Freshmen_," the first volume of the
+"_High School Boys Series_," our readers went further into the
+history of Dick & Co., and saw how even freshmen may impress their
+personalities on the life and sports of a high school. The pranks,
+the fights, the victories and achievements of that first year
+in high school had done much to shape the characters and mould
+the minds of all six of our boys.
+
+The present narrative deals with all that happened in the vacation
+after Dick Prescott and his friends had finished their freshman
+year. The summer now lay before them for whatever might come
+to them in the way of work and pleasure. Though none of the six
+yet knew it, the summer was destined to bring to them the fullest
+measure of wonder and excitement.
+
+And now let us get back to Dick & Co., that we may see just what
+befell them.
+
+"Pshaw! There comes Fred Ripley," exclaimed Harry Hazelton.
+
+"And he probably has a few ten dollar bills in his pockets," remarked
+Greg Holmes, rather enviously. "He will buy something."
+
+Fred Ripley, as readers of "The High School Freshmen" remember,
+was the son of a wealthy local lawyer, and a bitter enemy to Dick
+Prescott and his friends.
+
+"Fred just came here to buy something and then look at us with
+his superior smile," grunted Hazelton. "What do you say if we
+all walk away before the bidding begins?"
+
+"Then Rip would grin," returned Tom Reade. "He'd know just why
+we went away. I came here to see what's going to happen, and I
+won't be chased away from here by Fred Ripley."
+
+"Let's see if Fred can have any real fun with us," proposed Dick,
+with a quiet smile.
+
+"He can have fun enough with us, if he guesses why we are really
+here," Dave Darrin uttered resentfully. "Ripley seems to think
+that money is made and supplied to him just in order that he may
+rub gall and wormwood into those whom he doesn't like!"
+
+Fred kept well away from Dick & Co., though the six boys saw that
+he occasionally sent a covert look in their direction.
+
+"Time to begin," said the deputy sheriff, after glancing at his
+watch.
+
+Up to the platform jumped the auctioneer, bell in hand. Holding
+it with both hands he again rang vigorously for a full minute.
+The net result was to bring one shabby-looking man, two grammar
+school boys without a cent of money, and three children of not
+over four years of age into the lot.
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen," began the auctioneer, in his glib tones,
+"we are presenting to-day a most unusual opportunity. Prizes
+will be distributed to many enterprising people of Gridley, though
+these prizes are all so valuable that I trust none of them will
+go for the traditional 'song.' It is seldom, indeed, in any community,
+however favored it may be in general, that such a diversified
+lot of excellent things is put under the hammer for purchase by
+discriminating buyers! As you all know, Colonel W.P. Grundy's
+Great & Colossal Indian Exposition & Aboriginal Life Delineations
+has met with one of the too-common disasters of the road. This
+great show enterprise must now be sold out in its entirety."
+
+After an impressive pause, the silence was broken by a sob. Those
+in the crowd who were curious enough to turn, beheld the colonel
+with a handkerchief to his eyes, his shoulders heaving. Somehow
+the colonel's noisy grief failed to excite the sympathy of those
+assembled. It was suspected that the wrecked showman was playing
+for sympathy.
+
+"Such a wealth of treasures is here offered," continued the auctioneer,
+"that for the first time in my career I confess myself unable
+to decide which article or lot to lay before you first."
+
+"You said that last week at Templeton," laughed a man in the crowd.
+"Go on!"
+
+Whereupon the auctioneer once more addressed his hearers in a
+burst of vocal fireworks.
+
+"I wonder what Prescott and his mucker friends are here to bid
+on?" Fred Ripley was asking himself. "Whatever it is, if it's
+nothing that I want for myself I'll bid it up as high against
+them as I can. For, of course, they've pooled their funds for
+whatever they want to get. They can't put in more than a quarter
+apiece, so a dollar and a half is all I have to beat. I'll wager
+they already suspect that I'm here just to make things come higher
+for them. I hope they do suspect!"
+
+It was just after the Fourth of July. The summer sun shone fiercely
+down upon the assemblage.
+
+"Perhaps, first of all," announced the auctioneer, after pausing
+to take breath, "it will be the proper thing to do to offer the
+tent itself. At this point, however, I will say that the foreclosing
+creditor of the show himself bids two hundred dollars on the tent.
+No bid, unless it be more than two hundred dollars, can be accepted.
+Come, now, friends, here is a fine opportunity for a shrewd business
+man. One need not be a showman, or have any personal need of
+a tent, in order to become a bidder. Whoever buys this tent to-day
+will be able to realize handsomely on his investment by selling
+this big-top tent in turn to some showman in need of a tent.
+Who will start the bidding at three hundred dollars?"
+
+No one started it. After the auctioneer had talked for five minutes
+without getting a "rise" out of any Gridley citizen, he mournfully
+declared the tent to be outside of the sale.
+
+"Has anyone here any choice as to what he wants me to offer next?"
+questioned the salesman of the afternoon.
+
+There was no response.
+
+"Come, come, gentlemen!" rebuked the auctioneer. "Don't let the
+July sun bake your intellects, or the first cool day that comes
+along will find you all filled with unavailing regrets. Hasn't
+some one a choice as to what should be offered next?"
+
+Still receiving no reply, he heaved a sigh, then added:
+
+"I see that we shall have to start action in some way. Therefore
+we'll bring out something that is action personified, with grace
+mingled. Bring out the ponies. Gentlemen, I am now going to
+offer you your choice of eight of the handsomest ponies you ever-----"
+
+"But there are forty ponies and thirty-two good wagon horses,"
+piped up a business man in the audience.
+
+"There were," corrected the auctioneer, mournfully. "But most
+of the live stock was rented. Colonel Grundy had hoped to buy
+the stock gradually out of the receipts of the show. All that
+he owned in the way of live stock consisted of eight ponies.
+And here they come! Beauties, aren't they?"
+
+Despite the heat of the day it was as though a frost had settled
+down over the scene. Many of the men present were butchers, grocers
+or others who had hoped to pick up cheap horses to be used in
+their business.
+
+"Ponies are no good in this town," cried one man. "Lead 'em away.
+Come on, neighbors."
+
+"Wait, wait!" urged the auctioneer. "There are some bargains
+yet to come that will interest you all. Since we have the ponies
+on the spot let us begin to run them off. It will teach you all
+how to bid quickly when you see wonderful bargains bought up under
+your noses!"
+
+The bidding, however, was lax at first. A stable boy mounted
+one of the little animals, riding about at reckless pace.
+
+"Now, start the bidding!"
+
+After five minutes talking an opening bid of five dollars for
+the pony had been made and this had been advanced to seven.
+
+With all the zeal at his command the auctioneer drove the bidding
+along. It reached fourteen dollars, and there stopped. At last
+the pony was knocked down to a man who thought he could use the
+animal in a very light delivery wagon.
+
+"Now, gentlemen, wake up!" begged the auctioneer. "Let us have
+some bidding worthy of the fair name of Gridley for good judgment
+in business matters. Lead the roan pony forth."
+
+Undoubtedly the first pony had been a fair bargain at fourteen
+dollars. The bidding on the second animal began at ten dollars,
+going quickly to eighteen. From that point the offers traveled
+slowly until twenty-six dollars had been named. At this price
+the pony was sold.
+
+From that time on the ponies were "knocked down" rather briskly,
+though the highest-priced one of the first seven brought only
+thirty-one dollars.
+
+Now came the eighth.
+
+"You see what this animal is for yourselves, gentlemen," declared
+the auctioneer. "We don't need to have this sleek little animal's
+paces shown. We are in a hurry to get through. Who opens with
+twenty dollars?"
+
+"He is a handsome little animal, isn't he?" exclaimed Dick Prescott,
+crowding forward and gazing at the pony with glistening eyes.
+
+"I wish I had the money to buy him," whispered Dave Darrin.
+
+"Maybe I couldn't use that kind of a cut-down horse!" glowed Tom
+Reade, while Harry and Dan looked on longingly.
+
+"That's what the muckers are here after!" thought Fred Ripley,
+who had been watching them closely. "Now, no matter how much
+money they may think they have, I'll show them how easy it is
+for a fellow of my financial standing to step in and get the chestnut
+pony away from them!"
+
+"Who starts the bidding with twenty dollars?" demanded the auctioneer.
+
+"Ten," finally responded a man in the crowd.
+
+"Thank you. But, gentlemen, ten dollars is a shame for a beautiful
+animal like this. Who makes it twenty? Start it right up now!"
+
+Presently the bidding had reached sixteen dollars. Dick and his
+chums had crowded still closer to the pony, looking on with lively
+interest.
+
+"Here's where I sting Prescott and his crew!" muttered Fred Ripley
+under his breath. Then, aloud, he called:
+
+"Twenty!"
+
+"Thank you," smiled the auctioneer, nodding in Ripley's direction.
+"Here is a young man of sound judgment and a good idea of money
+values, as his manner and his whole appearance testify."
+
+"Someone hold Rip, or he'll burst," laughed Greg Holmes in Dick's
+ear.
+
+But Fred thought the chums were conferring as to how far they
+could go with what means the six of them might have at hand.
+
+"They will get going soon," thought Fred gleefully.
+
+Just then Dick Prescott piped up:
+
+"Twenty-two!"
+
+"Twenty-two? Thank you," bowed the auctioneer. "Another young
+gentleman of the finest judgment. Who says twenty-five?"
+
+"Twenty-three," offered Fred.
+
+"Twenty-five," called Prescott promptly.
+
+An instant after Dick had made this bid he felt heartily ashamed
+of himself. He hadn't intended to buy the pony, and didn't have
+the money. He had obeyed a sudden instinct to tease Fred Ripley,
+but now Dick wished he hadn't done it.
+
+"Twenty-six!" called young Ripley.
+
+The auctioneer looked at Prescott, but the latter, already abashed
+at his own conduct, made no further offer.
+
+"Twenty-eight!" called a man in the crowd, who knew that the wealthy
+lawyer's son usually got whatever he wanted very badly. This
+new bidder thought he saw a chance to get the pony, then later
+to force Fred to pay a still higher price for the animal.
+
+"Thirty!" called Ripley, with a sidelong glance at Dick & Co.
+
+"Did I hear you offer thirty-five?" queried the auctioneer, singling
+out Dick Prescott.
+
+But Dick remained mute. However, in the next instant Greg Holmes,
+ere Prescott could stop him, blurted out with:
+
+"Thirty-two!"
+
+"Thirty-four!" called Ripley briskly.
+
+Greg opened his mouth, but Dick nudged him. "Don't bid, Greg.
+You'd feel cheap if you had to take the pony and couldn't produce
+the money," Dick admonished him.
+
+"Thirty-five!" called the man who had raised the bidding before.
+
+"Thirty-six," from Ripley.
+
+"Thirty-eight!" called the man.
+
+"Thirty-nine!" offered Fred, though he was beginning to perspire
+freely.
+
+"Forty!" promptly offered the man.
+
+"Forty-one!" said Fred.
+
+And there it hung. After three minutes more of hard work on the
+auctioneer's part the pony went to Ripley at forty-one dollars.
+
+"I don't know what my father will say to me for this," groaned
+the lawyer's son. "But, anyway, Prescott and his crew didn't
+get the chestnut pony, and this is the last piece of live stock,
+so there's none left for them."
+
+He cast a triumphant look in the direction of those whom he termed
+"the mucker boys."
+
+"Rip was bidding to keep us from getting a look-in!" whispered
+Tom Reade gleefully.
+
+"That was what I thought," nodded Dick Prescott. "That was why
+I threw in a couple of bids---just to make him pay for his meanness.
+But I'm sorry I did it."
+
+"Step up and pay your money!" ordered the auctioneer. "Don't
+keep us waiting all day."
+
+"Won't a deposit do?" demanded Fred, coming forward.
+
+"Yes; we'll take fifteen dollars, and hold your purchase until
+one hour after the sale closes," replied the auctioneer. "Then,
+if you don't come along fast with the remainder, your deposit
+will be forfeited."
+
+"I'll raise the money all right," drawled Ripley, with an important
+air, as he passed up three five dollar bills. "Give me a receipt
+for this, please."
+
+"You've money enough there to pay it all," said the auctioneer.
+
+"Yes; but I may bid on something else," Fred replied.
+
+"Good luck to you," laughed the auctioneer.
+
+Presently along came a miscellaneous lot of the weapons that had
+been used by cowboys and Indians connected with the show. The
+auctioneer tried to close these out in one lot, but there were
+no bids.
+
+Several of the younger men did brisk, but not high bidding for
+the rifles. These were disposed of.
+
+Then tomahawks were offered for sale, singly. The first ones
+offered went at an average of twenty-five cents each. At last
+Dan Dalzell secured one for a nickel, paid his money and proudly
+tucked his purchase under his arm.
+
+"Bring out the grand war canoe!" called the auctioneer at last.
+
+Now every drop of blood in Dick Prescott's body tingled. His
+chums, too, were equally aroused. It was this that they had hope
+of securing---if it went off at a price next to nothing!
+
+So intensely interested were the six young high school athletes
+in the proceedings now that each one steeled himself to prevent
+betraying the fact. All were aware that Fred Ripley's malicious
+eyes were watching them. If he suspected that they wanted the
+canoe he could put the bidding up to a figure that would make
+their wishes impossible of fulfillment.
+
+Dick yawned. He looked intensely bored.
+
+"Come along," proposed Dave in an audible voice. "There's nothing
+here we can get."
+
+"Yes; it's getting tedious," hinted Tom Reade.
+
+Dalzell and Hazelton also appeared to lose all interest in the
+auction.
+
+"I was in hopes they'd want that canoe," muttered Fred Ripley,
+feeling as though he had been cheated out of a great pleasure.
+"As it happens I know all about that canoe. Wow! Wouldn't they
+groan if they put up all their money for the canoe---_and then
+found out_!"
+
+Just then the canoe was brought out. It was bolstered up on a
+long truck, drawn by a pair of horses. Twenty-eight feet long,
+slender and of graceful lines, this canoe, with its oiled birch
+bark glistening in the sun, was a thing of beauty. It was one
+of the genuine articles that the show had carried---of real Indian
+model and workmanship.
+
+"Gaze upon it, gentlemen!" cried the auctioneer enthusiastically.
+"Did you ever see the like of this grand war canoe? History
+in every line of it! Picture to yourselves the bygone days in
+which such a canoe, filled with painted braves, stole along in
+the shadows fringing the bank of some noble stream. Portray to
+your own minds such a marauding band stealing down stream upon
+some settlement, there to fall upon our hardy pioneers and put
+them to the death!"
+
+"I'm glad I'm living now, instead of in those days," called a
+man from the crowd, raising a laugh.
+
+"Gentlemen, before you are through," suggested the auctioneer,
+"one of you will be the proud and happy possessor of this magnificent
+war canoe. It is a priceless gem, especially when considered
+in the light of good old American history. Now, who will start
+the bidding? Who will say, clearly and distinctly, thirty dollars?"
+
+"We're not brave enough in these days!" called a voice from the
+crowd.
+
+"That's right, friends---have fun with me," retorted the perspiring
+auctioneer. "But don't let this valuable, beautiful trophy get
+away from you."
+
+Yet, though the auctioneer labored for a full five minutes he
+couldn't raise a bid.
+
+"Take it away! Take it back!" ordered the auctioneer wearily.
+"I was in hopes it would appeal to the artistic sense of this
+town, but it doesn't! Take it away."
+
+"If no one else wants it," drawled Dick Prescott, "I'll offer
+two dollars."
+
+"Thank you for good intentions, anyway," replied the salesman
+on the platform. "Two dollars I'm bid. Who says ten? Now, do
+wake up, friends!"
+
+But the bidding lagged.
+
+"This beautiful war canoe!" cried the auctioneer desperately.
+"It was the pride of the show. A real Indian canoe, equipped
+with gunwale seats and six Indian paddles. And only two dollars
+offered. Gentlemen, do I hear three? No! Last call! It's
+pitiful---two dollars!"
+
+Dick Prescott and all his friends were now in the seventh heaven of
+prospective delight. It seemed unreal, that they could get this
+treasure for any such sum.
+
+"If I must do it, I must," groaned the auctioneer. "Two I'm offered.
+Does anyone say more. Make it four! No? Make it three! No?
+Last call! Going, going-----"
+
+In another instant the big war canoe would have been knocked down
+to young Prescott at two dollars. Dick was "all on edge," though
+he strove to conceal the fact.
+
+"At two dollars, then!" groaned the auctioneer. "Two dollars!
+All right, then. Going, going-----"
+
+Just then the word "gone" would have been uttered, and the canoe
+gone to Dick & Co.
+
+"Three dollars!" called Fred Ripley.
+
+There was a pause, while the auctioneer exhorted the crowd to
+wake up.
+
+"Four," said young Prescott, at last, but he spoke with pretended
+indifference.
+
+"Five," chimed in a man who now seemed to take an interest. The
+bidding now went up slowly, a dollar at a time, with these three
+bidders, until twelve dollars was reached. Then the man dropped
+out. Dick was outwardly calm, though his chums shivered, for
+they knew that their combined capital did not reach the amount
+now being offered.
+
+"I'm afraid that canoe is going to Dick's head," whispered Harry
+Hazelton anxiously to Tom Reade.
+
+"Let him alone," retorted Tom in a low voice. "It's one of Dick
+Prescott's good points that he generally knows what he's doing."
+
+"But we have only-----"
+
+"Never mind if we're worth a million, or only a single dollar,"
+interrupted Reade impatiently. "Watch the battle between our
+leader and Rip, the Mean!"
+
+Now the bidding became slower, fifty cents at a time being offered,
+bids coming only when the auctioneer threatened to "knock down."
+
+"I don't want to get this confounded canoe fastened onto me,"
+grumbled Fred Ripley to himself. "I want to stick Prescott and
+his crowd for all I can, but I must look out that I don't get
+stung. I know better than to want that canoe, no matter how good
+it _looks_!"
+
+"Sixteen," said Dick at last, feeling more desperate inwardly
+than his face showed.
+
+"Sixteen-fifty," from Ripley.
+
+"Seventeen," offered Dick, after a pause.
+
+"Seventeen-fifty," announced Fred, after another long bait.
+
+"Eighteen!" followed up young Prescott. He was in a cold perspiration
+now, lest the fight be forced too far.
+
+To his astonishment, Fred Ripley, an ugly sneer on his face, turned
+his back on the bidding.
+
+"Are you through, gentlemen?" demanded the auctioneer, after a
+keen look in the direction of the lawyer's son.
+
+"I am," Ripley growled over his shoulder.
+
+"I am offered eighteen! Eighteen! Eighteen! Who says nineteen?
+Make it eighteen-fifty! Who says eighteen-fifty? Eighteen and
+a quarter! Are you through, gentlemen? Then going, going---gone!
+Sold to Master Prescott at eighteen dollars. Young man, I congratulate
+you. Walk right up and pay your money! All, or a deposit?"
+
+Dick, who had been collecting loose change from his chums, now
+came forward.
+
+"I'll pay a deposit of seven dollars," he announced.
+
+"Hand it here, then. Seven dollars; thank you. Here's your receipt.
+Now, remember, Prescott, you have until the end of one hour after
+the sale closes. Then, if you're not here with the other eleven
+dollars, you must expect to forfeit this deposit."
+
+"I know," Dick nodded.
+
+Then he hurried off to his chums.
+
+"Come along," he said, with desperate energy, as he led them away
+from the field. On the sidewalk he halted.
+
+"We've got it, fellows!" he exulted. "We've got it! Hooray!"
+
+"Yes; we've got it, if we've got eleven dollars more---which we
+haven't," Greg remarked.
+
+"We've eleven dollars more to raise," Prescott went on hurriedly.
+"Roughly, that's two dollars apiece. We must hustle, too."
+
+"No hustle for mine," yawned Dan Dalzell. "I'll just step down
+to my bank and get the money. Will two dollars be enough, Dick?"
+
+"Stop that talk," ordered Dave Darrin, getting a grip on Dan's
+shirt collar. "If you don't, I'll thrash you! Dick has a scheme.
+Out with it, old chap!"
+
+"The scheme is simple enough," said Prescott hurriedly. "We must
+each get two dollars, and get it like lightning. That will come
+to a dollar over the amount we need, but we shall need the extra
+dollar, anyway. So hustle! Borrow the money from anyone who'll
+let you have it. Offer to work the money out at any time---any
+old kind of work. The only point is to come running back with
+the money. Get it in any honest way that you can, and don't one
+of you dare to fail, or we'll lose our deposit money and our canoe.
+Start!"
+
+Nor did Prescott lose any time himself, but raced down the street,
+turned into Main Street and ran on until he came to the little
+cross street on which stood the bookstore conducted by his father
+and mother.
+
+"Mercy, Dick! What makes you run so?" asked Mrs. Prescott. Dick
+was rejoicing to discover that there was, at this moment, no customer
+in the store.
+
+"Mother," replied her son, "I want to borrow three dollars this
+minute. I'll be responsible for it---I'll pay it back. Please
+let me have it---in a hurry!"
+
+Then, briefly, he poured out the story. Mrs. Prescott's hand
+had already traveled toward the cash register.
+
+"We're very short of money just now, my boy. Try to earn this
+and pay it back quickly. You know, trade is slow in the summer
+time, and we have several bills to meet."
+
+"Yes, I'll pay it back, mother, at the first chance---and I'll
+make the chance---somehow," promised young Prescott. "Thank you."
+
+The money in his hand, Dick raced back to the lot where the show
+tent still stood.
+
+He was back before any of the others and waited impatiently.
+Dave Darrin came up ten minutes later.
+
+"Did you get it?" asked Dick anxiously.
+
+"Yes," replied Dave laconically, pushing two one dollar bills
+into Dick's hand.
+
+One by one the other boys arrived. Each had managed to round
+up his part of the assessment.
+
+With thirteen dollars in his hand, Dick went up to the auctioneer's
+clerk.
+
+"I am ready to pay the other eleven dollars on the canoe," Prescott
+announced, speaking as calmly as possible.
+
+"All right," agreed the clerk. "But you'll have to find some
+man you can trust to take the bill of sale. We can't pass title
+to a minor."
+
+"Why didn't you tell me that before?" Dick demanded.
+
+"That's all right. It wasn't necessary before, but it is now.
+Just find some man who will treat you all right and give you
+the canoe. Then we'll take the money and make out the bill of
+sale to him."
+
+Fred Ripley now sauntered up, offering his money. He was given
+the same directions for finding a man to whom title could pass.
+
+Dick looked about him. Then across the lot, and over on the further
+side of the street he saw his father.
+
+Dick returned quickly to the lot with Mr. Prescott, explaining
+the situation. The bookseller listened gravely, but offered no
+objections. He stepped over, paid the money for Dick, then said:
+
+"I must be going. Turn the canoe over to my son."
+
+"Yes, sir," replied the auctioneer's clerk. "Men, haul out the
+truck that has the canoe on."
+
+Mr. Prescott had already walked away. Dick and his chums greeted
+the coming of truck and canoe with a wild whoop. Then they piled
+up on the truck to inspect their treasure.
+
+Fred Ripley, returning with Mr. Dodge, a local banker, saw the
+six youngsters climbing up to look at their purchase. A broad,
+malicious grin appeared on Ripley's face.
+
+"Sold! sold!" gasped Dave Darrin. Then his face flushed with anger.
+For the canoe, which looked well enough on exhibition, proved
+to have three bad holes in her hull, which had been carefully
+concealed by the manner in which the craft had been propped up
+on the truck.
+
+The great war canoe looked worthless---certain to sink in less than
+sixty seconds if launched!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"RIP" TRIES OUT HIS BARGAIN
+
+
+Had a meaner trick ever been played on boys with whom it was so
+hard to raise money?
+
+"Ha, ha, ha!" chuckled Fred Ripley, so loudly that the dismayed,
+angry boys could not fail to hear him.
+
+"You sneak! You knew it all the time!" flared Dave Darrin, gazing
+down in disgust at the lawyer's son.
+
+"Maybe I did know," Fred admitted, yet speaking to Mr. Dodge.
+"You see, one of my father's clerks served the papers which attached
+the show."
+
+There was no help for Dick & Co. They had parted with their money
+and their "property" had been turned over to them.
+
+It is an ancient principle of law that the buyer must beware.
+The auctioneer had been most careful not to represent the canoe
+as being fit for service. He had offered it as an historical
+curiosity!
+
+Dick & Co. looked at the canoe anxiously.
+
+"What shall we do with it?" asked Dave Darrin moodily.
+
+"Make a bonfire of it?" asked Danny Grin.
+
+"Might as well," Greg nodded.
+
+"No, sir!" Dick interrupted. "Tom, what do you say? You're one
+of the really handy boys. Can't this canoe be patched up, mended
+and put in commission?"
+
+"It might be done," Tom answered slowly.
+
+The other five stood regarding him with eager interest.
+
+"But we'd have to get an Indian here to show us how to do it."
+
+"Where are the Indians that were here with the show?" asked Harry
+Hazelton.
+
+"They went away as soon as the show was attached," Dick answered.
+"Probably they're hundreds of miles from here now. They were
+only hired out to the show by their white manager, and they've
+gone to another job. Besides, they were only show Indians,
+and probably they've forgotten all they ever knew about
+canoe-building---if they ever did know anything."
+
+"Then I don't see but that we're just as badly off as ever," sighed
+Greg. "We're out eighteen dollars and the fine canoe that we
+expected would provide us with so much fun."
+
+"The paddles look all right, anyway," spoke up Harry Hazelton,
+lifting one out of the canoe and looking it over critically.
+
+"Oh, yes, the paddles are all right, and the river is close at
+hand," spoke Dave Darrin vengefully. "All we need is a canoe
+that will float."
+
+"If it were a cedar canoe we might patch it easily enough," Prescott
+declared. "But I've heard that there is so much 'science' to
+making or mending a birch bark canoe that an amateur always makes
+the job worse."
+
+"Haw, haw, haw!" came boisterously from Fred Ripley. He and Mr.
+Dodge were now standing before the table of the auctioneer's clerk.
+Fred was paying down the remaining twenty-six dollars on the
+price he had bid for the handsome chestnut pony.
+
+"Yes, you're laughing at us, you contemptible Rip!" scowled Dave,
+though he spoke under his breath. "You can afford to lose money,
+for you always know where to get more. You knew this canoe was
+worthless, and you deliberately bid it up on us---you scoundrel!"
+
+"Shall we make Colonel Grundy a present of this canoe?" suggested
+Danny Grin dolefully.
+
+"The poor old man hasn't money enough to get the canoe away from
+here, even if he wanted to," replied Dick, in a voice of sympathy.
+
+"But how did the show folks manage to use this canoe?" asked Tom
+Reade.
+
+"They didn't, except on a truck in a street parade, I imagine,"
+Dick replied. "And that must be how the holes came to be in the
+bottom. The sun got in its work on the bark and oil, and blistered
+the body of the canoe so that it broke or wore away in spots.
+Oh, dear!"
+
+The sale was over, but a few odds and ends remained. Fred Ripley,
+having now paid the whole of his forty-one dollars through Mr.
+Dodge, ordered his handsome new purchase led out.
+
+A man came out, holding the pony's halter. He walked slowly,
+the pony moving contentedly after him.
+
+"A fine little animal!" glowed Fred, stroking the glossy coat.
+
+"He---er---looks rather old, doesn't he?" ventured Mr. Dodge.
+
+"Not so very old," Fred answered airily. "There is a lot of life
+and vim left in this little fellow. And he can show speed, too,
+or I'm all wrong."
+
+Then Fred's eye roved toward the pile of stuff on which no one
+had bid.
+
+"There's a good saddle," suggested Ripley. "The real western
+kind," nodded the auctioneer.
+
+It looked the part.
+
+"I'll give you two dollars for the saddle," Fred offered.
+
+"You'll pay ten if you get that saddle," replied the red-faced
+auctioneer.
+
+"Put it up and let us see how the bids will run," proposed Ripley.
+
+"The sale is closed. Anything that is sold now will go at private
+sale," retorted the auctioneer.
+
+"Oh, come now!" protested Ripley. "I'd like to trade with you."
+
+"You can, if you produce the price. At least, your friend can.
+I can't deal with you, for you're a minor."
+
+Fred tried vainly to persuade the auctioneer to lower the price
+of the saddle, but finally concluded to pay ten dollars for it
+and two dollars for a bridle. A worn saddle cloth was "thrown
+in" for good measure. Ripley handed the money to the auctioneer's
+clerk.
+
+"Saddle up," directed Fred, tossing a quarter to the man who held
+the pony's bridle.
+
+Though flushed with his bargain, Fred was also feeling rather
+solemn. He had parted with nearly all of the sixty dollars his
+father had handed him that morning as his summer's spending money.
+He was beginning to wonder if his pony would really take the
+place of all the fun he had planned for his summer vacation.
+
+"Here is your mount, sir," called the man who had done the saddling.
+"Now, let's see what kind of a horseman you are."
+
+"As good as you'll find around Gridley," declared Fred complacently.
+
+Putting a foot into the left stirrup, he vaulted lightly to the
+animal's back.
+
+"He has a treasure, and we're stung," muttered Dave Darrin in
+a low voice. "Those that have plenty of money and can afford
+to lose don't often lose!"
+
+Before starting off Fred, glancing over at Dick & Co. standing
+dolefully on the truck, brayed insolently:
+
+"Haw, haw, haw!"
+
+Dave clenched his fists, but knew that he could do nothing without
+making himself ridiculous.
+
+"Get up, Prince!" ordered young Ripley, bringing one hand smartly
+against the animal's flank.
+
+"He's going to call his pony 'Prince,'" whispered Danny Grin.
+
+"It looks like an appropriate name," nodded Dick wistfully.
+
+For some reason the pony didn't seem inclined to start. Fred
+dug his heels against the animal's side and moved away at a walk.
+
+"A-a-a-ah!" murmured a crowd of small boys enviously.
+
+"Now, show a little speed, Prince," ordered Fred, digging his
+heels in hard.
+
+The pony broke into a trot. Someone passed Ripley a switch, with
+which he dealt his animal a stinging blow. Away went pony and
+rider at a slow canter.
+
+"Fine gait this little fellow has," exulted Fred, while cheers
+went up from the small boys.
+
+Suddenly the animal slowed down to a walk. Fred applied two sharp
+cuts with the switch, again starting his mount. Fred turned
+and came cantering back toward the group, feeling mightily proud
+of himself.
+
+Suddenly the pony stopped, trembling in every limb.
+
+"Get off, young man!" called someone. "Your pony is going to
+fall!"
+
+Fred got off, feeling rather peculiar. He wished that the six
+fellow high school boys over on the truck would move off.
+
+Mr. Dodge hurried over to the young man, looking very much concerned.
+
+"Fred," murmured the banker, "for all his fine looks I'm afraid
+there is something wrong with your pony."
+
+"What is it?" asked Fred, looking, as he felt, vastly troubled.
+
+At that moment an automobile stopped out in the road.
+
+"Beg your pardon, Mr. Dodge," called the chauffeur, "but are you
+going to want me soon?"
+
+"I want you at once," called back the banker, adding in a lower
+voice to Fred:
+
+"Flannery, my new chauffeur, was a coachman for many years. He's
+a fine judge of horseflesh."
+
+Flannery came up, an inquiring look on his face.
+
+"I want you to look this pony over and tell me just what you think
+of him," directed the banker.
+
+Flannery went over the pony's "lines" with the air of an expert,
+as, indeed, he was.
+
+"Fine-looking little beast," said Flannery. "He has been well
+fed and groomed."
+
+Then he looked into the pony's mouth, examining the teeth with
+great care.
+
+"Used to be a nice animal once," decided Flannery, "but he was
+that a long time ago. He's about twenty-five or twenty-six years
+old."
+
+"_What_!" exploded young Ripley, growing very red in the face.
+
+"Thinking of buying him, sir?" asked the chauffeur respectfully."
+
+"I've already bought him," confessed Fred ruefully.
+
+Flannery whistled softly. Then he took the pony by the bridle,
+dragging him along over the ground at a trot, the crowd making
+way for him.
+
+"Wind-broken," announced the ex-coachman, leading the trembling
+animal back. "Bad case, too."
+
+"A veterinary can cure that," Fred declared, speaking more airily
+than his feelings warranted.
+
+"Hm!" replied Flannery dryly. "You find the veterinary, Master
+Fred, and I'll show the gentleman how to make his fortune if he
+can cure wind-broken horses."
+
+"Then what good is the pony?" demanded Fred in exasperation.
+
+"Well, the hide ought to fetch three dollars, and there are a
+good many pounds of soap fat in him," replied Flannery slowly.
+
+"And is that all the good there is in this pony?" cried Ripley.
+He felt like screaming.
+
+"It's all the good I can see in him, sir," replied Flannery.
+
+"Then I won't take this pony," young Ripley declared, flushing
+hotly. "It's a downright swindle. Here, my man, hand my money
+back and take your old soap box."
+
+"Not to-day," declared the auctioneer briefly. He and his clerk
+were now preparing to depart.
+
+"You'd better!" warned Fred.
+
+"I won't."
+
+"Then I'll have you arrested."
+
+"Try it."
+
+"Run and get a policeman," Fred ordered, turning to a crowd of
+small boys.
+
+"All right," smiled the auctioneer. "If you'll be quick about
+it I'll wait for your policeman."
+
+But Mr. Dodge, who had shaken his head toward three boys who had
+shown signs of being willing to run for a policeman, now led young
+Ripley to one side.
+
+"No use making any fuss about it, I'm afraid, Fred. You saw the
+pony when it was offered for sale, didn't you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And you didn't ask to have him run? You didn't demand the privilege
+of trying him yourself?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"What representations did the auctioneer make about the pony?"
+pressed Mr. Dodge.
+
+"Why, he said the pony was a fine-looking animal-----"
+
+"And that's no lie," responded Mr. Dodge gravely. "What else?"
+
+"That's the only representation that I did make," broke in the
+auctioneer, who had strolled slowly over to them. "I also said
+that the pony showed all of his good points."
+
+"I'm afraid you'll have to swallow your loss, Fred," suggested
+the banker. "I'm sorry that I had even an innocent part in this
+trade."
+
+"Trade?" screamed Fred, now losing all control of himself. "It
+wasn't a trade at all! It's piracy! It's highway robbery! It
+was a barefaced swindle, and this swindler"
+
+Fred glared at the auctioneer.
+
+"Go slowly, young man," advised the salesman of the afternoon.
+
+"You're a swindler, and a mean one, taking downright advantage
+of other folks," stormed young Ripley. "But you won't get away
+with this swindle. My father is a lawyer---the best lawyer in
+the place---and he'll give you good reason to shiver!"
+
+"All right, young man. Send your father after me---if he'll take
+the case. But I'm going down to see him, anyway, for I must give
+him an accounting of the money taken in this afternoon. Come
+along, Edson," to his clerk.
+
+Very red in the face, Fred Ripley stood with his fists clenched,
+trying to avoid the eyes of the many grinning men and boys gathered
+around him.
+
+Dick & Co. had gotten down from the truck. They did not join
+in the fun-making at the enemy's expense, though naturally they
+did not feel very sorry for young Ripley.
+
+"Will you ride your pony home, sir?" asked the man who had done
+the saddling.
+
+"No," said Fred shortly. He felt tempted to tell the man to lead
+the worthless animal away and shoot it. Then he changed his mind.
+
+"Take this half dollar," he said, "and take the pony down and
+leave it in our stable."
+
+For another thought had just occurred to Fred Ripley. If he
+kept a close mouth, and watched his chance, he hoped that he
+might yet be able to make some sort of "trade" with the pony
+as an asset.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+BUYING FUEL FOR A BONFIRE?
+
+
+"Well, what are we going to do with our magnificent war canoe?"
+asked Greg Holmes dolefully. "Does the bonfire idea go?"
+
+"It doesn't," Dick retorted. "Although we don't know anything
+about such a job, and though it is supposed to need a sure enough
+expert to do it, we're at least going to try the thing out and
+see if we can't make this canoe float, and carry us safely, at
+that!"
+
+"We'd better decide how to get it away from here, anyway," proposed
+Tom Reade. "We haven't any lease of this lot."
+
+Over near the road a group of men and boys were laughing heartily.
+It was at the lawyer's son that their mirth was directed. As
+for Dick & Co., the Gridley crowd felt only sympathy. The proceedings
+of the afternoon had but emphasized the old idea that at an auction
+sale one must either use great judgment or take his chances.
+
+"Say," called Dick, "there goes the very man we ought to ask for
+advice. Harry, will you run over and ask Hiram Driggs to come
+here?"
+
+Hazelton, nodding, hurried away at full speed. "Hiram Driggs
+is an awfully high-priced man," sighed Tom Reade.
+
+"Perhaps his mere advice won't come high," young Prescott answered.
+"If it does, we'll begin right by telling him that we have no
+money---that we've nothing in fact but a birchbark white elephant
+on our hands."
+
+Driggs came over promptly, his keen, shrewd eyes twinkling.
+
+"So you boys have been buying away from my shop, and have been
+'stung,' eh!" queried Driggs, a short, rather stout man, of about
+forty.
+
+"Robbed, I'd call it," replied Dave Darrin.
+
+"Same thing, at a horse trade or an auction sale," hinted Hiram
+dryly as he got up on the truck. "Let's have a look at your steam
+yacht."
+
+For a few moments Driggs looked the canoe over in grim silence.
+
+"Whew!" was time final comment.
+
+"Pretty bad, isn't it?" Dick inquired.
+
+"Well, for my part, I'd sooner buy a real wreck," Driggs announced.
+"This may be an auctioneer's idea of honor. What was his name?"
+
+"The auctioneer's name? Caswell," Dick answered.
+
+"I'll make a note of that name," said Driggs, drawing out notebook
+and pencil, "and keep away from any auction that has a man named
+Caswell on the quarter-deck. Now, boys, what do you want to know
+about this canoe that your eyes don't tell you?"
+
+"About how much would it cost us to fix her?" asked Prescott.
+
+"Thirty dollars---maybe thirty-two," said Driggs, after another
+casual look at the canoe.
+
+"Let's announce the bonfire for to-night," urged Greg.
+
+"We haven't any such sum of money, Mr. Driggs," Dick went on.
+
+"Too bad, boys, for you'd probably have a lot of fun in this craft.
+If you want to sell it, maybe I could allow you four dollars
+for the craft as she stands."
+
+"We'd hate to part with the canoe," Dick continued.
+
+"I know, I know," remarked Driggs sympathetically. "It was wanting
+a boat badly when I was a boy that drove me into the boat business.
+But I didn't have to handle birch bark then, or my first craft
+would have sunk me. Say, boys, great joke how young Ripley got
+stung so badly, wasn't it?"
+
+"I know about how he feels," remarked Dick.
+
+"Yes, of course," smiled Driggs. "But you boys are entitled to
+some honest sympathy. I don't imagine young Ripley will get much
+sympathy, will he?"
+
+"Not a heap," Greg Holmes answered.
+
+"Well," resumed Driggs, "I ain't a mite sorry for the boy and
+his make-believe pony. But I wish I could help you with your
+boat, for I know you haven't any loose money to throw around like
+young Rip."
+
+Driggs dug his hands deep into his pockets and wrinkled his brow
+in thought.
+
+At last he looked up hopefully.
+
+"I'll tell you what I've been thinking about, boys. The town
+will be laughing at young Ripley to-morrow. But Rip, he'll be
+passing the laugh around on you young fellers, too. Now, I don't
+mind Rip's troubles; but it's different with you boys, and I know
+how it stings to part with all the money you could scrape together.
+Now, let's look this job over. I could say about thirty dollars
+for this job. It will cost twenty, and the other ten dollars
+would be profit, interest on my investment in my shop and so forth.
+Now, I'll let this job go at just the cost---twenty dollars,
+and throw off the profit and trimmings. Yes---to you young fellows---I'll
+call the job twenty dollars."
+
+"That's kind of you," said Dick, with a grateful sigh. "But we
+want to be honest with you, Mr. Drigg---Twenty dollars, or five,
+or a hundred---it would be all the same to us. We haven't the
+money."
+
+"Not so fast," returned Driggs, his eyes twinkling. "I'll give
+you credit, and treat the debt as a matter of honor between us."
+
+"But I don't know how we'd pay you back," Dick went on. "As it
+is, we've borrowed a good bit of money that we've got to pay back."
+
+"Exactly," agreed Driggs, "and you want to pay the other money
+back before you pay me. Yes; I'll take the job at cost---twenty
+dollars, and I'll throw in the use of one of my teams and trucks
+to come up here and get the canoe."
+
+"But I'm afraid, sir, that we'd be a very long time paying you."
+
+"No, you won't," Driggs disputed. "I don't allow long time bills,
+but I'll show you a way to pay me back fairly early, if you boys
+have the energy---and I believe you have. Now, you see, first
+off, boys, we'll need a lot of birch bark. I haven't any in stock,
+and the kind that is sound and good for canoe building is scarce
+these days. Now, first off, you'll have to range the woods for
+bark. Do you know where to find it?"
+
+"Yes," Dick nodded. "Over on that place they call Katson's Hill."
+
+"But that's about eleven miles from here," objected Driggs.
+
+"I know it is," Prescott answered. "But the point is that Katson's
+Hill is wild land. No tax assessor knows who is the owner of
+that land, and it wouldn't bring enough money to make it worth
+while to sell it at a sheriff's sale. So a number of farmers
+turn their cattle in there and use it for free grazing ground.
+As no owner can be found for the land we won't have to pay for
+the birch bark that we cut there."
+
+"That's so," Driggs acknowledged. "But it's an awful distance,
+and over some mighty rough bits of road. You'll be about dead
+after you've packed a load of birch bark in from Katson's Hill."
+
+"That wouldn't be anything, compared with having to do without
+our canoe," Dick returned.
+
+"Maybe not," Driggs conceded. "Now, boys, is there much of that
+birch bark on Katson's Hill?"
+
+"There must be several shiploads," Dave Darrin replied.
+
+"Good enough. Then, see here. I'll take this job at twenty dollars,
+if you boys will get the birch bark. After you've brought in
+enough to patch the canoe then you can bring in enough more to
+amount to twenty dollars. Is that a go?"
+
+"It's wonderfully kind of you," Dick answered gratefully.
+
+"Not much it isn't," Driggs grinned, "and it will make that young
+Ripley cub feel mighty sore and cheap when he finds that he was
+the only one who got 'skinned' at this auction. But before you
+get through cutting and hauling birch bark you may think I'm a
+pretty hard taskmaster. I'll call it a go, if you boys will."
+
+"We'll pay our full debt, Mr. Driggs, and pay you a load of thanks
+besides."
+
+"All right," nodded Driggs, jumping down off the truck, in haste
+to get away from the embarrassment of being thanked. "Some of
+you just hang around here until my man, Jim Snowden, gets up here
+with the truck. After Jim starts away with your war canoe then
+you can leave the rest to me, except cutting and hauling several
+loads of birch bark to square up matters."
+
+Driggs beat a hasty retreat now. When he had gone the members
+of Dick & Co. exchanged glances. Then Holmes began to dance
+his best idea of a jig.
+
+"We'll have that bonfire at eight o'clock tonight, Greg," Dick
+reminded him with a smile.
+
+"Will you?" demanded Greg, scowling fiercely. "If any of you
+fellows have any matches, then just keep away from that canoe,
+or I'll fight. We can't afford to take any risks. Whoop!"
+
+"Whoop!" answered Harry Hazelton, standing on his head.
+
+"Whoop!" echoed Dave Darrin, giving Danny Grin a playful punch
+that sent Dalzell sprawling.
+
+They were as happy a lot of boys as one could wish to see. They
+were to have their canoe and all the sport that that meant. It
+was to be a safe craft---as good as new! For Hiram Driggs was
+a dependable and skilful boat builder.
+
+"Hey, too bad you fellows got stung so fearfully," cried a grammar
+school boy in passing. "I'm mighty sorry."
+
+"Thank you," Dick answered. "But we're going to have the canoe
+repaired. We'll be having lots of fun in the war canoe after
+a few days."
+
+"How you going to get her fixed?" asked the other boy.
+
+"Hiram Driggs has taken the job, and you know what he can do with
+boats."
+
+"Whee! I'm glad on you're going to have the canoe fixed all right,"
+nodded the other boy, and passed on.
+
+Forty-five minutes after Driggs' departure Jim Snowden came up
+with the truck. With the help of the boys he loaded the canoe
+from the other truck, then started away.
+
+By this time the news had spread to other boys that Dick & Co.
+would soon have their war canoe afloat in fine order---that Hiram
+Driggs stood sponsor for the prediction.
+
+That evening Fred Ripley had a somewhat unpleasant talk with his
+father.
+
+"You've no business with pocket money," said Squire Ripley sternly.
+"You have no idea of the value of it."
+
+"I thought I had made a good bargain," said Fred sullenly.
+
+"So does every fool who parts with his money as easily as you
+do," returned the lawyer. "Well, enjoy yourself, my boy. If
+you'd rather have that paralyzed pony than the money I gave you
+to enjoy the summer with, I suppose you're entitled to your choice,
+though I don't like your judgment."
+
+"Of course," suggested Fred, "since I've met with misfortune you
+won't be too hard on me. You'll let me have a little more money,
+so I won't have to go through the summer like a mucker."
+
+"I'll give you no more spending money this summer," retorted the
+lawyer, adding, grimly: "If I did, you'd probably go and buy a
+cart to match your horse."
+
+In fact Fred felt so uncomfortable at home that, just after dark,
+he started up Main Street.
+
+"Where's your horse, Fred?" called Bert Dodge. "Why are you walking
+when you own one of the best steeds that ever came out of Arabia?"
+
+"Shut up, won't you?" demanded Fred sulkily.
+
+Bert chuckled for a while before he went on:
+
+"Of course, I'm sorry for you, Fred, but it's all so funny that
+I can't help laughing."
+
+"Oh, yes, it must be awfully funny," replied young Ripley testily.
+
+"But you can afford it," said Bert. "You can get more money from
+your father."
+
+"I suppose so," Ripley assented, not caring to repeat his interview
+with his father. "Anyway, I'm glad that Dick Prescott and the
+rest of his crowd got fooled as badly as I did. And they can't
+get any more money this summer."
+
+"I guess they must have gotten some already," Bert rejoined.
+"Didn't you hear the news about that canoe?"
+
+"What news?" asked Fred quickly.
+
+"Why, they've engaged Hiram Driggs to put the canoe in good order."
+
+"Where did they get the money?" asked Fred, his brow darkening.
+
+"I don't know," was Bert's rejoinder. "But they must be able
+to raise money all right, for Driggs has the canoe down at his
+yard, and he has promised it to them in a few days."
+
+This news came like a slap in the face to the lawyer's son. He
+remained with Bert for another hour, but all the time Fred brooded
+over the fact that Dick & Co. were to have their canoe after all.
+
+"At that, I don't know that they will have their canoe," Fred
+remarked darkly to himself as he started homeward.
+
+Shortly after midnight Fred Ripley sneaked away from his home,
+turning his face in the direction of Hiram Driggs' boatyard.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+HIRAM PRIES A SECRET LOOSE
+
+
+When he left home Fred Ripley had no clearly defined idea as to
+what he meant to do.
+
+However, he had in one pocket a keen-bladed pocket knife. Well
+wrapped in paper a short but sharp-edged chisel rested in one
+of the side pockets of his coat.
+
+At the outset his only purpose was to do irreparable mischief
+to the war canoe. The means of accomplishing that purpose he
+must decide upon when he reached the boatyard.
+
+How dark it was, and how hot! Late as the hour was the baking
+heat of the day did not seem to have left the ground. Fred walked
+along rapidly, fanning his perspiring face with his straw hat.
+
+"They'll have their war canoe in the water in a few days, will
+they?" the lawyer's son muttered. "Humph!"
+
+Through the side streets he went, keeping a sharp lookout. Conscious
+of the fact that he was bent on an unworthy errand, Fred did not
+care to be recognized abroad at this unusual hour.
+
+In a few minutes he had reached the boatyard. This was surrounded
+by a high board fence, and the gate was locked.
+
+"It won't do to get over the fence," young Ripley decided. "I
+might be seen and watched. But I know a way."
+
+At one corner of the yard the fence ran almost, though not quite
+to the bank of the river.
+
+Keeping well within the shadow of the fence, young Ripley hastened
+toward this point.
+
+Here the amount of space was not sufficient for him to step around
+the end of the fence. However, by grasping it on both sides Fred
+could swing himself around it and into the boatyard. He did so
+with ease, then halted, peering cautiously about the yard.
+
+"No one here," the lawyer's son decided at last. "Whew! I wouldn't
+dare even to stumble over a tramp taking a nap here. This is
+ticklish business, or it would be if I were caught here. Now,
+where is the canoe?"
+
+Early in the evening the moon had shone, but now the stars gave
+all the light there was to be had. It was so close in the yard
+that Fred soon pulled off his jacket, carrying it or his arm.
+
+Nowhere in the open yard was the canoe to be seen. There were
+three semi-open sheds. Into each of these in turn Ripley peered.
+The canoe was nowhere to be found.
+
+"I'm a fool to lose my sleep and take all the risk for this!"
+grunted the boy, halting and staring moodily about him in his
+great disappointment. He now glared angrily at a large building,
+two-thirds boathouse and one-third boat-building shop.
+
+"Hiram Driggs had the canoe taken in there!" muttered the boy.
+"Just my luck. I couldn't get into that building unless I broke
+a window---and I don't dare do that."
+
+Still determined to get at the canoe, if possible, Fred stole
+down to the inclined platform from which boats were carried to
+the water. But the water-front entrance to the boathouse also
+proved to be locked.
+
+"There's no show for me here," grunted the young prowler. "I
+wonder if any of the windows have been left unlocked."
+
+His good sense told him that it would be a serious matter indeed
+to raise a window and enter the building---if he were caught.
+
+But Fred, after a few moments of strained listening, decided to
+take the chance. At any hazard that he dared take he must get
+to the war canoe and put it out of commission for all time.
+
+He tried three of the windows. All of them proved to be locked.
+
+"I'm going to have some more of my usual luck," groaned young
+Ripley. "I wonder why it is that I always have such poor luck
+when I have my heart most set on doing a thing?"
+
+He was slipping along to the fourth window when he heard a sound
+that almost caused his heart to stop beating.
+
+Merely the sound of footsteps pausing by the gate to the boatyard---that
+was all, for a moment. But Fred cowered in acute dread.
+
+"Who's in there?" called a steady voice, that filled Fred Ripley
+with consternation, He knew that voice! It belonged to a member
+of the Gridley police force.
+
+"Talk about your tough luck!" shivered Fred. "This is the limit!
+Now, I'm in for it."
+
+For a few moments he crouched close to the boathouse nearly paralyzed
+with fright. His consternation increased when a sound over by
+the fence indicated that the policeman was trying to mount that
+barrier.
+
+Now, Fred's courage returned, or enough of it to enable him to
+try to escape. Bending low, he turned and ran swiftly, almost
+noiselessly. His speed astonished even himself. He gained the
+corner of the fence by which he had entered the yard. Taking
+a firm hold, he swung himself around the fence and out of sight
+just as the policeman's head showed over the top of it.
+
+Fortunately for the fugitive, the policeman, in climbing the fence,
+had made noise enough to drown the slight sounds produced by Ripley's
+frenzied flight.
+
+His first thought being of burglars, the policeman drew his revolver
+as soon as his feet touched the ground inside the yard. With
+his left hand he held an electric pocket flash lamp, whose rays
+he flashed into the dark places.
+
+Fred did not stop until he found himself safely within the grounds
+of his home. There he halted, fanning himself with his hat and
+taking long breaths. If discovered by anyone he could easily
+claim that he had found the night too hot to sleep inside and
+had come outdoors for air.
+
+The next morning, about ten o'clock, Hiram Driggs, who had already
+been visited by Dick & Co., on their way to Katson's Hill, was
+called upon by Policeman Curtis of the Gridley force. Curtis,
+being off duty, was in citizen's clothes.
+
+"Did you miss anything out of the plant this morning, Mr. Driggs?"
+inquired the guardian of life and property.
+
+"Nothing that I know of," Driggs answered. "Why?"
+
+"I thought I heard burglars about here last night, while on duty,"
+the policeman explained. "I came up over the fence, and looked
+about the place, but couldn't find anything. Yes, I did, too,
+though. I'll talk about that in a moment. You see, I went off
+duty at one o'clock this morning, so I didn't spend much time
+here. I'm on house reserve duty to-day. Now, for what I found
+here. I didn't find a living soul in the yard, but on the ground,
+near one of the open sheds, I came upon a chisel wrapped in a
+newspaper. I hid it, then, but I'll show it to you now. Maybe
+it belongs to the shop, and if so I've no business with it. But,
+if you don't recognize the chisel as yours, then I'll take it
+up to the station house and turn it over to the chief."
+
+"After all that stretch o' talk," smiled Driggs, "you ought to
+show me a whole case full of chisels."
+
+"I hid it over here," Curtis explained, going over to one of the
+open sheds. "I tucked it in under this packing case. Here it
+is, now, just where I left it. Do you recognize it as yours?"
+
+From the newspaper wrapping Driggs took the small but keen-edged
+implement. He regarded it curiously. Then he turned the paper
+over slowly.
+
+"Do you recognize it?" persisted the policeman.
+
+"Mebbe," said Driggs. "I guess you can leave it here. But, in
+case any question should come up about it in the future, suppose
+you write your autograph on the handle of the chisel."
+
+Driggs passed over his fountain pen, the policeman obligingly
+obeying the request for his signature on the wood.
+
+"Now, just for good measure, write your name across the top of
+the newspaper, too," Driggs proposed. Curtis did so.
+
+"You seem to attach a good deal of importance to this find," hinted
+the policeman.
+
+"Mebbe," assented Driggs indifferently. "Mebbe not. But you
+and I will both know this paper and the chisel again, if we see
+it, won't we?"
+
+"We ought to," nodded the policeman. "But you don't consider
+the matter as important enough, then, to interest the police?"
+
+"I wouldn't think o' bothering the police force about a trifling
+little matter like this," returned Driggs carelessly.
+
+Just as soon, however, as the policeman had gone, Driggs darted
+into his private office. There he took up the telephone receiver
+and asked for Lawyer Ripley's residence number.
+
+"Is Master Fred at home!" he inquired, when a servant of the Ripley
+household answered the telephone. Fred was at home, the servant
+replied, and then summoned Fred to the telephone.
+
+"Well, who is it, and what is it?" asked Fred crossly.
+
+"Hiram Driggs," responded the boat builder dryly. "That's 'who
+is it.' As to 'what is it,' if you'll take a quick run over to
+my office at the boatyard I'll tell you the rest of it."
+
+"What on earth can you want to see me about?" Fred demanded.
+
+Even over the wire, the note of dismay in Ripley's voice was plainly
+evident to Driggs, who chuckled.
+
+"I can't tell you, over the wire, all that I want to see you about,"
+Driggs replied. "You'd better come over here at once. I can
+promise you that it's something interesting."
+
+"I---I don't believe I can come over to-day," Fred answered hesitatingly.
+"The weather is too hot."
+
+"Mebbe the weather will get hotter, if you don't come," Hiram
+Driggs responded calmly.
+
+"That's a joke, eh?" queried Fred. "Ha, ha, ha!"
+
+"Depends upon the feller's sense of humor," Driggs declared.
+"Well, you're coming over, aren't you?"
+
+"Ye-es, I'll come," Fred assented falteringly, for his guilty
+conscience made a coward of him. "You're a fine fellow, Mr. Driggs,
+and I'm glad to oblige anyone like you. I'll be right over."
+
+"Thanks, ever so much, for the compliment," drawled Driggs in
+his most genial tone. "Such a compliment is especially appreciated
+when it comes from a young gentleman of your stripe. Good-bye."
+
+That word "stripe" caused Fred Ripley to have a disagreeable chill.
+He remembered that "stripes" are an important part of the design
+on a convict's suit of state-furnished clothes.
+
+"But he needn't think he can prove anything against me," Fred
+muttered to himself, as he started down the street. "Of course,
+I know I lost that chisel last night, and Driggs may have found
+it in his boatyard. But he can't prove that the chisel belongs
+to me, or to our house. There are lots more chisels just like
+that one. If Driggs tries to bluff me he'll find that I'm altogether
+too cool for him!"
+
+Nevertheless, it was an anxious young man who walked into the
+boat builder's office a few minutes later. Hiram Driggs, smiling
+broadly, held out his hand, which Fred took.
+
+"Sorry I wasn't here when you called last night," said Driggs
+affably.
+
+"I don't know what you mean," Fred rejoined promptly. "I didn't
+call at your house last night."
+
+"Oh, no," Driggs replied. "I meant when you called here."
+
+"I didn't call here, either."
+
+"Ever see this before?" asked Driggs, holding up the chisel.
+
+"Never," lied Fred.
+
+"That's curious," said Driggs musingly. "Officer Curtis, the
+man on this beat, found the chisel here, and it was wrapped up
+in part of this newspaper."
+
+Driggs brought forth from one of the drawers of his desk the newspaper
+in question.
+
+"What has that scrap of paper to do with it?" asked Fred, speaking
+as coolly as he could.
+
+"Why," explained Driggs, turning the paper over, "here's the mail
+sticker on this side, with your father's printed name and address
+pasted on it just as it came through the post-office."
+
+Fred gasped audibly this time. Driggs surveyed his face with
+a keen, tantalizing gaze.
+
+"Mebbe 'twas your father, then, who was in the yard last night,
+and who refused to answer the policeman's hail," suggested the
+boat builder. "I'd better go up to his office and show him these
+things and ask him, I guess."
+
+"But I don't believe my father will know anything about it," spoke
+young Ripley huskily.
+
+"Then your father will want to know something about it," Driggs
+went on. "He's a man of an inquiring turn of mind. Let's run
+up to his office together and ask him."
+
+"No, no, no!" urged Fred, his face growing paler.
+
+"Then why were you here last night?"
+
+"I wasn't here," protested the boy.
+
+"Perhaps I can tell you why you were here," Driggs went on, never
+losing his affable smile. "You don't like Dick Prescott, and
+you don't like his boy friends. Prescott has been too many for
+you on more than one occasion. But that is no reason why you
+should enter my yard after midnight. That is no reason why you
+should want to do harm to a war canoe or to any other property
+that happens to be in my yard. I really don't know whether you're
+to be blamed for being a glib liar, Ripley. You've never given
+yourself much practice at telling the truth, you know. But I
+have this to say: If anything happens to that canoe, or to anything
+else here, I shall make it my business to get hold of Officer
+Curtis, and he and I will drop in and show your father this chisel,
+and this piece of paper that it was wrapped in. As you will see,
+Curtis has written his signature on the paper and on the handle
+of the chisel, so that he may identify them again at any time.
+Now, Ripley, I won't look for you to pay this yard any more visits
+except in a proper way and during regular business hours. Good
+morning!"
+
+Hiram Driggs held out his hand as smilingly as ever, and Fred
+took it in a flabby grasp, feeling as though he were going to
+faint. Then without a word Ripley slunk out of the office, while
+Driggs gazed after him still smiling.
+
+"The mean scoundrel!" panted Fred, as he hurried away, his knees
+trembling under him. "There isn't a meaner fellow in town than
+Hiram Driggs, and some day he'll go and tell my father just for
+spite. I know he will! Now, I've got to find some good way
+to account for that paper and chisel I'll put in the day thinking
+up my story."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+BIRCH BARK MERCHANTS
+
+
+Away over on Katson's Hill six high school boys, stripped to their
+undershirts and trousers, were toiling hard, drenched in perspiration
+and with hands considerably the worse for their hard work.
+
+"What we're finding out is that it's one thing to strip bark for
+fun, and quite another thing to take it off in pieces large enough
+for a boat-builder," Dick Prescott declared.
+
+"It isn't as fast work as I thought it would be, either," Dave
+Darrin declared, running his knife slowly down the trunk of a
+young birch.
+
+"What we need is to bring a grindstone along with us," Tom Reade
+grunted, as he examined the edge of the largest blade in his jackknife.
+"I simply can't cut with this knife any more."
+
+"I couldn't cut with a fine razor," declared Greg Holmes. "Look
+at the blisters on my hands from the cutting I've already done."
+
+"Never mind your aches and pains," comforted Dave Darrin. "We're
+doing this to pay charges on our canoe, and Hiram Driggs has been
+mighty kind about the whole business. Think of the fun we're
+going to have when that canoe is launched; Now, fellows, Hiram
+Driggs has been mighty good to us, so I want to propose a plan
+for your approval. Whenever Driggs tells us that we've cut and
+hauled enough birch bark to pay him, then we must come out here
+and get still a few more loads, to pay him in good measure and
+show that we appreciate his kindness. Never mind how much our
+backs ache or our hands smart. Do you agree?"
+
+"I'll fight any fellow in the crowd who doesn't agree," announced
+Tom Reade.
+
+"You can't get up a fight with me on that score," retorted Greg.
+The others also quickly assented to Dave's plan.
+
+By and by the youngsters halted for half an hour to eat the luncheons
+they had brought with them. Then they went at their work again.
+
+At half-past three o'clock in the afternoon they tied up in bundles
+as much of the bark as each boy could carry, then started homeward.
+
+"We ought to get home in time for supper," Dick declared hopefully.
+
+It was about eight o'clock in the evening when they reached Greg's
+gate. The return was harder than they had expected. The road
+seemed to be twice as rough as it had been in the morning; they
+were utterly fagged, and discovered that even a load of birch
+bark can weigh a good deal under certain circumstances.
+
+"Pile it up in the back of the yard," Greg suggested, "and we'll
+take it around to Mr. Driggs in the morning."
+
+"Then we can hardly get back to Katson's Hill to-morrow, if we
+wait until the boatyard opens at eight o'clock," said Dave. "We
+ought to start for the hill before six, as we did this morning."
+
+"We'll none of us feel like going to Katson's Hill early to-morrow
+morning," smiled Dick wearily. "Fellows, I guess we'll have
+to put in twice as much time, and go every other day. I'm afraid
+it's going to be a little too much for us to do everyday."
+
+So this was agreed upon, though rather reluctantly, for Dick &
+Co. were anxious to repay Driggs at the earliest date.
+
+Not one of the six boys appeared on Main Street that evening.
+Each of them, after eating supper, crept away to bed to ease
+the aching of his muscles in slumber.
+
+The next morning they met at Greg's gate shortly after seven o'clock.
+
+"The loads will seem lighter to-day," laughed Dick.
+
+"But to-morrow---oh, me, oh, my!" groaned Reade, making a comical
+face.
+
+"It's the 'White Man's Burden,' you know," Dick laughed.
+
+"What is?" Dave inquired.
+
+"Debt---and its consequences."
+
+"My father has a horror of debt," Tom announced.
+
+"Well, I guess the black side of debt shows only when one doesn't
+intend to make an effort to pay it," Dick suggested. "The whole
+business world, so we were taught at high school, rests on a foundation
+of debt. The man who doesn't contract debts bigger than he can
+pay, won't find much horror in owing money. We owe Hiram Driggs
+twenty dollars, or rather we're going to owe it. But the bark
+we're going to take in to him to-day is going to pay a part of
+that debt. A few days more of tramping, blistered hands and aching
+backs, and we'll be well out of debt and have the rest of the
+summer for that great old canoe!"
+
+"Let's make an early start with the bark," proposed Tom. "I want
+to see if the stuff feels as heavy as it did late yesterday afternoon."
+
+"Humph! My load doesn't seem to weigh more than seven ounces,"
+Darrin declared, as he shouldered one of the piles of bark.
+
+"Lighter than air this morning," quoth Tom, "and only a short
+haul at that."
+
+When Hiram Driggs reached his boatyard at eight o'clock he found
+Dick & Co. waiting for him.
+
+"Well, well, well, boys!" Mr. Driggs called cheerily. "So you
+didn't back out."
+
+"Did you think we would, sir?" Dick inquired.
+
+"No; I knew you boys wouldn't back out. And I don't believe you
+threw away any bark on the way home, just to lighten your loads."
+
+Hiram went about the yard starting the day's work for his men,
+then came back to the boys.
+
+"Now, just bring the bark over to the platform and we'll look
+it over and sort it," suggested the boat builder.
+
+Dick & Co. carried their loads over to the platform, where they
+cut the lashings.
+
+"We'll make three heaps of the stuff," Driggs proposed. "One
+heap will be the worthless stuff that has to be thrown away.
+Another heap will be for the pieces that are good but small; they'll
+do for patches. The third heap will be the whole, sound strips.
+Mebbe I'd better do all the sorting myself."
+
+So the boys stood by, watching Driggs as he sorted the bundles
+of bark with the speed of a man who knows just what he wants.
+A quantity of the bark went on to the "worthless" heap, yet there
+was a goodly amount in each of the other piles by the time that
+the boat builder was through sorting it.
+
+"You've done first rate, boys," he announced at last. "Is there
+much more of that bark on Katson's Hill?"
+
+"We ought to be able to bring in fifty times as much bark as we've
+brought already," Dick answered.
+
+"I wish you would," Driggs retorted.
+
+"And give up the whole of our summer vacation?" Danny Grin asked
+anxiously.
+
+"Well, there is that side to it, after all," Driggs admitted quickly.
+"It must be a tough job on your backs, too. But, boys, I wouldn't
+mind having a lot of this stuff, for birch bark canoes are coming
+into favor again. The only trouble is that birch bark is hard
+to get, these days, and costs a lot to boot. So it makes birchbark
+canoes come pretty high. At the same time, there are plenty
+of wealthy folks who would pay me well for a birch-bark canoe.
+Now, I know that you boys, owning a canoe that will soon be in
+the water, won't be anxious to give up your whole summer to doing
+jobs for me. But couldn't you bring in a lot more bark if you
+had a team of horses and a good-sized wagon?"
+
+"Of course we could," Dick nodded. "But we haven't any horses
+or a wagon."
+
+"I was thinking," Driggs went on slowly. "I can spare my gray
+team and the big green wagon. Any of you boys know how to drive?"
+
+"All of us do," Dick answered, "though I guess Tom could handle
+a team better than any of the rest of us."
+
+"Then suppose you take my team out at six o'clock to-morrow morning?"
+Driggs suggested. "I'll have to charge you four dollars a day
+for it, but I'll take it in bark as payment. With the wagon you'll
+be able to bring in a lot more bark than you could without a wagon."
+
+"It's a fine idea, sir," glowed Dick, "and you're mighty kind
+to us."
+
+"Not especially kind," smiled the boat builder. "I can use a
+lot of this bark in my business, and I'm glad to get it on as
+reasonable a basis as you boys can bring it to me. You see, it's
+lucky that Katson's Hill is wild and distant land. If we had
+a land owner to deal with he'd make us pay high for the privilege
+of stripping the bark."
+
+"But why couldn't you send your own workmen out to cut the bark?"
+Dick asked. "They've as much right on Katson's Hill as we have."
+
+"Oh, yes; I could do that," Driggs assented. "And I could make
+a little more money that way, mebbe. But would it be square business,
+after you young men have trusted me with your business secret
+as to where bark can be had for nothing?"
+
+That was a ruggedly honest way of putting it that impressed Dick
+& Co.
+
+"I'll tell you what you---might do, Mr. Driggs," hinted Tom Reade.
+"You might lend us a grindstone, if you have one to spare. Then
+we can sharpen our knives right on the spot and cut bark faster."
+
+"You can have the grindstone," Driggs assented. "And I'll do
+better than that. I can spare half a dozen knives from the shop
+that are better than anything you carry in your pockets. Oh,
+we'll rush this business along fast."
+
+Six utterly happy high school boys reported at Hiram Driggs' stable
+at six o'clock the next morning. They harnessed the horses, put
+the grindstone in the wagon and all climbed aboard. Two seats
+held them all, and there was room for a load of bark, besides,
+several times as large as Dick & Co. could carry on their backs.
+
+Work went lightly that day! The shop knives cut far better than
+pocket knives could do, and the stone was at hand for sharpening.
+Six laughing and not very tired boys piled aboard the wagon that
+afternoon, with what looked like a "mountain" of prime birch bark
+roped on.
+
+For seven more working days Dick & Co. toiled faithfully, at the
+end of which time they discovered that they had about "cleaned"
+Katson's Hill of all the really desirable bark.
+
+"Your canoe will be dry enough to launch in the morning," said
+Driggs, as he received the last load at his stable. "Come down
+any time after eight o'clock and we'll put it in the water."
+
+Were Dick & Co. on hand the next morning?
+
+Dan Dalzell was the last of the six boys to reach post outside
+the locked gate of the yard, and he was there no later than twenty-one
+minutes past seven.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+MEETING THE FATE OF GREENHORNS
+
+
+At five minutes before eight Hiram Driggs arrived, keys in hand.
+
+"I see you're on time," he smiled, unlocking the gate and throwing
+it open. "Now come in and we'll run your canoe out on the river
+float."
+
+Even in the dim light of the boathouse Dick & Co. could see the
+sides of the canoe glisten with their coating of pitch and oil
+that lay outside the bark. The war canoe looked like a bran-new
+craft!
+
+"Do you like her?" queried Driggs, with a smile of pride in the
+work of his yard.
+
+"Like her?" echoed Dick, a choking feeling in his throat. "Mr.
+Driggs, we can't talk---yet!"
+
+"Get hold," ordered the boat builder. "Carry her gently."
+
+Gently? Dick & Co. lifted their beloved treasure as though the
+canoe carried a cargo of eggs.
+
+Out into the morning sun they carried her, letting her down with
+the stern right at the water's edge.
+
+"O-o-o-oh!" It would be hard to say which one of Dick & Co. started
+that murmur of intense admiration.
+
+"Now, if you can take your eyes off that canoe long enough," proposed
+Driggs, after all hands, the builder included, had feasted their
+eyes for a few minutes upon the canoe, "come into the office and
+we'll attend to a little business."
+
+Not quite comprehending, the high school boys followed Driggs,
+who seated himself at his desk, picking up a sheet of paper.
+
+"Prescott, I take it you're the business manager of this crowd,"
+the boat builder went on. "Now, look over these figures with
+me, and see if everything is straight. Here are the different
+loads of bark you've brought in. I figure them up at $122.60.
+See if you make it the same?"
+
+"Of course I do," nodded Dick, not even looking at the figures.
+
+"Careless of you, not to watch another man's figuring," remarked
+Hiram Driggs. "Now, then, the bark you've brought in comes to
+just what I've stated. Against that is a charge for the team
+and wagon, eight days at four dollars a day---thirty-two dollars.
+Twenty dollars for fixing your canoe. Total charges, fifty-two
+dollars. Balance due you for bark, seventy dollars and sixty
+cents. That's straight, isn't it?"
+
+"I---I don't understand," faltered Dick Prescott.
+
+"Then see if this will help you to understand," proposed Driggs,
+drawing a roll of bills from his pocket and laying down the money.
+Here you are, seventy dollars and sixty cents."
+
+"But we didn't propose to sell you any bark," Dick protested.
+"All we expected to do was to bring you in good measure to pay
+you for all your kindness to us."
+
+"Kindness to you boys?" demanded Driggs, his shrewd eyes twinkling.
+"I hope I may go through life being as profitably kind to others.
+Boys, the bark you've sold me will enable me to make up several
+canoes at a fine, fat profit. Take your pay for the goods you've
+delivered!"
+
+Dick glanced at his chums, who looked rather dumbfounded. Then
+he picked up the bills with an uneasy feeling.
+
+"Thank you, then," young Prescott continued. "But there is one
+little point overlooked, Mr. Driggs. You did the canoe for us
+at cost, though your price to any other customer would have been
+thirty dollars."
+
+"Oh, we'll let it go at that," Driggs suggested readily. "I'm
+coming out finely on the deal."
+
+"We won't let it go at that, if you please, sir," Dick Prescott
+retorted firmly.
+
+Dick placed a ten dollar bill on the desk, adding:
+
+"That makes the full thirty dollars for the repairing of the canoe."
+
+"I don't want to take it," said Driggs gruffly.
+
+"Then we won't take any of this money for the bark," insisted
+Dick, putting the rest of the money back on the table.
+
+"If you corner me like that," muttered Driggs, "I'll have to take
+your ten dollars. Now put the rest of the money back in your
+pocket, and divide it among your crowd whenever you're ready.
+Wait a minute until I make out a receipt for repairing the canoe.
+I'll put the receipt in your name, Prescott."
+
+Driggs wrote rapidly, then reached for another paper.
+
+"And now," he laughed, "since you're so mighty particular about
+being exact in business, you may as well sign a receipt for the
+money paid you for the bark."
+
+Signatures were quickly given.
+
+"Now, I reckon you boys want to get out to your canoe," the builder
+hinted.
+
+"Yes, but we can't take Dick with us," Tom declared. "Not with
+all that money belonging to the company in his pocket. Dick,
+before you step into the canoe you'd better leave the money with
+Mr. Driggs, if he'll oblige us by taking care of it."
+
+Driggs dropped the money in an envelope, putting the latter in
+his safe.
+
+"Call and get it when you're going away," he said.
+
+"Some day, when we recover, Mr. Driggs," said Dick earnestly,
+"we're going to come in and try to thank you as we should."
+
+"If you do," retorted the boat builder gruffly, "I'll throw you
+all out. Our present business deal is completed, and the papers
+all signed. Git!"
+
+Driggs followed them out to show them how to launch the canoe
+with the least trouble.
+
+"Have any of you boys ever handled a paddle before?" inquired
+Hiram Driggs.
+
+"Oh, yes; in small cedar canoes," Dave answered.
+
+"All of you?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Then you ought to get along all right in this craft. But be
+careful at first, and don't try any frolicking when you're aboard.
+Remember, a canoe isn't a craft that can be handled with roughness.
+Don't anyone try to 'rock the boat,' either. In a canoe everyone
+has to sit steadily and attend strictly to business."
+
+"A war canoe! Isn't it great?" chuckled Dan, as he started to
+help himself to a seat.
+
+But Tom grabbed him by the coat collar, pulling him back.
+
+"First of all, Danny Grin, shed that coat. Then ask Dick which
+seat you're going to have. He's the big chief of our tribe of
+Indians."
+
+"Better all of you leave your coats here," suggested Driggs.
+"You can get 'em when you come back. And you can keep the canoe
+here without charge, so you'll have a safe place for it. Some
+fellows, you know, might envy you so that they might try to destroy
+the canoe if you left it in a place that isn't locked up at night."
+
+When the boys were ready, in their shirt sleeves, Dick assigned
+Dave Darrin to the bow seat. The others were placed, while Prescott
+himself took the stern seat, from which the steering paddle must
+be wielded.
+
+"All ready, everyone," Dick called. "Dave, you set the stroke,
+and give us a slow, easy one. We mustn't do any swift paddling
+until we've had a good deal of practice. Shove off, Dave."
+
+Darrin pushed his paddle against the float, Dick doing likewise
+at the stern. Large as it was, the canoe glided smoothly across
+the water.
+
+"Now, give us the slow stroke, Dave!" Dick called.
+
+Soon the others caught the trick of paddling in unison. Each
+had his own side of the craft on which to paddle. Dick, alone,
+as steersman, paddled on either side at will, according as he
+wished to guide the boat.
+
+"You're doing finely," called Hiram Driggs.
+
+"Let's hit up the speed a bit," urged Dan Dalzell.
+
+"We won't be in too big a hurry about that," Dick counseled.
+"Let us get the knack of this thing by degrees."
+
+"Whee! When we do get to going fast I'll wager there is a lot
+of fine old speed in this birch-bark tub!" chuckled Tom Reade.
+
+Dick now headed the canoe up the river. For half a mile or more
+they glided along on a nearly straight course.
+
+To say that these Gridley high school boys were happy would be
+putting it rather mildly. There was exhilaration in every move
+of this noble sport. Nor was it at all like work. The canoe
+seemed to require but very little power to send her skimming over
+the water.
+
+At last Dick guided the canoe in an easy, graceful turn, heading
+down the river once more.
+
+"Now, you can try just a little faster stroke, Dave," Dick suggested.
+"And make it just a bit heavier on the stroke, fellows, but don't
+imagine that we're going to try any racing speed."
+
+"Hurrah!"
+
+"Zip!"
+
+"Wow!"
+
+It was great sport! Just the small increase in the stroke sent
+the handsome big war canoe fairly spinning down the river.
+
+"I never dreamed it would be like this!" cried Dave Darrin, in
+ecstasy. "Fellows, I don't believe there is any fun in the world
+equal to canoeing in a real canoe."
+
+"It beats all the little cedar contraptions that some folks call
+canoes!" Tom Reade declared.
+
+"I am almost beginning to think," announced Danny Grin, "that
+I'd rather go on canoeing than go home for my dinner."
+
+"That idea would last until about half-past twelve," chuckled
+Reade. "This is glorious fun, all right, but dinner has its
+place, too. As for me, I want to get my dinner strictly on time."
+
+"Glutton!" taunted Greg Holmes.
+
+"Don't you believe it," Reade retorted. "I want my dinner right
+on time so that I can get back for a longer afternoon in the canoe."
+
+"Fellows," announced Dave Darrin solemnly, "we've got to form
+a canoe club."
+
+"Humph!" retorted Greg Holmes. "We don't want to belong to any
+club where the other fellows have only the fourteen or sixteen
+foot cedar canoes."
+
+"We don't have to," Dave explained. "We'll limit the membership
+to those who own war canoes like this one. In other words, we'll
+be the whole club."
+
+"What's the need of our forming a club?" asked Greg Holmes. "We're
+as good as being a club already. We're always together in everything,
+aren't we?"
+
+"Still, it won't do any harm to have a regular club name for the
+summer," Dick Prescott suggested.
+
+"What would we call the club?" asked Hazelton.
+
+"Why not call it the Gridley High School Canoe Club?" Dick demanded.
+
+"Best name possible," Tom agreed.
+
+"Some of the other high school fellows might get sore at us, though,"
+Tom hinted. "They might say we had no right to take the high
+school name."
+
+"We won't take it for ourselves only," Dick smiled. "We'll keep
+the club membership open to any set of six fellows who will own
+and run a war canoe. We'll keep the membership as open as possible
+to the high school fellows."
+
+"Humph! And then Fred Ripley, Bert Dodge and a few others with
+plenty of cash would get a canoe and insist on coming in and spoiling
+the club."
+
+"They might," Dick assented, "but I don't believe they would.
+Fred Ripley, Bert Dodge and a few others of their kind in the
+Gridley High School wouldn't spend five cents to join anything
+we're in."
+
+Toot! toot! sounded a whistle shrilly behind them.
+
+Dick turned carefully to glance at the bend above them.
+
+"Steam launch, with an excursion party," he informed the others.
+"I think I see Laura Bentley and Belle Meade in the bow waving
+handkerchiefs at us."
+
+Dan Dalzell turned abruptly around. Harry Hazelton did the same.
+
+"Look out!" cried Greg, as he shifted swiftly to steady the craft.
+
+Just then Tom Reade turned, too. His added weight sent the canoe
+careening. There was a quick scramble to right the craft.
+
+Flop! The canoe's port rail was under water. She filled and
+sank, carrying a lot of excited high school boys down at the same
+time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+"DANNY GRIN" IS SILENT
+
+
+Dick Prescott sank into the water not more than two or three feet.
+Then his head showed above the surface of the river. He struck
+out vigorously, looking about him.
+
+"The canoe is done for!" he gasped.
+
+Too-oot! too-oot! too-oot! The steam launch was now speeding
+to the scene, its whistle screeching at a rate calculated to inform
+everyone in Gridley of another river disaster.
+
+Up came Greg, then Dave. Tom Reade's head appeared down stream.
+Harry Hazelton bobbed up not six feet from Dick. Hazelton blew
+out a mouthful of water, then called:
+
+"Everyone up, Dick?"
+
+"All but Dan."
+
+"What-----"
+
+"I guess he's all right. Danny Grin is a good swimmer, you know."
+
+Half a dozen river craft were now heading their way, but the launch
+was the only power boat in sight.
+
+Five members of Dick & Co. now got close together.
+
+"We've got to go down after Danny Grin," Reade declared. "You
+fellows watch, and I'll get as close to bottom as I can."
+
+Tom sank. To the anxious boys he seemed to be gone for an age.
+He came up alone.
+
+"Did you see Dan?" Dick faltered. "Not a glimpse of him," returned
+Tom despairingly.
+
+"See the canoe?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then you couldn't have gone down in the right place," Dick argued.
+
+"I'll try it, fellows!" exclaimed Darrin. Down went Dave. He
+soon came up, treading water. As soon as he had blown out a mouthful
+of water he exclaimed:
+
+"I found Dan, but I couldn't stay under long enough. He went
+down with the canoe. He's lying in it now."
+
+"Look out, there! We'll pick you up," called a voice from the
+launch, which now darted toward the boys. A bell for half speed,
+then another for "stop" sounded, and the hull of the launch divided
+the frightened swimmers.
+
+"Let me get aboard!" cried Dick, taking a few lusty over-hand
+strokes.
+
+Willing hands hauled him into the launch at the bow, while girls'
+cries and anxious questions filled the air.
+
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"Who-----"
+
+But Dick waited to answer no one. Standing in the bow of the
+launch, he pointed his hands, then dived into the river.
+
+While he was below the surface of the water the other canoeists
+swam alongside, helping themselves aboard.
+
+"Oh, Dave!" cried Laura Bentley. "What's wrong?"
+
+"Dan Dalzell hasn't come up," Darrin choked. "Here, clear the
+way. I'm going down after Dick."
+
+He was gone like a flash. Seconds ticked by while a score of
+pale faces watched over the side of the launch.
+
+Then, at last, up shot Dave. He was followed almost instantly
+by Dick, his arms wrapped around the motionless form of Dan Dalzell.
+
+"Get close and we'll haul you in!" called Tom Reade, a boat-hook
+in his hand.
+
+"Is Dan drowned!" demanded a dozen voices.
+
+"Don't ask questions now!" cried Tom Reade impatiently, without
+looking about him. "Keep quiet! It's a time for work."
+
+Abashed, the questioners became silent. Tom caught the boat-hook
+through the collar of Dan's flannel shirt. With the aid of the
+launch's helmsman Reade drew Dan in and got him aboard. Young
+Dalzell's eyes were closed, nor did he speak.
+
+Then Dick and Dave were pulled aboard the launch.
+
+"Dan didn't seem to be able to free himself," Darrin explained
+breathlessly. "His foot was wedged under a cleat in the canoe."
+
+"Carry Dan aft," ordered Dick, while he was still clambering over
+the rail. "Lay him face down."
+
+Then, drenched as he was, Dick hastened aft, where he directed
+others how to pat Dan on the back and to work his arms.
+
+"We've got to get that water off his lungs," Dick explained.
+"Don't stop working for a moment. I wish we had a barrel to roll
+him on!"
+
+"We will have soon," replied the launch's helmsman, rushing back
+to his post and ringing the bell. Thus recalled to his post,
+the engineer turned on the speed.
+
+The craft made swiftly for Hiram Driggs' float. A few moments
+later it ran alongside.
+
+Warned by the whistle, Driggs and two of his workmen came running
+out to the float.
+
+"Get a barrel as quickly as you can!" shouted young Prescott.
+
+By the time Dalzell had been hustled ashore the barrel was in
+readiness. Dan received an energetic rolling. Three or four
+little gushes of water issued from his mouth.
+
+"Keep up the good work," ordered Dick feverishly. "We'll bring
+him around soon."
+
+When they saw that no more water was coming from Dalzell's mouth
+the workers placed him in a sitting position, then began to pump-handle
+his arms vigorously.
+
+A tremor ran through the body of Danny Grin.
+
+"Hurrah!" cried Dick. "He's going to open his eyes!"
+
+This Dan did a few moments later. "Keep on working his arms,"
+commanded Prescott.
+
+"Quit!" begged Dalzell in a faint whisper. "You're hurting me."
+
+"Good enough!" chuckled Dick. "Keep on at his arms until he can
+talk a whole lot more."
+
+"But isn't it cruel?" asked a girl.
+
+"No," rejoined Tom Reade, turning to her. "Did you ever bring
+a drowning man to?"
+
+"Never, of course."
+
+"Then let our Dick have his way. He generally knows what he's
+about. No rudeness intended you understand," Reade added, smiling.
+
+"This lad's all right, now," declared Hiram Driggs. "Help him
+to his feet and walk him about a bit until he gets the whole trick
+of breathing again. Dalzell, didn't you know any better than
+to try to swallow the whole river and ruin my business?"
+
+A faint grin parted Dan's lips.
+
+"Oh, I'm so thankful," sighed Laura Bentley. "Dick, I was afraid
+there would be but five of you left when I saw Dan being hoisted
+aboard!"
+
+Soon Dalzell was able to laugh nervously. Then a scowl darkened
+his face.
+
+"I'm the prize idiot of Gridley!" he muttered faintly.
+
+"What's the matter now?" Dave Darrin demanded.
+
+"The canoe is lost, and it's all my fault," moaned Dalzell. "Oh,
+dear! Oh, dear!"
+
+"Bother the canoe!" cried Dick impatiently. "We're lucky enough
+that no lives have been lost."
+
+"But I---I turned and upset the craft," wailed Dan.
+
+"There were others of us," said Greg sheepishly. "If we had had
+the sense of babies none of us would have turned, and there wouldn't
+have been any accident."
+
+"This is no time to talk about canoe etiquette," Prescott declared.
+"Let us be thankful that we're all here. We'll wait until Dan
+is himself again before we do any talking."
+
+"I'm all right," protested Dan Dalzell.
+
+"Yes; I believe you are," Driggs nodded.
+
+"'T' any rate, you won't die now of that dose of river water."
+
+"Party ready to come back aboard the launch?" called the helmsman.
+
+"Oh, don't hurry us, just now!" appealed Laura Bentley, going
+over to him quietly. "We're all so interested and concerned in
+what is going on over here."
+
+So the helmsman waited, grumbling quietly to himself.
+
+Some twenty of the high school girls had chartered the launch
+for a morning ride up the river. Dainty enough the girls looked
+in their cool summer finery. They formed a bright picture as
+they stood grouped about Dick & Co. and the other male members
+of the party.
+
+"You fellows can say all you want to," mumbled Dan, "but the canoe
+is gone for good and all! We won't have any more fun in it this
+summer."
+
+"Was that what ailed you, Dan?" teased Darrin. "You felt so badly
+over the loss of the canoe that you tried to stay on the bottom
+of the river with it?"
+
+"My foot was caught, and I couldn't get it loose," Dan explained.
+"I was trying to free myself, like mad, you may be sure, when
+all at once I didn't know anything more. You fellows must have
+had a job prying my foot loose."
+
+"It was something of a job," Dick smiled, "especially as our time
+was so limited down there at the bottom with you. The river
+must be twenty feet deep at that point."
+
+"All of that," affirmed Hiram Driggs.
+
+By this time the high school girls had divided into little groups,
+each group with a member of Dick & Co. all to itself. The girls
+were engaging in that rather senseless though altogether charming
+hero worship so dear to the heart of the average schoolboy.
+
+"What caused the accident?" inquired one girl.
+
+"Gallantry," smiled Greg. "We were all so anxious to see you
+girls that we all turned at the same time. We made the canoe
+heel, and then it filled and went down. But you can't blame us,
+can you?"
+
+"But you've lost your fine big canoe," cried Laura Bentley, looking
+as though her pretty eyes were about to fill with tears.
+
+"Yes," Dick admitted, "and, of course, it's too bad. But a lot
+of other worse things might have happened, and I guess we'll get
+over our loss some way."
+
+"But that canoe meant so much for your summer fun," Laura went
+on. "Oh, it's too bad!"
+
+"Maybe the canoe isn't lost," suggested Hiram Driggs.
+
+"What do you mean, Mr. Driggs?" cried Laura, turning to him quickly.
+
+"Is there any way of bringing the canoe up again?" asked Belle
+Meade eagerly.
+
+"There may be," Driggs replied quietly. "I'm going to have a
+try at it anyway."
+
+"All aboard that are going back to the dock," called the helmsman
+of the launch, who was also her owner.
+
+Laura turned upon him with flashing eyes.
+
+"I don't believe there is anyone going," she said. "We wouldn't
+leave here anyway, while there's a chance that the high school
+boys can get their canoe back to the surface of the water. You
+needn't wait, Mr. Morton. When we're ready we can walk the rest
+of the way."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+WHAT AN EXPERT CAN DO
+
+
+"I don't say that I can surely raise the canoe," Mr. Driggs made
+haste to state, "or that it will be worth the trouble if we do
+raise it. That canoe may have sunk on river-bottom rocks, and
+she may be badly staved by this time. But I've sent one of my
+men to fire the scow engine, and I'm going out to see what can
+be done in the matter."
+
+"And may we wait here?" asked Laura Bentley, full of eagerness.
+
+"Certainly, young ladies."
+
+"Oh, that's just fine of you, Mr. Driggs," cried Belle Meade.
+
+Smoke soon began to pour out of the short funnel of the working
+engine on the boatyard scow. It was a clumsy-looking craft---a
+mere floating platform, with engine, propeller, tiller and a derrick
+arrangement, but it had done a lot of good work at and about the
+boatyard.
+
+"You want to get aboard the scow now, boys," called Mr. Driggs.
+"If we do anything real out yonder I'll have need of some willing
+muscle."
+
+"Can't some of the girls go, too?" called a feminine voice. "We're
+all dreadfully anxious, you know."
+
+Hiram pursed up his mouth, as though reluctant. Then he proposed,
+grudgingly:
+
+"A committee of two girls might go, if they're sure they'll keep
+out of the way when we're working. Just two! Which of the young
+ladies ought we to take, Mr. Prescott?"
+
+"Why, I believe Miss Bentley and Miss Meade will be as satisfactory
+a committee as can be chosen," Dick smiled.
+
+Some of the girls frowned their disappointment at being left out,
+but others clapped their hands. Laura and Belle stepped on the
+scow's platform.
+
+"I wouldn't try to go, if I were you, Dan," urged. Dick, as young
+Dalzell stepped forward to board the scow.
+
+"I'm all right," Dan insisted.
+
+"Sure you're all right?" questioned Hiram Driggs, eyeing Danny
+Grin's wobbly figure.
+
+"Of course I am," Dan protested, though he spoke rather weakly.
+
+"Then there's a more important job for you," declared Mr. Driggs.
+"Stay here on the float with the rest of the young ladies, and
+explain to them just what you see us doing out yonder."
+
+There was the sound of finality about the boat builder's voice,
+kindly as it was.
+
+"Cast off," ordered Driggs, taking the tiller. "Tune up that
+engine and give us some headway."
+
+Clara Marshall was thoughtful enough to run back and get a chair,
+which she brought down to the float and placed behind Dalzell.
+
+"Sit down," she urged.
+
+"Thank you," said Dan gratefully, "but I didn't need a chair."
+
+Nevertheless the high school girls persuaded him to be seated.
+
+"I---I wasn't drowned, you know," Dan protested as he sat down.
+
+"No; but you got a little water into your lungs," responded one
+of the girls. "I heard Mr. Driggs tell Dick Prescott that, as
+nearly as they could guess, you opened your mouth a trifle just
+before Dick and Dave reached you and freed you from that awful
+trap. Mr. Driggs said that if you had been under water two minutes
+longer there would have been a different story to tell."
+
+"I wonder how long I was under water?" mused Dan.
+
+"Long enough to drown, Danny Grin," replied Clara Marshall gravely.
+
+Meanwhile the scow was making slow headway out into the river
+and slightly up stream.
+
+"Dick, don't you think this canoeing is going to prove too dangerous
+a sport for you boys?" asked Laura, regarding him with anxious
+eyes.
+
+"Not when we get so that we know how to behave ourselves in a
+canoe, Laura," young Prescott answered.
+
+"Yet, no matter how skilful you become, some unexpected accident
+may happen at any moment," she urged.
+
+"You wouldn't have us be mollycoddles, would you?" asked Dick
+in surprise.
+
+"Certainly not," replied Laura with emphasis.
+
+"Yet you would advise us to avoid everything that may have some
+touch of danger in it."
+
+"I wouldn't advise that, either," Laura contended with sweet
+seriousness. "But-----"
+
+"You'd like to see us play football some day, wouldn't you?"
+
+"I certainly hope you'll make the high school eleven."
+
+"Football is undoubtedly more dangerous than canoeing," Dick claimed.
+
+"It seems too bad that boys' best sports should be so dangerous,
+doesn't it?" questioned young Miss Bentley.
+
+"I can't agree with you," Dick answered quietly. "It takes danger,
+and the ability to meet it, to form a boy's character into a man's."
+
+"Then you believe in being foolhardy, as a matter of training?"
+asked Laura, with a swift flash of her eyes.
+
+"By no means," Prescott rejoined. "Foolhardy means just what
+the word implies, and only a fool will be foolhardy. If we had
+been trying to upset the canoe, as a matter of sport, that would
+have been the work of young fools."
+
+It was not difficult to locate the spot where the canoe had gone
+down. The river's current was not swift, and the paddles now
+floated not very far below the spot where the cherished craft
+of Dick & Co. had gone down.
+
+"Do you want the services of some expert divers, Mr. Driggs?"
+asked Dave, turning from a brief chat with Belle Meade.
+
+"Not you boys," retorted the boat builder. "You youngsters have
+been fooling enough with the river bottom for one day."
+
+"Then how do you expect to get hold of the canoe, sir?" asked
+Tom Reade.
+
+"We'll grapple with tackle," replied Driggs, going toward an equipment
+box that stood on the forward end of the scow. "We'll use the
+same kind of tackle that we've sometimes dragged the bottom with
+when looking for drowned people."
+
+Laura Bentley slivered slightly at his words. Driggs' keen eyes
+noted the fact, and thereafter he was careful not to mention drowned
+people in her hearing.
+
+The tackle was soon rigged. Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton, who
+possessed the keenest interest in things mechanical, aided the
+boat builder under his direction.
+
+Back and forth over the spot the scow moved, while the grapples
+were frequently shifted and recast.
+
+"Stop the engine," called Driggs. "We've hooked into something!"
+
+Laura turned somewhat pale for a moment; Belle, too, looked uneasy.
+The same thought had crossed both girls' minds. What if the
+tackle had caught the body of some drowned man?
+
+"We'll shift about here a bit," Driggs proposed, nodding to the
+engineer to stand by ready to stop or start the engine on quick
+signal.
+
+Before long the grappling hook of another line was caught;
+
+"The two lines are about twelve feet apart," Driggs announced.
+"My idea is that we've caught onto two cross braces of the canoe.
+If so we'll have it up in a jiffy."
+
+Both lines were now made fast to the derrick, in such a way that
+there would be an even haul on both lines. Belting was now connected
+between the engine and a windlass.
+
+"Haul away, very slowly," Driggs ordered.
+
+Up came the lines, an inch at a time. Belle and Laura could not
+resist the temptation to go to the edge of the scow and peer over.
+
+"I see something coming up," cried Belle at last.
+
+"It's the canoe," said Tom Reade, trying to speak carelessly,
+though there was a ring of exultation in his voice.
+
+Nearer and nearer to the surface of the water came the canoe.
+
+"Now, watch for my hand signal all the time," called Driggs.
+"I don't want to get the middle part of the canoe more than an
+inch above the surface."
+
+When the point of the canoe's prow rose above the surface of the
+water a cheer went up from the scow that carried the news instantly
+back to the landing float.
+
+Danny Grin stood up, waving his hat and cheering hoarsely, while
+the girls who surrounded him waved handkerchiefs and parasols.
+
+Then the gunwale appeared just above water along the whole length.
+
+"It will be a hard job to bail her out now," Dave declared.
+
+"Not so hard that it will worry you any," Driggs smiled.
+
+He dragged a pump over, allowing its flexible pipe to rest down
+into the water in the canoe.
+
+"Now, some of you youngsters get hold of the pump handles," Driggs
+ordered.
+
+Five high school boys got hold with a will. Gradually, as the
+water was emptied out of her the canoe rose higher and higher
+in the water.
+
+There was no cheering, now, from the boys on the scow. They were
+using all their breath working the pump, while Driggs carefully
+directed the bottom of the flexible tubing.
+
+"There!" declared Driggs at last. "Barring a little moisture,
+your canoe is as dry as ever it was, boys. I can't see a sign
+of a leak anywhere, either. But don't make a practice of tipping
+it over every day, for I can't afford to leave my work to help
+you out. There's your canoe, and she's all right."
+
+Dick got hold of the painter at the bow, while Driggs released
+the grappling tackle.
+
+What a cheer went up from the scow, and what a busy scene there
+was on the float as the young women jumped up and down in their
+glee over the good fortune of Dick & Co.
+
+"Now, we'll cruise down and get the paddles," Driggs proposed.
+
+"As soon as we pick up a couple of them, Dick and I can take the
+canoe and get the rest," Dave suggested.
+
+"You cannot, while the young ladies are with us," Hiram Driggs
+contradicted. "Do you want to scare them to death by having another
+upset?"
+
+Laura shot a grateful glance at kindly Hiram Driggs. The scow
+moved forward, cruising among the paddles until all of them had
+been recovered.
+
+"Now, Mr. Driggs, won't you stop a moment?" asked young Prescott.
+"It will be a bit humiliating to be towed into dock. Wait, and
+let us get into the canoe. We'd rather take it ashore under
+our own power."
+
+Laura hoped Hiram Driggs would veto the idea, but he didn't.
+
+The canoe was brought alongside, and five boys stepped carefully
+into it, seating themselves.
+
+"Room for one young lady in here, if we can find a fair way of
+drawing lots between them," suggested Dick playfully.
+
+"They won't step into the canoe, just now, if I can prevent them,"
+Driggs declared flatly. "You boys want just a few minutes' more
+practice at your new game before you risk the lives of these girls."
+
+"You're right, I'm afraid, Mr. Driggs," Dick Prescott admitted
+with a smile. "But, before long, we hope to take out as many
+of the high school girls as care to step into this fine old war
+canoe."
+
+"I hope you won't forget that," Belle Meade flashed at him smilingly.
+
+"We won't," Dave promised her. "And you and Laura shall have
+the first invitation."
+
+"I shall be ready," Laura replied, "just as soon as you boys feel
+that you can take proper care of us in the canoe."
+
+"You'll have to do your own share of taking care," Tom Reade responded.
+"About all a passenger has to learn in a canoe is to take a seat
+right in the middle of the canoe, and to keep to that place without
+moving about."
+
+Dick & Co., minus Danny Grin, now paddled off, reaching the float
+some moments before the scow got in.
+
+"Young ladies," said Dick, as he stepped to the float, "I don't
+know how many of you will care about going out in our canoe, but
+we wish to invite all who would like it to try a trip within the
+next few days. Four boys and two girls can go out at a time,
+and in case of mishap that would leave two good swimmers to look
+after each girl. We shall be glad if you will permit us to invite
+you in couples."
+
+Despite the accident of the morning the invitation was greeted
+with enthusiasm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+DICK TREMBLES AT HIS NERVE
+
+
+Hiram Driggs refused to accept any money for his trouble in raising
+the canoe.
+
+"I won't charge you anything, unless upsetting your craft becomes
+a troublesome habit," the boat builder declared. "Remember, I'm
+a big winner on our birch bark trade."
+
+Within the next four days all of the girls invited had been able
+to take a trip up the river and back.
+
+By this time Dick & Co. had fully acquired the mastery of their
+canoe. They had had no more upsets, for "Big Chief Prescott,"
+of this new Gridley tribe of young Indians, had succeeded in putting
+through some rules governing their conduct when the chums were
+out in their canoe. One of these rules was that no one should
+change his position in the craft except the steersman at the stern.
+Others would not look about at a hail unless informed by the
+steersman that they might do so.
+
+Not by any means did Dick do all the steering of the craft. Each
+of his chums had a frequent turn at it, and at the other positions
+in the canoe, until all were expert at any part of the work.
+
+"But there is one big drawback about having this canoe," Greg
+remarked one day.
+
+"What's that?" asked Dave.
+
+"There are no canoes to race with."
+
+"There are up at Lake Pleasant," Dick replied.
+
+"But we can't take the canoe up there," Tom Reade objected. "It's
+twenty-four miles from Gridley."
+
+"Couldn't we walk there and carry the canoe on our shoulders?"
+suggested Dave.
+
+While they were discussing this, the canoe lay on the float.,
+whence they were soon to take it into the boathouse.
+
+"We can try it now," suggested Dick.
+
+Getting a good hold, Dick & Co. raised the war canoe to their
+several shoulders. They found they could accomplish the feat,
+though it wasn't an easy one.
+
+"We'll have to give up that idea," Tom remarked rather mournfully.
+"Without a doubt we could carry the canoe to Lake Pleasant, if
+we had time enough. But I don't believe we could make five miles
+a day with it. So to get the canoe up to Lake Pleasant on our
+shoulders, and then back again would take over two weeks."
+
+Dick was unusually thoughtful as the boys strolled from Driggs'
+yard up to Main Street. Lake Pleasant was a fine place to visit
+in summer. He knew that, for he had been there on one occasion.
+
+On one side of the lake were two hotels, each with roomy recreation
+grounds, with piers and plenty of boats. On this same side there
+were four or five boarding houses for people of more moderate
+means.
+
+Boating was the one great pastime at Lake Pleasant. Indeed, a
+canoe club had been started there by young men of means, and the
+boathouse stood at the water's edge on the Hotel Pleasant grounds.
+
+Then, too, there may have been another reason for Dick's desire
+to go to Lake Pleasant. The following week Dr. and Mrs. Bentley
+were going to take charge of a party of Gridley high school girls,
+at Lake Pleasant, and Laura and Belle Meade would be of the number.
+
+"We'd cut a fine dash at Lake Pleasant," Dave Darrin laughed.
+"Which hotel would we honor with our patronage? Terms, from
+fourteen to twenty-five dollars a week. We've about enough money
+to stay at one of the hotels for about two hours, or at a boarding
+house for about nine hours. When shall we start---and how shall
+we get there with our canoe?"
+
+"We have about fifty dollars in our treasury, from the birch bark
+business," Dick mused aloud, "but that won't help us any, will it?"
+
+"Why, how much would it cost to have the canoe taken up there
+on a wagon Danny Grin asked.
+
+"Not less than fifteen dollars each way," Dick replied.
+
+"We'll give it up," said Tom. "There's nothing in the Lake Pleasant
+idea for us."
+
+"I hadn't any idea we could do anything else but give it up,"
+Dave observed, though he spoke rather gloomily.
+
+Dick was still thinking hard, though he could think of no plan
+that would enable them to make a trip to Lake Pleasant and remain
+there for some days.
+
+It was a Saturday afternoon. It had been a hot day, yet out on
+the water, busy with their sport, and acquiring a deep coating
+of sunburn, the boys had not noticed the heat especially. Now
+they mopped their faces as they strolled almost listlessly along
+the street.
+
+"I want to go to Lake Pleasant," grumbled Danny Grin.
+
+"Going to-night, or to-morrow morning?" teased Greg.
+
+"If I had an automobile I'd start after supper," Dalzell informed
+them.
+
+"But not having a car you'll wait till you're grown up and have
+begun to earn money of your own," laughed Harry Hazelton.
+
+"What do you say, Dick?" asked Dan Dalzell anxiously.
+
+"I say that I'm going to put in a few days or a fortnight at Lake
+Pleasant if I can possibly find the way," Dick retorted, with
+a sudden energy that was quite out of keeping with the heat of
+the afternoon.
+
+"Hurray!" from Danny Grin.
+
+"That's what I call the right talk," added Darrin.
+
+"How will the rest of us get along with the canoe while you're
+gone?" questioned Tom Reade.
+
+"You don't suppose I'd go to Lake Pleasant without the rest of
+the crowd?" Dick retorted rather scornfully.
+
+"Then you're going to take us all with you, and the canoe, too?"
+Tom demanded, betraying more interest.
+
+"If I can find the way to do it, or if any of you fellows can,"
+was young Prescott's answer.
+
+That started another eager volley of talk. Yet soon all of them
+save Dick looked quite hopeless.
+
+The railroad ran only within eight miles of the lake. From the
+railway station the rest of the journey was usually made by automobile
+stages, while baggage went up on automobile trucks. Charges were
+high on this automobile line up into the hills. To send the canoe
+by rail, and then transfer it to an automobile truck would cost
+more than to transport it direct from Gridley to the lake by wagon.
+
+"We can talk about it all we want," sighed Tom, "but I don't see
+the telephone poles on the golden road to Lake Pleasant."
+
+"We've got to find the way if we can," Dick retorted firmly.
+"Let's all set about it at once."
+
+"When do we start?" teased Tom.
+
+"Monday morning early," laughed Dave. "And this is late Saturday
+afternoon."
+
+Dan Dalzell was not in his usually jovial spirits. His heart
+was as much set on going as was Dick's, but Dan now felt that
+the pleasure jaunt was simply impossible.
+
+"Let's meet on Main Street after supper," Dick proposed. "Perhaps
+by that time we'll have found an idea or two."
+
+"If we can find a pocketbook or two lying in the Main Street gutter,
+that will be something more practical than finding ideas," Tom
+replied with a doleful shake of his head. "But perhaps we'll
+really find the pocketbooks. Such things are told of in story
+books, anyway, you know."
+
+"If we find any pocketbooks," smiled Dick, "our first concern
+after that will be to find the owners of them. So that stunt
+wouldn't do us much good, even if it happened."
+
+Then the boys separated and went to their respective homes for
+supper. But Dick Prescott did not eat as much as usual. He was
+too preoccupied. He knew to a penny the amount that was in the
+treasury of their little canoe club, for Mr. Prescott was holding
+the money subject to his son's call. Certainly the money in the
+treasury wouldn't bring about a vacation at Lake Pleasant.
+
+Just as soon as the meal was over Dick went out, strolling back
+to Main Street.
+
+"'Lo, Dick!"
+
+Prescott turned to recognize and nod to a barefooted boy, rather
+frayed as to attire. Mart Heckler had been two classes below
+him when Prescott had attended Central Grammar School. Now Mart
+was waiting for the fall to enter the last grade at Central, which
+was also to be his last year at school. Mart's parents were poor,
+and this lad, in another year, must join the army of toilers.
+
+"You must be having a lot of fun this vacation, Dick," remarked
+Mart rather wistfully. "Lot of fun in that war canoe, isn't there?"
+
+"Yes; there is, Mart. If we see you down at the float one of
+these days we'll ask you out for a little ride."
+
+"Will you?" asked Mart, his eyes snapping. "Fine! Now that you
+fellows have your canoe I don't suppose you'll be trying to go
+away anywhere this summer. Too much fun at home, eh?"
+
+"I don't know about that," said young Prescott wistfully. "Just
+now we're planning to try to take the canoe up to Lake Pleasant
+for a while."
+
+"Bully place, the lake," said Mart approvingly. "I'm going up
+there Monday. Going to be gone for a couple of days."
+
+"How are you going to get there?" Dick asked with interest.
+
+"You know my Uncle Billy, don't you?" asked Mart. "He's the teamster,
+you know. He's going to Lake Pleasant to get a load of furniture
+that the installment folks are taking back from a new boarding
+house up there. He said I could go up with him. We'll carry
+our food, and sleep over Monday night in the wagon."
+
+Dick halted suddenly, trembling with eagerness. He began to feel
+that he had scented a way of getting the canoe up to the lake
+in the hills!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+PUTTING UP A BIG SCHEME
+
+
+"Your uncle will be at his regular stand to-night, won't he?" queried
+Dick Prescott.
+
+"I expect so," Mart agreed. "What's the matter? Do you want
+to go along with us? I guess Uncle Billy would be willing."
+
+At this moment Dick heard a group of younger boys laughing as
+they strolled along the street.
+
+Following their glances, Dick saw in the street what is commonly
+known in small towns as the "hoss wagon"---a vehicle built for
+the purpose of removing dead horses.
+
+"There goes Fred Ripley's bargain!" chuckled one of the boys.
+
+At that moment Fred Ripley himself turned the corner into Main
+Street.
+
+"And there's Rip himself," laughed another boy. "Hey, Rip! How's
+horse flesh?"
+
+But Fred, flushing angrily, hurried along. "What's up?" asked
+young Prescott as the group of boys came along.
+
+"Haven't you heard about Fred's pony?" asked one of the crowd.
+
+"I know he bought a pony," Dick answered.
+
+"Yes; but Squire Ripley had a veterinary go down to the Ripley
+stable this afternoon, and look the pony over," volunteered the
+ready informant. "Vet said that the pony would be worth a dollar
+or two for his hide, but wouldn't be worth anything alive. So
+Squire Ripley ordered the pony shot, and that cart is taking the
+poor beast away."
+
+"Is your canoe going to be a winner?" asked another boy.
+
+"We expect so," Dick nodded.
+
+"Great joke on Rip, isn't it?" grinned another.
+
+"I can't say that his misfortune makes me especially happy," Prescott
+answered gravely.
+
+"Well, I'm glad he was 'stung' on his pony," continued the other
+boy. "Rip is no good!"
+
+"There is an old saying to the effect that, if we got our just
+deserts we'd all of us be more or less unhappy," smiled Dick.
+
+"Rip won't be so chesty with us smaller boys," predicted another
+grammar school boy. "If he tries it on, all we've got to do is
+to ask him, 'How's horse flesh, Rip?'"
+
+In spite of himself Dick could not help laughing at the thought
+of the mortification of the lawyer's son when he should be teased
+on so tender a point. Then Dick asked:
+
+"Mart, is your uncle at his stand now?"
+
+"I reckon he is," nodded Heckler.
+
+"Let's go over there and see him."
+
+"You're going to try to take the ride with us, then?" asked Mart.
+
+"I think so."
+
+"Bully!" glowed Mart, who, like most of the younger boys of Gridley,
+was a great admirer of the leader of Dick & Co.
+
+Billy Heckler, a man of thirty, was, indeed, to be found at his
+stand.
+
+"Dick wants to go up to Lake Pleasant with us on Monday," Mart
+began, but Dick quickly added:
+
+"I understand, Mr. Heckler, that you're going up to the lake without
+a load."
+
+"Yes," nodded the truckman.
+
+"Then it struck me that perhaps I could arrange with you to take
+up our canoe and some bedding, and also let the fellows ride on
+the wagon."
+
+"How many of you are there?" inquired Billy Heckler.
+
+"The usual six," Dick smiled. "If you can do it, how much would
+you charge us?"
+
+"Fifteen dollars," replied the driver, after a few moments' thought.
+
+Dick's face showed his disappointment at the answer.
+
+"I'm afraid that puts us out of it, then," he said quietly. "I
+had hoped that, as you are going up without a load, anyway, you
+might be willing to take our outfit up for a few dollars. It
+would be that much to the good for you, wouldn't it?"
+
+"Hardly," Billy replied. "Carrying a load takes more out of a
+team than an empty wagon does. You can see that, can't you?"
+
+"Ye-es," Dick nodded thoughtfully. "But, you see, we're only
+boys, and we can't talk money quite like men yet."
+
+"Some men can't do anything with money except talk about it,"
+Billy Heckler grinned. "Well, I'd like to oblige you boys. What's
+your offer, then?"
+
+"We don't feel that we could pay more than five dollars," Dick
+answered promptly.
+
+"No money in that," replied Billy Heckler, picking up a piece
+of wood and whittling.
+
+"No; I'm afraid there isn't," Dick admitted. "I guess our crowd
+will have to content itself with staying at home and using the
+canoe on the river."
+
+"The river is a good place," Heckler argued. "Why aren't you
+all content to stay at home and use your canoe on the river?"
+
+"Because," smiled young Prescott, "I suppose it's human nature
+to want to get away somewhere in the summer. Then we understand
+that there are other crew canoes on Lake Pleasant. Of course,
+now we've spent a few days in the canoe, we believe we're real
+canoe racers."
+
+"If you could call it ten dollars," Heckler proposed after a few
+minutes, "that might-----"
+
+"The crowd hasn't money enough," Dick replied. "You see, we've
+got to get the canoe back, too. Then we'll have to use money
+to feed ourselves up there. I don't see how we can go if we have
+to spend more than five dollars to get there."
+
+Billy Heckler started to shake his head, but Mart, getting behind
+Dick, made vigorous signals.
+
+"We-ell, I suppose I can do it," agreed Heckler at last. "There's
+nothing in the job, but I can remember that I used to be a boy
+myself. We'll call it a deal, then, shall we?"
+
+"I'll have to see the other fellows first," Prescott answered.
+"I'll hustle, though. The fellows will all have to get permission
+at home, too, you know."
+
+"Let me know any time before six to-morrow night," proposed Billy.
+"It must be understood, though, that if I get a paying freight
+order to haul to the lake between now and starting time, then
+my deal with you must be off."
+
+"Of course," Dick agreed. "And thank you, Mr. Heckler. Now,
+I'll hustle away and see the other fellows."
+
+Dick sped promptly away. When he reached Main Street he found
+the other fellows there. Dick gleefully detailed the semi-arrangement
+that he had made.
+
+"Great!" cried Dave.
+
+"Grand, if we can all square matters at home," Tom Reade nodded.
+"Well, fellows, you all know what we've got to do now. We'll
+meet again at this same place. All do your prettiest coaxing
+at home. It spoils the whole thing if anyone of us gets held
+up from the trip. Did you hear about Rip's pony, Dick?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Served him ri---" began Greg Holmes, but stopped suddenly.
+
+For Fred Ripley, turning the corner, saw Dick & Co., and carefully
+walked around them to avoid having to pass through the little
+crowd.
+
+"Speaking of angels-----!" said Dave Darrin dryly.
+
+"Don't tease him, Darry," urged Dick in a very low voice.
+
+But Fred heard all their remarks. His fists clenched as he walked
+on with heightened color.
+
+"It's just meat to them to see me so badly sold on the pony, and
+to know that my father ordered the animal shot and carted away!"
+muttered young Ripley fiercely. "Of course the whole town knows
+of it by this time. Prescott's muckers and a few others will
+be in high glee over my misfortune, but, anyway, I'll have the
+sympathy of all the decent people in Gridley!"
+
+Fred's ears must have burned that night, however, for the majority
+of the Gridley boys were laughing over his poor trade in horse
+flesh.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ALL READY TO RACE, BUT-----
+
+
+On the landing stage at the Hotel Pleasant a group of girls stood
+on the following Tuesday morning.
+
+"Wouldn't Dick and Dave and the rest of their crowd enjoy this
+lake if they were here with their canoe?" asked Laura Bentley.
+
+"Yes," agreed Belle Meade. "And very likely they'd win some more
+laurels for Gridley High School, too. Preston High School has
+a six-paddle canoe here now, and Trentville High School will send
+a canoe crew here in a few days. Oh, how I wish the boys could
+manage to get here with their war canoe!"
+
+"It seems too bad, doesn't it," remarked Clara Marshall, "that
+some of the nicest boys in our high school are so poor that they
+can't do the ordinary things they would like to do?"
+
+"Some of the boys in Dick & Co. won't be poor when they've been
+out of school ten years," Laura predicted, with a glowing face.
+
+"I don't believe any of them will be poor by that time," agreed
+Clara. "But it must hurt them a good deal, just now, not to have
+more money."
+
+"I wish they could be here now," sighed Laura.
+
+"You want to see Gridley High School win more laurels in sports
+and athletics?" asked another girl.
+
+"Yes," assented Miss Bentley, "and I'd like to see the boys here,
+anyway, whether they won a canoe race or not."
+
+"There's a crew canoe putting off from the other side now!" announced
+Belle Meade.
+
+"That's probably Preston High School," said Laura.
+
+"Have the Preston boys a war canoe, too?" asked one of the girls,
+shading her eyes with her hand, and staring hard at the canoe
+across the lake, some three quarters of a mile away.
+
+"Someone at the hotel said the Preston boys have a cedar and canvas
+canoe," Laura replied.
+
+"That's a birch-bark canoe over yonder," declared the girl who
+was studying the distant craft so intently. "I can tell by the
+way the sun shines on the wet places along the sides of the canoe."
+
+The other girls were now looking eagerly. "Wait a moment," begged
+Clara, and, turning, sped lightly to the boathouse near by. She
+returned with a telescope.
+
+"Hurry!" begged Laura Bentley as Clara started to focus the telescope.
+
+"You take it," proposed Clara generously, passing the glass to
+Laura.
+
+Laura soon had the telescope focused.
+
+"Hurrah, girls!" she cried. "That's the war canoe from Gridley,
+and Dick & Co. are in it."
+
+She passed the glass to Belle Meade, who took an eager peep through
+it.
+
+"Hurrah! Gridley High School! Hurrah!" chorused the other girls.
+
+Their voices must have traveled across the water, for Prescott,
+at the stern of the war canoe, suddenly gave a couple of strokes
+with his wet, flashing paddle, that swung the prow around, driving
+the canoe straight in the direction of the landing float.
+
+"Hurrah! Gridley High School! Hurrah!" called the girls again,
+giving the high school yell of the girls of that institution of
+learning.
+
+In answer a series of whoops came over the water.
+
+"They're coming at racing speed!" cried Laura.
+
+"Which shows how devoted the boys of our high school are to the
+young ladies," laughed Belle.
+
+Within a few minutes the canoe was quite close, and coming on
+swiftly. From the young paddlers went up the vocal volley:
+
+"T-E-R-R-O-R-S-! Wa-ar! Fam-ine! Pesti-i-lence! That's us!
+That's us! G-R-I-D-L-E-Y-----H.S.! Rah! rah! rah! Gri-dley!"
+
+"Hurrah! Gridley! Hurrah!" answered the girls.
+
+"Whoop! Wow! wow! _Whoo-oo-oo-oop_! Indians! Cut-throats!
+Lunch-robbers! Bad, bad, bad! Speed Club! Glee Club! Canoe
+Club---Gridley H.S.!" volleyed back Dick & Co.
+
+It was the first time that they had let out their canoe yell in
+public. They performed it lustily, with zest and pride.
+
+"Splendid!" cried some of the girls, clapping their hands. Though
+it was not quite plain whether they referred to the new yell,
+or to the skilful manner in which the boys now brought their craft
+in. At a single "Ugh!" from Prescott they ceased paddling. Dick,
+with two or three turns of his own paddle, brought the canoe in
+gently against the float. Now Dave and Dick held the canoe to
+the float with their paddles while the other young Indians, one
+at a time, stepped out. Those who had landed now bent over, holding
+the gunwale gently while Dave, first, and then Dick, stepped to
+the float.
+
+"Up with it, braves! Out with it!" cried Dick. The canoe, grasped
+by twelve hands, was drawn up on to the float, where its wet hull
+lay glistening in the bright July sunlight.
+
+"You never told us you were coming up here!" cried Laura Bentley,
+half reproachfully.
+
+"If you're bored at seeing us," proposed Dick, smilingly, "we'll
+launch our bark and speed away again."
+
+"Of course we're not bored," protested Belle Meade. "But why
+couldn't you tell us you were coming?"
+
+"We weren't sure of it until late Sunday afternoon," Dave assured
+her. "Some of us had to do some coaxing at home before we got
+permission."
+
+"How did you get that big canoe here?" Clara Marshall asked.
+
+"Don't you see the gasoline engine and the folded white wings
+inside the canoe?" asked Tom Reade gravely. "We can use it either
+as a canoe or as an airship."
+
+Three or four of the girls, Clara at their head, stepped forward
+to look for engine and "wings," then stepped back, laughing.
+
+"You're such a fibber, Tom Reade!" declared Susie Sharp.
+
+"A falsifier?" demanded Tom indignantly. "Nothing like it, Miss
+Susie! The worst you can say of me is that I have the imagination
+of an inventor."
+
+"Tweedledum and tweedledee!" laughed Clara.
+
+"It does seem good to see you boys up here," Belle went on with
+enthusiasm. "How long are you going to stay?"
+
+"In other words, how soon are you going to be rid of us?" asked
+Danny Grin.
+
+"Are you speaking for yourself, Mr. Dalzell?" Belle returned tartly.
+"I inquired more particularly about the others."
+
+Dan quite enjoyed the laugh on himself, though he replied quickly:
+
+"The others have to go home when I do. They had to promise that
+they would do so."
+
+"We have been camping at Lake Pleasant for two days," Dick explained.
+"We came up herewith our canoe and camping outfit on Billy Heckler's
+wagon. We brought along Harry's bull-dog to watch the camp.
+As to how long we'll stay, that depends."
+
+"Depends upon what?" Clara asked.
+
+"On how long our funds hold out," Prescott explained, with a frank
+smile. "You see, all our Wall Street investments have turned
+out badly."
+
+"I'm truly sorry to hear that young men of your tender age should
+have been drawn into the snares of Wall Street," retorted Clara
+dryly.
+
+"So, having had some disappointments in high finance," Prescott
+went on, "we can stay only as long as our _dog fund_ lasts."
+
+"Dog fund?" asked Susie Sharp, looking bewildered.
+
+"Dick is talking about the money we made in bark," Greg Holmes
+explained readily.
+
+"Then you really expect to be here a fortnight?" Laura asked.
+
+"Yes; if we don't develop too healthy appetites and eat up our
+funds before the fortnight is over," Dick assented.
+
+"Oh, you mustn't do that," urged Belle.
+
+"Mustn't do what?" Dave asked.
+
+"Don't eat up your funds too quickly," Belle explained.
+
+"Even if you do," suggested Susie Sharp, teasingly, "you won't
+need to hurry home. We girls know where there are several fine
+fields of farm truck that can be robbed late at night. Potatoes,
+corn, watermelons-----"
+
+"It's really very nice of you girls to offer to rob the farmers'
+fields to find provender for us," returned Greg. "But I am afraid
+that we boys have been too honestly brought up to allow ourselves
+to become receivers of stolen-----"
+
+"Greg Holmes!" Susie Sharp interrupted, her face turning very
+red.
+
+"No; it's nice of you, of course," Greg went on tantalizingly,
+"but we'd rather have a short vacation, that we can tell the whole
+truth about when we go home."
+
+"You boys may starve, if you like," retorted Susie, with a toss
+of her head. "I'm through with trying to help you out."
+
+"You know, Susie," Danny Grin went on maliciously, "farmers' fields
+are often guarded by dogs. Just think how you would feel, trying
+to climb a tree on a dark night, with a bulldog's teeth just two
+inches from the heels of your shoes."
+
+"Who are up here, in the way of canoe folks?" Dick asked Laura.
+
+She told him about the Preston High School boys and the coming
+crew from Trentville High School.
+
+"We ought to be able to get up some good races," remarked Dave.
+
+"You'll disgrace Gridley High School, though, unless you drop
+Danny Grin and Greg Holmes," retorted Susie.
+
+"Now, don't be too hard on us, Miss Sharp," tantalized Greg, "just
+because we tried to dissuade you from committing a crime with
+the otherwise laudable intention of feeding us when our money
+runs out."
+
+"If you will only leave Greg and Dan out," proposed Clara, "you
+may call on any two of us girls that you want to take their places
+in the canoe on race days."
+
+"Whew!" muttered Dick suddenly.
+
+"What's wrong?" demanded Belle.
+
+"Don't mind Prescott," urged Tom Reade. "Just as we left shore
+on the other side someone threw a stone into the lake and raised
+a succession of ripples, which rocked the canoe a bit. So---well,
+you've all heard of sea sickness, haven't you?"
+
+"We might feel worse than sea sick," Dick went on, "if we had
+raced, and then suddenly remembered that we have no authorization
+from Gridley High School to represent the school in sporting events."
+
+Tom's face fell instantly. Dave Darrin, too, looked suddenly
+very serious.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked Laura anxiously.
+
+"Why, you see," Dick went on, "although we are sure enough Gridley
+High School boys, we haven't gone through the simple little formality
+of getting our canoe club recognized by the High School Athletic
+Council."
+
+"You can race just the same, can't you?" asked Susie Sharp, looking
+much concerned.
+
+"We may race all we wish, and no one will stop us-----"
+
+"Then it's all right," said Susie, with an air of conviction.
+
+"But we simply cannot race in the name of Gridley High School."
+
+"Oh, but that's too bad!" cried Clara.
+
+"You can write to someone in the Council and secure the necessary
+authorization, can't you?" asked Laura.
+
+"Yes, we can write; but it's another matter to get action by the
+Council in time," Dick responded. "You see, it's the vacation
+season. There are seven members of the Athletic Council and I
+believe that all seven of the members are at present away from
+Gridley. Likely as not they are in seven different states, and
+the secretary may not even know where most of them are."
+
+Eight Gridley High School girls suddenly looked anxious. They
+had been rejoicing in the prospect of "rooting" for a victorious
+Gridley crew here at Lake Pleasant. Now the whole thing seemed
+to have fallen flat.
+
+"The thing to do---though it doesn't look very promising---is
+to-----" began Tom Reade, then came to dead stop.
+
+"How provoking you can be, when you want to, Tom," pouted Clara.
+"Why don't you go on?"
+
+"Because I found myself stuck fast in a new quagmire of thought,"
+Reade confessed humbly. "What I was about to say is that the
+first thing to do is to write to Mr. William Howgate, secretary
+of the Gridley High School Athletic Council of the Alumni Association.
+But that was where the thought came in and stabbed me with a
+question mark. Mr. Howgate is out of town. Does anyone here
+know his address?"
+
+Fourteen Gridley faces looked blank until Dick at last remarked:
+
+"I suppose a letter sent to his address in Gridley would reach
+him. It would be forwarded."
+
+"Thank goodness for one quick-witted boy in Gridley High School!"
+uttered Belle. "Of course a letter would be forwarded."
+
+"And there isn't any time to be lost, either," urged Susie. "Girls,
+we'll take Dick right up to the hotel now, and sit and watch him
+while he writes and mails that letter."
+
+"Right!" came a prompt chorus.
+
+"Come along, boys," added Susie, as the girls started away with
+their willing captive.
+
+"Let Dave go," spoke up Tom. "Some of us must stay behind and
+stand by our canoe. It's valuable---to us!"
+
+So Darrin was shoved forward. He and Prescott had walked a few
+yards when the latter stopped in sudden dismay.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked Clara.
+
+"We are dressed all right for our own camp," Dick replied, glancing
+down at his flannel shirt, old trousers and well-worn pair of
+canvas "sneakers" on his feet. "We didn't feel out of place in
+the canoe, either. But the hotel is a fashionable place, and
+we can't go up in this sort of rig, to discredit you girls. For
+that matter, just think how smart you all look yourselves, dressed
+in the daintiest of summer frocks. While we look like---well,
+I won't say the word."
+
+"If our Gridley boys are ashamed to be seen with us just because
+they're in rough camp attire," said Laura gently, "then we haven't
+as much reason to be proud of them as we thought we had."
+
+"I'm answered," Dick admitted humbly. "Lead on, then. We'll
+take comfort from our company, and hold our heads as high as we
+can."
+
+On to the wide hotel porch, where many well-dressed people sat,
+the girls conducted the two delegates from the canoe club. However,
+none of the guests on the porch paid any particular attention
+to Dick and Dave. Both campers and canoers were common enough
+at this summer resort.
+
+It was Clara who led the way into a parlor, in one corner of which
+there was a writing desk. Dick seated himself at the desk, and
+after a moment's thought began to write, then promptly became
+absorbed in his task. Dave and the girls seated themselves at
+a little distance, chatting in low tones.
+
+There were other guests of the Hotel Pleasant in the parlor, while
+still others passed in or out from time to time.
+
+One young man, quite fashionably dressed, stepped into the parlor,
+looked about him, then started as his glance fell on Dick and Dave.
+
+It was Fred Ripley.
+
+"Hello!" muttered Ripley in a voice just loud enough to carry,
+as he stood looking at Dick and Dave. "I thought I saw, out in
+the grounds, a sign that read: 'No tramps, beggars or peddlers
+allowed on these grounds or in the hotel.'"
+
+Dick's fingers trembled so that he dropped the pen, though he
+tried to conceal his feelings.
+
+Dave Darrin's fists clenched tightly, though he had the good sense
+to realize that to start a fight in the parlor was out of the
+question.
+
+Ripley's remark had been loud enough to attract the attention
+of nearly every person in the big room toward Dick and Dave.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+SUSIE DISCOMFITS A BOOR
+
+
+Laura Bentley bit her lips. She flushed, then started to rise,
+but Susie Sharp gently pushed her back into her seat, then crossed
+to an electric button in the frame of a window.
+
+A bell-boy promptly answered Susie's ring.
+
+"Will you kindly ask the manager to come here at once?" asked
+Susie.
+
+As it happened, the manager was no further away than the corridor.
+He came in quickly, bowing.
+
+"Mr. Wright," asked Susie coldly, nodding toward Fred Ripley,
+who stood leaning over a chair, smiling insolently, "will you
+kindly have this objectionable person removed? He is annoying
+our guests."
+
+In a twinkling Fred's insolent smile vanished. Susie's request
+had not been voiced in a loud tone, but it had been heard by perhaps
+twenty-five strangers in the parlor.
+
+Ripley's face paled, briefly, then became fiery red. He stood
+erect, stammered inarticulately, then looked as though he were
+furtively seeking some hiding place.
+
+"I think, Miss Sharp," replied the hotel manager, with another
+bow, "that the young man is on the point of leaving, and that
+the services of a porter will not be needed."
+
+Fred tried to look unconcerned; he fished mentally for something
+smart to say. For once, however, his self assurance had utterly
+deserted him.
+
+"Oh---well!" he muttered, then turned and left the parlor in the
+midst of a deep silence that completed his utter humiliation.
+
+"Mr. Wright," said Laura, "I want you to know Mr. Darrin, one
+of our most popular high school boys in Gridley. Dick, can't
+you come over here a moment? Mr. Wright, Mr. Prescott. Our two
+friends, Mr. Wright, have brought up a racing canoe. They are
+camping across the lake. We hope they will arrange for races
+with the Preston and Trentville High School Canoe Clubs."
+
+"I am most glad to meet your friends," said the manager, shaking
+hands with Dick and Dave. "Two of the Preston High School young
+men are stopping here in the house, and the others are over at
+the Lakeview House. I hope, Mr. Prescott, that we shall be able
+to have some fine high school races. It will increase the gayety
+of the season here."
+
+"Thank you," said Dick. "But I am afraid, sir, that we have been
+worse than neglectful---stupid.
+
+"How so?" asked Mr. Wright, his manner quickly putting both rather
+shabby-looking boys wholly at their ease.
+
+"Why, sir," Prescott explained, "we had never thought, until this
+morning, to secure authorization from the Athletic Council of
+our school to represent Gridley High School. I am now engaged
+in writing a letter asking for that authorization."
+
+"Let me take a hand in this," begged Mr. Wright. "Is your letter
+at all of a private nature?"
+
+"Not in the least, sir."
+
+"May I see it?"
+
+"Certainly, Mr. Wright."
+
+The hotel manager followed Dick to the writing desk, where he
+glanced over the letter.
+
+"I have only one suggestion to make," said the manager. "Why
+not ask the secretary, Mr. Howgate, to send his answer by telegraph
+to this hotel, collect?"
+
+"That would be all right," agreed Dick frankly, "if his answer
+isn't too long, or if he doesn't have to send more than one telegram.
+We are not exactly overburdened with funds, Mr. Wright."
+
+"That doesn't cut any figure at all," replied the hotel manager
+in a voice so low that none but Prescott heard him. "Any telegrams
+sent here for you will be paid for by the hotel. There will be
+no expense to you, Mr. Prescott."
+
+"I'm afraid I don't understand why you should do this, Mr. Wright,"
+said Dick, looking at the other attentively.
+
+"Purely a matter of business, my boy," the hotel manager beamed
+down at him. "Such racing as I hope to have here on Lake Pleasant
+constitutes a summer season attraction. Arrange a schedule of
+races, and you may be sure that both hotels will advertise the
+fact. It will be enough to draw a lot of young people here, and
+this hotel thrives by the number of guests that it entertains.
+So will you do me the favor of asking your Mr. Howgate to telegraph
+his answer---collect---addressing it here?"
+
+That began to look like something that Prescott could understand.
+He called Dave over to him and told his chum what was being discussed.
+
+"Fine!" glowed Darrin. "Thank you, Mr. Wright."
+
+So Dick made the suggested addition to the letter. After he addressed
+an envelope and had sealed it the manager took the letter away
+to mail. Then he returned to say, with a tactfulness that won
+the hearts of the eight Gridley High School girls:
+
+"Mr. Prescott, you and your friends will oblige me if you will
+make this hotel your headquarters when you are on this side of
+the lake. We shall always be delighted to see you here."
+
+Thanking the manager for his courtesy, Dick and Dave accompanied
+Laura to the porch; where they were introduced to some of the
+other guests. Then the two boys and the girls started down to
+the lakeside once more.
+
+"Mr. Wright was very kind," murmured Dick gratefully.
+
+"He never fails in courtesy toward anyone," replied Laura. "You
+boys will come over every day, won't you? We must have a picnic
+or two."
+
+"And you must all visit our camp." Dick urged. "It isn't much
+of a place, but the welcome will be of the real Gridley kind.
+If you dare take the risk, we'll even offer you a camp meal."
+
+"The farmers' gardens are in danger, after all, then," laughed
+Susie. "If you are going to deplete your larders to entertain
+us, we girls will surely rob the farmers to make up for what we
+eat."
+
+Susie's face had grown so grave that Prescott could not help regarding
+her quizzically.
+
+"I mean just what to say about robbing the farmers, don't I, girls?"
+Susie asked.
+
+"Yes," agreed Laura Bentley promptly. She had no idea what was
+passing in her friend's head, but she knew Susie well enough to
+feel sure that the latter was planning nothing very wicked.
+
+"Can't we take you out, two at a time?" proposed Dick, as the
+young people neared the float.
+
+"Now?" inquired Laura.
+
+"Yes; since 'now' is always the best time for doing things," Prescott
+replied.
+
+In no time at all the plan had been agreed to. Clara and Susie
+went out for the first ride in the canoe, Tom Reade taking command,
+while Dick and Dave remained on the float.
+
+Two at a time the girls were taken out on the water. This consumed
+nearly two hours of time altogether, but it was thoroughly enjoyed
+by every member of the party.
+
+But at last it came close, indeed, to the luncheon hour.
+
+"Now, when are you coming over to that picnic in our camp?" Dick
+asked in an outburst of hospitality.
+
+"At what time of the day?" Laura inquired.
+
+"If your mother and Mrs. Meade will come along as chaperons,"
+Dick answered, "night would be the best time."
+
+"Why at night?"
+
+"Because, then, you wouldn't be able to see the shabby aspect
+of our camp so plainly."
+
+"It would be very jolly to go over and have a picnic meal by the
+campfire," Belle agreed. "Yet, in that case, we would want to
+reach your place by half-past four or so in the afternoon."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"So that we girls may have the fun of helping prepare a famous
+feast," Miss Meade went on. "Boys, if we come, we shall pass
+luncheon by and bring keen appetites for that evening feast.
+What is the principal item on the bill of fare of your camp?"
+
+"Canned goods," replied Tom Reade.
+
+"Don't you believe him," Dick interjected quickly. "Lake trout,
+bass and perch. This lake is well stocked, and we have already
+found one splendid fishing hole. We got up at five this morning
+and caught so many fish in half an hour that we threw some of
+them back into the water because we had no ice."
+
+"Will your mothers come, if we have it in the evening?" asked
+Dick looking at Laura and Belle.
+
+"Surely," nodded Laura quickly.
+
+"And we'll greatly enjoy it," Dick went on, "if Dr. Bentley will
+also come. Is your father here, Miss Meade?"
+
+"I'm sorry to say that he isn't," Belle answered. "A real picnic,
+in real woods, beside real water, would appeal to him strongly."
+
+"But we haven't fixed upon the date," cried Susie impatiently.
+
+"How would to-morrow night do?" Dick suggested.
+
+"Famously," Laura replied. "Now, boys, you catch the fish to-morrow
+afternoon, and don't bother so much about the other things to
+eat. We won't have any canned stuff in our famous feast. We
+girls will bring all the garden stuff."
+
+"And will steal it from the farmers, at that," added Susie teasingly.
+
+"Yes, you will!" mocked Danny Grin good-humoredly.
+
+"I give you our word that we'll steal everything that we bring
+in the garden line," Susie declared vigorously.
+
+"Then you'll arrange it with the farmer in advance," Greg laughed.
+
+"I give you our word that we won't do that, either," laughed Laura,
+coming to her friend's support, though she had no idea what was
+passing in Susie's busy little head.
+
+"There goes the luncheon bell!" cried Dick reproachfully. "We're
+keeping you girls away from your meal. Come on, fellows. Into
+the canoe with you."
+
+"But you'll be back here to-morrow morning?" pressed Miss Bentley.
+
+"Yes; at what time?"
+
+"Ten o'clock."
+
+"You'll find us here punctually."
+
+Dick & Co. paddled back to their camp feeling that they were having
+a most jolly time, with all the real fun yet to come.
+
+Dick did not think it worth while to go over to the hotel again
+that day, to see if a telegram had come. He was certain that
+the letter would not find Mr. Howgate earlier than the next day,
+in any event.
+
+But at ten o'clock the next morning Dick & Co., having put the
+best possible aspect on their attire, paddled gently in alongside
+the float of the Hotel Pleasant.
+
+Even before they had landed, Fred Ripley, who was stopping with
+his father and mother at the Lakeview House, alighted from an
+automobile runabout in the woods some two hundred yards from the
+lakeside camp of Dick & Co.
+
+"Those muckers are away," Fred told himself, as he watched the
+war canoe go in at the hotel float. "Now, if I have half as much
+ingenuity as I sometimes think I have, I believe I can cut short
+their stay here by rendering that cheap crowd homeless---and foodless!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE RIPLEY HEIR TRIES COAXING
+
+
+Fred studied the now distant canoe, then glanced carefully about
+the camp.
+
+He knew that any sign of his presence, observed by Dick & Co.,
+would be sure to result in the swift return of the canoe, with
+its load of six indignant boys.
+
+Nor did young Ripley dare to risk discovery as the perpetrator
+of the outrage he was now planning. He feared his father's certain
+wrath.
+
+"There are screens of bushes behind which I can operate," Ripley
+decided. "I am glad of the bushes, for, if I use care, not a
+living soul can see me. Now, for some swift work."
+
+It did not take Ripley long to discover where the boys' food supply
+was stored.
+
+"These fellows act like boobs!" muttered Fred in disgust. "Here
+they go away and leave everything exposed. If they didn't have
+an enemy in the world, even then some tramp could come along and
+clean out the camp. Humph! Two tramps, if they wanted to work
+for a little while, could carry away all the food there is here.
+What a lot of poor, penniless muckers Prescott and his friends
+are!"
+
+Again Fred studied the lay of the land, then drew off his coat
+and flung it aside.
+
+"Now, to work!" he said to himself gleefully.
+
+First of all, he got the food supplies all together. Most of this
+stuff was in the form of canned goods. Ripley gathered it up in
+one big pile.
+
+Then he stepped over to the tent, from which, at several points
+and angles he looked carefully over to the hotel landing float
+on the other side of Lake Pleasant.
+
+"They can't see, from the hotel, whether the tent is down or up,"
+Fred determined. "So here goes!"
+
+Opening the largest blade of his pocketknife, Fred cut one of
+the guy-ropes. He passed around the tent, cutting each one in
+turn, until the canvas shelter fell over in a white mass.
+
+"Won't they be sore, though?" laughed Fred maliciously, as he
+started to carry off the camp supplies.
+
+Gr-r-r-r-r! Gr-r-r-r!
+
+Just as Fred was straightening up to start off with his load for
+a bush-screen near the lake front, Ripley heard that ominous growl.
+There was also the sound of something moving through the bushes.
+
+As Fred turned his face blanched.
+
+"Harry Hazelton's bull-dog!" he quivered, now utterly frightened
+as he caught sight of the gleaming teeth in that ugly muzzle.
+"I didn't know that they had brought that beast with them. It's
+the lake for mine! If I can only get into the water I can swim
+faster than the dog!"
+
+All this flashed through his mind in an Instant. Young Ripley
+started in full flight.
+
+Close behind him, bounding savagely, came the bull-dog, Towser!
+
+Trip! Fred's foot caught in a root. Crying out in craven fright,
+Fred Ripley plunged to the ground.
+
+There was no time to rise. Towser, growling angrily, was upon
+him with a bound.
+
+Gr-r-r-r-r!
+
+Fred, with a shriek, felt the dog's teeth in the back of his shirt.
+
+"Get out, you beast!" begged young Ripley in a faint voice.
+
+Gr-r-r-r! was all the answer. Plainly the dog liked the taste
+of that shirt, for he held to it tight.
+
+"Get away---please do!" faltered Fred in a broken voice. "Get
+away. Don't bite. Nice doggie! Nice, nice doggie! Please let
+go!"
+
+Gr-r-r-r-r!
+
+But Towser didn't attempt to bite as yet. For a bull-dog, and
+considering how fully he was master of the field at present, Towser
+displayed amazing good nature. Only when young Ripley moved did
+the four-footed policeman of the camp utter that warning growl.
+
+"Nice doggie!" coaxed Fred pleadingly. "Good old fellow!"
+
+To this bit of rank flattery Towser offered no reply. It began
+to look as though he would be quite satisfied if only his captive
+made no effort to get away.
+
+"Wouldn't I like to be on my feet, with a shotgun in my hands!"
+gritted Fred.
+
+"Gr-r-r-r," replied Towser, as though he were an excellent reader
+of human minds.
+
+For a few moments Fred lay utterly quiet, save for the trembling
+that he could not control.
+
+During those same moments Towser made himself more comfortable
+by shifting himself so that he lay with his paws across Fred's
+left shoulder-blade. His teeth remained firmly fastened in Ripley's
+shirt.
+
+"Now, how long are you going to stay here, you beast?" glared
+Fred Ripley, though he did not dare emphasize his displeasure
+by stirring. It was an instance in which his own displeasure
+amounted to infinitely less than that of the dog.
+
+Over at the hotel Dick Prescott was reading this telegram to his
+chums:
+
+"Letter received. Am communicating with other members of Council.
+Will let you know when I have word. Signed Howgate."
+
+"Oh, you'll get your authorization all right," Laura declared
+cheerily. "It's only a matter of form."
+
+Laura did not tell something she knew---to the effect that at
+her request Dr. Bentley had wired Mr. Howgate, urging that the
+permission be granted to the boys to race as a high school
+organization.
+
+"May we take you young ladies out in the canoe this morning?"
+Dick inquired.
+
+"Only a few of us, or for very short, trips," Laura replied.
+"The fact is, we girls are to play hostess to you this noon."
+
+"Hostess?" asked Dave, looking puzzled.
+
+"Yes; we are going to be your hostesses at luncheon," Laura smiled.
+
+"But I thought you girls were going to skip luncheon in favor
+of the picnic meal to-night."
+
+"Wait until you boys see the luncheon," laughed Susie Sharp, "and
+you'll be sure to think we might as well have skipped that meal.
+It will be light and shadowy, I promise you. Toast, lettuce
+salad, moonbeam soup, sprites' cake, feather pudding and ghost
+fruit."
+
+"Won't there be some dog biscuit?" asked Danny Grin hopefully.
+
+"You shall have a special plate," Susie promised.
+
+So the canoe was hauled up on the float and left there, and a
+general chat followed.
+
+At noon, Dr. Bentley joined the young people, talking with them
+pleasantly, after which he led the way to the hotel.
+
+There, in a little private dining room, the boys met Mrs. Bentley
+and Mrs. Meade. The luncheon was soon after served.
+
+It was a dainty meal, though far more elaborate than Susie had
+led the boys to expect.
+
+At the end of the meal a waiter, looking duly solemn, presented
+at Danny Grin's elbow a plate holding three dog biscuits.
+
+"Thank you," said Dan Dalzell politely. "But I shall keep them
+for future use."
+
+Very calmly, notwithstanding Dick's slight frown, Dan placed the
+biscuit in his coat pockets, though some of the girls found it
+hard indeed not to giggle.
+
+After the meal the party adjourned to the lawn under the shade
+of some fine old elms. A little later a farm wagon, drawn by
+a pair of horses, stopped near the group.
+
+"Now, you must excuse us, boys," announced Laura, rising with
+a mysterious air. "We girls have a little errand to perform.
+We shall be back before half-past four o'clock."
+
+"Wouldn't it be better to be back a good deal before that time?"
+urged Dick. "You see, we can't carry more than three passengers
+at once, and we are to have eleven guests to ferry across the
+lake."
+
+"Why, didn't I tell you?" asked Laura, looking astonished. "My
+father said it would be an imposition to ask you boys to make
+four round trips this afternoon, and as many more to-night, so
+he has engaged one of the hotel launches to take us over, and
+to call for us this evening. You don't mind, do you, boys? But
+we would like to have you here at half-past four o'clock to go
+across the lake with us."
+
+"We'll be here," Dick promised promptly.
+
+Six high school boys watched the girls drive off in the farm wagon,
+waving handkerchiefs and parasols back to the boys.
+
+"Two o'clock," remarked Dick, looking at his watch. "Suppose
+we take a spin up the lake?"
+
+"Or go back to camp, to make it more ship shape?" suggested Tom
+Reade.
+
+"What's the use?" inquired Prescott. "We fixed everything as
+well as we could before leaving there this morning. As to the
+safety of the camp, Harry's dog, Towser, can be depended upon
+to look after that."
+
+So Dick & Co. headed up the lake in their canoe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE LIAR HAS A LIE READY
+
+
+"That's an odd sight, over yonder," announced Dave, pointing shoreward
+with his paddle.
+
+They were now nearly three miles above the hotel landing. They
+had entered a section of the country given over to truck gardening.
+
+"Women gathering in the produce," said Dick, after a glance.
+
+"I don't like that," uttered Dave in disgust.
+
+"I thought we had progressed too far, and had become too civilized.
+Years ago I know that women used to work in the fields, but I
+thought we were above that sort of thing."
+
+"Perhaps the farmer's sons' were all girls," suggested Danny Grin.
+
+"I don't like it, anyway," retorted Dave.
+
+"Nor I," agreed Tom. "To have women at work in the fields makes
+it appear as though the men are too lazy."
+
+The sight on shore was not interesting enough to claim long attention,
+so the young canoeists proceeded on their way.
+
+At a little after four o'clock, however, they were back at the
+landing.
+
+Not long after, eight young women were sighted riding along in
+a farm wagon, while Dr. and Mrs. Bentley and Mrs. Meade strolled
+down one of the paths.
+
+The wagon reached the pier first, just as a launch in charge of
+one of the hotel employs came puffing out of a boathouse near
+by.
+
+"Come here, boys, and help us unload the wagon," called Susie
+Sharp.
+
+Dick & Co. sprang in answer to her summons.
+
+"Why, what on earth have you here?" demanded Dave, opening his
+eyes wide as he saw the contents of the wagon.
+
+There were dozens of ears of corn, a sack of new potatoes, cucumbers,
+tomatoes, a dozen big watermelons and a bushel of early summer
+apples.
+
+"Sh!" warned Laura mysteriously. "Didn't we promise you we'd
+rob some farmer for the feast? Did you think that boys are the
+only ones who can go foraging for a country picnic?"
+
+"You girls didn't go foraging---did you?" gasped Dick Prescott.
+
+"We surely did," retorted Susie Sharp.
+
+"Didn't we say we would do so? And doesn't all this stuff prove
+it?"
+
+"Then you paid the farmer for it," guessed Tom Reade wisely.
+
+"We didn't do any such thing," Miss Sharp insisted. "Did we,
+girls?"
+
+Seven other young feminine heads shook in vigorous denial.
+
+"We didn't pay the farmer, and we didn't make any arrangement
+with him," said Laura quietly, her eyes twinkling with mischief.
+"We simply drove out along the road until we came to the field,
+and-----"
+
+"-----Ravaged it," supplemented Belle Meade demurely. "We went
+through that field like war, famine and pestilence combined!"
+
+"Hurry!" called Susie peremptorily.
+
+So the boys made haste with the vegetables and fruit, transferring
+everything to the bow of the launch, where it was neatly stacked.
+
+"What do you think of that?" Tom demanded of Dick in a whisper
+at the first opportunity.
+
+"The girls are chaffing us," Dick answered knowingly. "Stole
+the stuff, did they? That is, stole it in earnest? Nonsense!
+They're too nice girls for that! But I guess even nice girls,
+like some decent fellows, find enjoyment, once in a while, in
+making believe they are doing something desperate. Of course
+they didn't really steal this stuff."
+
+"If they did," muttered Tom, "they'd be the kind of girls we wouldn't
+want to know."
+
+"It's all right," Dick assured him. "Sooner or later the truth
+of this joke of theirs will all come out. There are no finer
+girls in the country than they."
+
+By this time the older people had joined them. Dr. Bentley's
+party embarked in the launch, taking up all the room there was.
+
+"Pass us your bow-line, and we can just as well give you boys
+a tow," proposed the doctor. "There is no use in your paddling."
+
+"Thank you very much, sir," Dick answered, "but paddling is just
+the fun for which we bought this canoe. We do it because we like
+it. And we'll show you how fast we can get across the lake."
+
+With a toot of the whistle the launch started. Dick gave the
+word to his chums. At first the canoe, even under moderate paddling,
+went ahead of the launch, though gradually the launch drew up.
+
+"You boys look as if you were working," called Dr. Bentley.
+
+"We're doing very little work, sir," Dave answered. "We could
+make the canoe go faster than this, but it would hardly do to
+run ahead of our guests."
+
+In truth the canoe slipped rapidly through the water with the
+expenditure of only a moderate amount of energy on the part of
+Dick & Co.
+
+In a few minutes the lake had been crossed. A point was found
+at which the launch could be backed in. By this time the boys
+were on shore, their canoe hauled up, and they stood ready to
+help their guests ashore.
+
+"We've landed a little below the camp," said Dick, "but it won't
+take us more than a minute to walk there. After we've taken
+you into the camp we'll return for the garden truck."
+
+Gr-r-r-r-r! came a warning sound through the bushes.
+
+"Towser!" spoke Harry Hazelton sharply. "I'm ashamed of you!"
+
+"You ought to be!" came the answer in another voice, and a surly
+one, at that.
+
+"Fred Ripley?" muttered Dick. "What on earth can he be doing
+here?"
+
+Unconsciously all of the picnickers hastened their steps. Then
+they came upon a truly ludicrous sight.
+
+Fred lay where he had been lying ever since ten o'clock that morning.
+He was coatless, stretched out face downward, with Towser still
+camped across his shoulder, and the dog's teeth still fastened
+in his shirt.
+
+"Come and call this measly dog off!" ordered Fred, in a surly
+tone. "This is a fine reward that I get for trying to do you
+fellows a friendly turn!"
+
+Dick, Dave and Tom were the first to get within range and obtain
+a glimpse of the extraordinary scene. They halted, gasping, though
+their glances swiftly took in the whole affair. They comprehended
+what Ripley had been doing, and how the dog had come upon the
+marauder.
+
+By this time the other members of the party came in sight. Fred
+still lay on the ground, scowling and fuming over his undignified
+position, while Towser still kept an eye open for business.
+
+"Call this dog off!" Fred ordered again.
+
+"How did the dog happen to catch you here?" Dick asked quietly.
+
+"Call this dog off and I'll tell you," snapped Fred. "I was trying
+to do you fellows a good turn, but the dog had to interfere and
+get hold of the wrong party."
+
+"You were trying to do us a good turn?" gasped Dick wonderingly.
+
+"Yes---but it will be the last time, unless you call this dog
+off," snarled young Ripley.
+
+Perhaps it is hardly necessary to say that not one in the party
+believed Fred's extraordinary story.
+
+"Hazelton, get this dog of yours away, or I'll go to court and
+secure an order to have the beast shot!" snapped young Ripley.
+
+But at this moment another voice was heard calling from the roadway:
+
+"Fred! Fred! Are you there?"
+
+It was Squire Ripley's voice, though the lawyer himself could
+not be seen as yet.
+
+"Yes, sir; your son is here," Dick answered. "Come and see just
+how he is here!"
+
+"Get your dog off quickly, Hazelton!" urged Fred.
+
+But Harry, at a slight sign from Dick, didn't stir or open his
+mouth to call off his dog.
+
+Through the brush came the sound of hurried steps. Then Lawyer
+Ripley stepped into the group.
+
+"Fred, what on earth does this mean?" demanded the lawyer, staring
+hard.
+
+"That's just what we thought you might like to find out, sir,"
+Dick replied. "We've been away from camp all day, and just came
+back to this scene, Mr. Ripley. You are something of an expert
+in the matter of evidence, sir. Will you kindly tell us what
+you make out of this? There is our tent cut down. There are
+all of our food supplies in a pile, except what you see scattered
+about on the ground. Your son appears to have been headed for
+the lake when our dog overtook him and pinned him down. As a
+lawyer, Mr. Ripley, what would you conclude from the evidence
+thus presented?"
+
+"Call that dog away!" ordered Mr. Ripley.
+
+"Willingly, sir," Dick agreed, "now that you have had opportunity
+to look into all the evidence that we found. Harry, will you do
+the honors?"
+
+Smiling slightly, Hazelton stepped forward to speak to Towser.
+That four-footed guardian of the camp displayed some resentment
+at first over the idea of letting go of Fred's shirt. After a
+little, however, Hazelton succeeded in getting his dog away and
+tied to a tree.
+
+Fred rose to his feet, his face fiery red while he trembled visibly.
+
+"What is the meaning of this, young man?" demanded Lawyer Ripley.
+
+"The meaning," choked the lawyer's son wrathfully, "is just this:
+I was coming by this place this morning in the runabout, when
+I heard a good deal of coarse laughter down here. I knew the
+voices weren't those of boys, and so I knew that something must
+be up. I got out of the car and came over here. I saw two tramps
+in the camp. They had already cut down the tent, and when I arrived
+they were planning to cart the food away. Then they saw me as
+I stepped forward. I told them what I thought of them for thieving
+in such fashion. Then the tramps got ready to jump on me and
+thrash me. Just as I raised my hands to defend myself this dog
+came bounding out of the woods and the tramps ran away. Having
+no more sense than any other fool dog, the cur pinned me down
+and held me here."
+
+"All day?" asked his father.
+
+"Yes; I've been a prisoner here for hours," quavered Fred. "And
+now these fellows want to make out, before the high school friends
+of mine," nodding toward the girls, "that I was the thief and
+destroyer."
+
+"That story is straightforward enough," commented the lawyer,
+turning to the others rather stiffly. "Do any of you wish to
+challenge it?"
+
+No one spoke.
+
+"I'll tell you what I wish, father," broke in Fred angrily. "I
+want an order from the court to have that dog seized and shot.
+He's a vicious and dangerous brute!"
+
+"I think such a court order will be easily obtained," replied
+Mr. Ripley frigidly.
+
+Harry Hazelton turned pale, clenching his fists, though he had
+the good sense not to speak just then. The other boys all looked
+highly concerned.
+
+"Were you bitten by the dog?" asked Dr. Bentley quietly.
+
+"I---I don't know yet," replied Fred. "I can't tell."
+
+"Mr. Ripley," said Dr. Bentley very quietly, "if you contemplate
+seeking a court order for having the dog shot, then I suggest
+that you permit me to take the young man aside and examine him.
+I am a physician, with a good many years of practice behind me,
+and any court would pronounce me competent to testify as to whether
+your son has been bitten, and, if so, to what extent."
+
+"I don't choose to be examined here," Fred declared sulkily.
+"If I want anything of that sort done our own physician can do
+it."
+
+"Young man," replied Dr. Bentley, "your father is an eminent lawyer.
+He is therefore qualified to inform you that if you decline an
+examination now as to the presence or absence of injuries on your
+body, your refusal would have to be taken into account in contested
+court action for the death of the dog."
+
+"Dr. Bentley is quite right, and he has stated the matter accurately,"
+replied Mr. Ripley. "Fred, do you desire to be examined now?
+If so, we can go away to some secluded spot with the doctor,
+and with the dog's owner and any other witness desired."
+
+"I don't want to do anything now but to get away from here," replied
+Fred sulkily. "I want to be rid of Prescott and his friends as
+soon as possible."
+
+"Very good, then," nodded his father. "You may do as you like,
+but if you refuse Dr. Bentley's suggestion for an immediate examination
+you will stand no chance of securing an order dooming the dog."
+
+Fred's further answer was an angry snort as he turned away. His
+father lingered to say:
+
+"If your suspicions that my son was here improperly are anywhere
+near correct, then you are entitled to my most hearty apology.
+Fred is a peculiar and high-strung boy, but I believe his impulses
+are right in the main. I will add that I believe his account
+of how he came to be in this strange plight. He took the car
+early this morning. I am just returning from a spin in our larger
+automobile. I saw my runabout at the edge of the road and it
+occurred to me to stop and see if my son were here. Is there
+anything more to be said about my son's peculiar experience here?"
+
+"Nothing, thank you, Mr. Ripley," replied Dr. Bentley, after a
+sidelong glance at Dick.
+
+"Then I will bid you all good afternoon," replied Squire Ripley,
+raising his hat to the women.
+
+Dr. Bentley watched the lawyer out of sight, then turned to Hazelton
+with a smile.
+
+"Harry," remarked the physician, "your dog won't be shot by order
+of the court."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+AT THE GREATEST OF FEASTS
+
+
+It proved a glorious affair, that picnic by the edge of the lake.
+
+Tom and Dan took Clara and Susie out in the canoe to watch them
+as they fished.
+
+The other four boys fell to with a will, reweaving in new guy
+ropes and erecting the tent again.
+
+Then firewood was gathered in armfuls and several campfires started.
+
+Just before dark the canoe came in with a cargo of nearly four
+dozen fish.
+
+These Tom and Dan took to one side and quickly cleaned. Just
+as Dick and Dave were beginning to realize with some embarrassment
+that they had nowhere near enough dishes for such an affair, the
+man from the launch appeared with two baskets of dishes. He then
+brought up three folding tables and proceeded to set them up,
+next bringing on campstools. Dr. Bentley had overlooked nothing.
+Last of all paper lanterns were strung from the trees, and just
+at dark these were lighted.
+
+Potatoes were set to boil in a kettle. Embers were raked down
+and corn still in the husks was set in the embers and covered
+up to roast. Some of the girls sliced more tomatoes than the
+whole party could eat. Cucumbers, too, were prepared.
+
+Fish were broiled on grates over the fires. All was ready just
+before dark.
+
+Dick gave the launch man a hearty invitation to join them at supper,
+the latter shaking his head, expressed his thanks and hurried
+away.
+
+What an appetizing meal it was! Nothing seemed to have gone wrong.
+It was a merry party indeed that sat down around the tables.
+
+Suddenly there came an interruption. "Camp! Oh, I say---camp!"
+called a gruff voice from the road.
+
+"Here!" called Dick, rising from the table. "Who is it?"
+
+"Any girls there?" demanded the same voice.
+
+"Several," Dick acknowledged.
+
+"Having a picnic, are you?" demanded the strange voice.
+
+"The best ever!" Dick replied heartily.
+
+"Lots of fresh vegetables, too, eh?"
+
+"Ye-es," Dick assented slowly, and with a peculiar feeling. He
+recalled the laughing talk of the girls about "stealing," and
+now wondered what was about to happen.
+
+"I guess they're the girls I want, then," continued the voice
+of the unseen speaker.
+
+Dick & Co. felt a swift spasm of uneasiness, for that voice sounded
+as though it might belong to the law.
+
+A moment later a roughly dressed man moved down into the circle.
+
+"My name is Dobson," said the new comer, looking hard at the girls.
+"I reckon you were in my truck garden this afternoon, weren't
+you?"
+
+"Why---er----ye-es," admitted Laura, the first to find her voice.
+She rose and faced Mr. Dobson with a look of budding uneasiness.
+
+"Took lot of my vegetables, didn't you?" pressed the farmer.
+
+"Ye-es," faltered Laura, "but-----"
+
+"Excuse me, miss, but there aren't many kinds of 'buts' about a
+transaction of that kind," insisted the farmer.
+
+Here, Dr. Bentley, who had looked less concerned than anyone else
+present, broke in:
+
+"Your name is Dobson?" he asked.
+
+"Not Gibson, then?" pressed the doctor.
+
+"Course my name isn't Gibson, if it's Dobson," retorted the farmer.
+"There is a man named Gibson who lives 'bout a quarter of a mile
+from my place."
+
+"Then I imagine I shall have to take you one side and have a little
+conversation with you," smiled the doctor, rising. "Will you
+follow me?"
+
+The farmer nodded without speaking and the two men walked away.
+
+Ten minutes later Dr. Bentley returned to the young people.
+
+"I appeased the farmer's wrath," he announced, with a laugh.
+"And now, young ladies, if my judgment is worth anything, I think
+it is about time to let the cat out of the bag."
+
+Eight high school girls flushed and looked rather confused.
+
+"Why, has anything wrong been going on?" inquired Mrs. Bentley
+anxiously, while Mrs. Meade waited breathlessly for the reply.
+
+"Nothing extremely wrong," replied Dr. Bentley. "I will explain
+what happened. Some of these young ladies, having heard that
+boys occasionally rob orchards or gardens for a feast, laughingly
+promised the young hosts of this evening that they would steal
+the necessary vegetables for to-night's supper. Now, while some
+boys may sometimes do such things, it is needless to add that
+no boy with a good home and a mother's training is likely to become
+engaged in such petty pilfering. I don't believe the boys for
+a moment credited the girls with any real stealing."
+
+"We didn't," spoke up Dick promptly. "We knew there was a string
+to the joke somewhere."
+
+"These young ladies consulted me," went on Dr. Bentley. "Of course
+they wanted the whole matter kept very quiet, and they made me
+promise secrecy. I told them that I didn't like their plan at
+all, but they coaxed, and I will admit that I yielded to their
+coaxing very much against my best judgment. They wanted to be
+able to say that they hadn't paid the farmer, or made any arrangement
+whatever with him. That much is true. They didn't approach the
+farmer---they sent me. I went to Farmer Gibson and made the
+arrangement with him for the supplies, paying him in advance a fair
+price for whatever the young ladies would take out of his garden.
+Yet, in spite of my care in the matter, and my very explicit
+directions to them, it seems that they went astray, and descended
+upon the truck garden of Mr. Dobson, instead of that of Mr. Gibson.
+Mr. Dobson, not having received any pay, very naturally objected to
+being looted of his vegetables while Mr. Gibson received the money.
+But I have been able to explain matters in a satisfactory manner
+to Mr. Dobson, and have sent him on his ways"
+
+Eight very crestfallen high school girls listened to this recital.
+
+The boys, had they not felt a manly sympathy for their discomfited
+friends, would have laughed outright.
+
+"I am glad that it is no worse," said Mrs. Bentley in a relieved
+voice. "At the same time, it was a very silly performance."
+
+"It was," nodded the doctor, who turned to the girls to add:
+
+"My dears, as you succeeded this time in making me your very reluctant
+accomplice, I am in no position to say very much to you. But
+I trust you all realize the situation and its outcome, and that
+you will never allow yourselves to be made ridiculous again in
+any such way."
+
+"I don't believe we shall," Laura replied. "We felt ashamed of
+ourselves afterwards, but we were silly enough to feel because
+we had pledged ourselves to forage for fruit and vegetables that
+the joke must be carried out."
+
+"Tom Reade," snapped Susie Sharp, "you are just bursting with
+laughter that you can hardly hold back."
+
+"Not I!" Tom denied promptly. "I am congratulating myself that
+we boys had sense enough not to take seriously your claim that
+you had been robbing anyone's garden. As it happened, you did
+that very thing, but you didn't know it, and you didn't mean to."
+
+There was an embarrassed silence. Then Dick proposed:
+
+"Let's have a good-natured laugh all around and forget the whole
+thing."
+
+That relieved the awkwardness of the situation. After that a
+watermelon was cut and brought to the tables.
+
+"Gridley, ahoy!" called a voice across the dark waters.
+
+"Who's there?" called Dick.
+
+"Preston High School Canoe Club. May we visit your camp?"
+
+"Shall I invite them over?" asked Dick, looking at Mrs. Bentley
+and then at the girls.
+
+Receiving their consent, he called out:
+
+"Come in, Preston High School! Welcome!"
+
+A soft splashing of paddles showed where the visitors were coming
+in to shore. Dan Dalzell taking the camp lantern, ran to meet them.
+
+A moment later six Preston lads were stepping ashore, one after
+the other. Dick, having excused himself at table, came forward
+also to greet them.
+
+Two of the Preston High School boys were already acquainted with
+Laura Bentley and some of her friends. Introductions followed
+rapidly.
+
+"Drop into the Gridley seats and have some of the watermelon,"
+Dick pressed the visitors, he and his chums standing in order
+to do the honors of the occasion.
+
+"It looks as though we had been trying to invite ourselves to
+a banquet," laughed Hartwell, "big chief" of the Preston High
+School "Indians." "We didn't mean to seem as rude as that, Prescott."
+
+"All I know," smiled Dick cordially, "is that you are all heartily
+welcome. Can we stir up a fire and broil some fish?"
+
+"Don't think of it, thank you," begged Hartwell. "We've had our
+suppers---dinners, the hotel folks insist on calling 'em. It's
+jolly enough for us to be allowed to join you and see the watermelon
+passing around."
+
+"Chug! chug! Puff! puff!" sounded the returning launch. Dick
+glanced apprehensively at Dr. Bentley and the ladies. Did the
+coming of the launch mean that it was about time for the pleasant
+evening to break up?
+
+"Might I ask where and how you find such delicious watermelons
+in this neck of the woods?" inquired Brown, of the Prestons.
+
+"Ask the young ladies," piped up Danny Grin, thereby getting himself
+much disliked for at least the next thirty seconds.
+
+"Dr. Bentley and the young ladies obtained the melons from a farmer,"
+explained Tom Reade, giving Dan an unseen poke in the small of
+the back.
+
+"These melons look good enough to steal," laughed Hartwell, and
+was unable to understand the total silence that greeted his assertion.
+
+"Help wanted from a couple of you boys!" called the voice of the
+launch man.
+
+Four of Dick & Co. raced down to the water's edge. They came
+back, staggering under a big bucket covered on the top with bagging.
+
+"What is this?" asked Dick.
+
+"Ice cream," explained the doctor. "Mrs. Bentley's suggestion."
+
+"We fellows of Preston High School feel ashamed of ourselves for
+having intruded," exclaimed Hartwell. "May we be permitted to
+withdraw?"
+
+"At any time after ten o'clock," smiled Mrs. Bentley graciously.
+"We shall be very much disappointed if you leave us at present."
+
+There was a clatter of dishes and spoons. Mrs. Bentley and Mrs.
+Meade presided over this part of the camp feast.
+
+"We needn't ask you Gridley fellows if you've been having a good
+time," declared Hartwell presently. "But we hadn't any idea that
+we should intrude on an affair of this sort. In fact, while business
+must be barred now, I will admit that business was the object
+of our call."
+
+"What sort of business?" inquired Dick Prescott.
+
+"We came to challenge you fellows to a race," explained Big Chief
+Hartwell.
+
+"A race?" chuckled Dave. "Queer how you've bit us where we live!"
+
+"Do you think you can beat us in a canoe race?" asked Hartwell.
+
+"Yes," Dick rejoined. "All we need to arrange is the date. We'll
+beat you on any date that you name! That isn't brag, please
+understand! It's merely the old, old Gridley High School way."
+
+The young ladies applauded this sentiment merrily.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A SCALP-HUNTING DISAPPOINTMENT
+
+
+"Want to try us out, Gridley?" hailed Big Chief Hartwell, from the
+Preston High School canoe.
+
+It was nearly ten o'clock the next morning, but Dick & Co. had
+just finished putting their camp to rights after breakfast, for
+they had slept late after the feast.
+
+"Do we want to try you out?" Dick answered laughingly. "Why,
+we don't have to do that. We shall be ready to hand you a beating,
+though, at any time you ask for it. We can't help beating you,
+you know. It's the Gridley way!"
+
+"Brag is a good dog," derided Brown from the bow seat of the Preston
+canoe.
+
+"We keep both dogs here," Dave shouted tantalizingly.
+
+"Are you coming out to wallop us?" Hartwell insisted.
+
+"Yes; if you insist upon it," Dick agreed. "But we don't like
+to do it."
+
+"Get into your canoe and come out and see how much of your brag
+you can make good," was Hartwell's calm reply.
+
+"What? Now?" Prescott inquired.
+
+"'Now' is always the best time to do a thing," declared Mason,
+of Preston High School.
+
+"Oh, no," smiled Dick, with a shake of his head. "You fellows
+have been out for some time this morning. You'll have to give
+us time to warm up properly."
+
+"I didn't suppose Gridley needed a little thing like that," Hartwell
+taunted. "You Gridleyites are such sure winners, you know, that
+you ought not to need such a little thing as preparation."
+
+"One of the reasons why Gridley wins," Dick retorted, "is that
+we always use common sense when entering sporting events. So
+we'll ask you to oblige us with a gift of our rights in the matter.
+In fifteen minutes we'll be ready for you."
+
+Gently the canoe was launched in the water. Harry, with a remembrance
+of yesterday's events, called Towser, saying sternly:
+
+"Stay right here, boy, and watch. Maybe you'll get the rest of
+Rip's shirt to-day."
+
+"And maybe he won't," chuckled Dave. "That's what I call holding
+out false hopes to a dog. Rip won't venture within five miles
+of here to-day. Yet perhaps Towser will bag some other game for
+us."
+
+"Into the canoe with you, you loitering braves!" called Big Chief
+Prescott firmly.
+
+Away went the Gridley war canoe, gliding smoothly.
+
+"Our craft is the 'Pathfinder'," called Hartwell, across the water.
+"What do you call your boat?"
+
+"The 'Scalp-hunter'," smiled Dick. As a matter of fact he and
+his friends had forgotten to name the canoe, but he supplied the
+name on the spur of the moment. It made a prompt hit with his
+chums.
+
+"You don't believe you can win any race with such paddling as
+yours, do you?" Hartwell called derisively.
+
+"We don't show all our fine points to the enemy until the battle
+is on," was Prescott's amiable answer. "Even then you won't see
+all our best tricks; you'll be too busy paddling to keep in sight
+of us."
+
+Only very gradually did Dick allow his crew to warm up to their
+work. The Preston boys soon paddled over to the middle of the
+lake, and there lay resting.
+
+"Now, we'll go back and give them a brush," Dick murmured to his
+chums. "Don't exceed any orders that I give in the brush. Don't
+be at all uneasy if we find the Prestons going ahead of us."
+
+"Haven't we got to win?" queried Dave.
+
+"Especially after all the brag we've been throwing in their
+direction?" Tom supplemented.
+
+"We'll win if we can do it easily," Dick answered. "Otherwise
+we won't."
+
+"Then what becomes of our Gridley talk?" asked Greg.
+
+"The difference is that this isn't a real race to-day," Prescott
+explained. "This is only a brush, and we're in it only to see
+what the Preston boys can show us about canoe handling."
+
+At a rather slow, easy dip, the "Scalp-hunter" ranged up near
+the "Pathfinder."
+
+"All ready there, Gridley?" called Hartwell rather impatiently.
+
+"As ready as we're going to be," said Dick.
+
+"Flying start, or from a stop?"
+
+"Either," Dick nodded.
+
+"Then," proposed Hartwell, "move along until your prow is flush
+with ours. When I give the word both crews paddle for all they're
+worth. Steer for the two blasted pines at the lower end of the
+lake."
+
+"That's good," Dick agreed.
+
+Very gently the war canoe ranged alongside, her bark sides,
+well-oiled, glistening in the sunlight. The Preston canoe was not
+of bark, but of cedar frame, covered with canvas.
+
+Hartwell evidently wanted a wholly fair race, for he even allowed
+the "Scalp-hunter's" prow the lead of a couple of feet before
+he shouted:
+
+"Go it!"
+
+Amid a great flashing of paddles the two canoes started. The
+Preston High School craft soon obtained a lead of a foot or so,
+and held it. Now the contest was a stubborn one. Gridley gained
+two feet more.
+
+"You see," called Dick in a low voice, "this is the Gridley way."
+
+"Is it?" Hartwell inquired. "Hanky-pank!"
+
+Plainly enough the last two words were a signal. Though the Preston
+High School boys did not make much visible change in their style
+or speed of dip, the "Pathfinder" now gained perceptibly. Within
+a minute she had a lead of a clean ten feet, and seemed likely
+to increase the interval.
+
+"Why don't you come along, Gridley?" called back the big chief
+in the leading canoe.
+
+"Too early," smiled Dick. Nor did he allow the Gridley boys to
+increase their speed. Presently the "Pathfinder" led by two lengths.
+
+"Why didn't you tell us," Hartwell demanded over his shoulder,
+"that the much vaunted Gridley way is 'way to the rear?"
+
+"We haven't reached the pines yet, have we?" Dick asked.
+
+"No; and you won't, to-day, unless you push that clumsy tub of
+yours along faster."
+
+"Don't wait for us," Dick answered goodnaturedly. "We'll be here
+after a little while."
+
+"We'll wait for you when we land," laughed Hartwell. "Mumble
+bumble!"
+
+Another secret signal, surely, for again the "Pathfinder" began
+to increase the distance from the Gridley rival.
+
+"We'd better stop, and pretend we're only fishing," muttered Tom
+Reade, but Dick kept grimly silent. He was watching every move
+of the Preston paddlers.
+
+"Why, they're leading us four lengths," muttered Darrin, in an
+undertone. But Prescott appeared unworried.
+
+"We'll try to brace our speed, by and by," Dick answered.
+
+"And so will the other fellows," Tom surmised. "They're not going
+at anything like their pace as yet."
+
+For a quarter of a mile the canoes held the same relative position.
+
+"Now, liven up," Dick called softly. "One, two, three, four!
+One, two, three, four!"
+
+Catching the rhythm, Dick & Co. put in some good strokes, their
+paddling becoming faster and stronger. A length and a half of
+the interval was closed up.
+
+"Porky-poo!" ordered Hartwell.
+
+Answering, the Preston High School boys paddled as though fury
+now possessed them. They held the pace, too.
+
+"Hit it up hard, now," Dick commanded. "One, two, three, four!"
+
+Never had Gridley responded more nobly on any field of sport or
+other contest than now. The paddles flew, their wet blades gleaming
+in the air, only to disappear under the water again. Each recovery
+was swift, prompt rhythmic!
+
+But Hartwell's crew was also showing the stuff of which it was
+made.
+
+"Stop paddling---back water!" shouted Hartwell finally.
+
+The "Pathfinder" lay on the water, motionless, only two yards
+from the shore on which stood the blasted pines.
+
+At that same instant the Gridley High School "Scalp-hunter" was
+a trifle more than seven lengths astern.
+
+"That was good and warming," smiled Big Chief Dick, as the second
+canoe came up.
+
+"Yah, yah, yah!" retorted the Preston High School boys, betraying
+their delight in derisive grins.
+
+"Where is that wonderful, all-conquering way you were telling
+us about?" chaffed Hartwell.
+
+"You'll find out when we race," smiled Prescott calmly.
+
+"When we race?" repeated Preston's big chief. "Didn't we race
+just now? Or do you consider that it wasn't a race just because
+you weren't in it?"
+
+"It wasn't a race," Dick answered. "Merely a brush."
+
+"Brush?" repeated Hartwell indignantly. "Didn't we challenge
+you fellows, and didn't you accept? Also, didn't you lose?"
+
+"We lost the brush," Dick admitted.
+
+"You lost the race to us," Hartwell declared stoutly. "Preston
+High School beat Gridley High School by several lengths!"
+
+"Hardly that," Dick retorted coolly. "Preston High School merely
+distanced some boys from Gridley High School. You didn't defeat
+a Gridley High School canoe crew."
+
+"Why didn't we?" the Preston High School big chief questioned.
+
+"Because, if you recall all the chat we had last night, the
+'Scalp-hunter's' crew isn't yet official. We haven't been
+authorized by the Athletic Council of Gridley High School."
+
+"Is that the way you get out of it?" blurted Hartwell.
+
+"No," Dick smiled. "That's the way we get Gridley High School
+out of the charge of defeat. As soon as we're authorized to represent
+Gridley High School as an official canoe crew, then you may claim
+any victory you can obtain over us. But you haven't beaten our
+high school yet for the reason that we don't officially represent
+Gridley High School. Isn't that all clear?"
+
+"I suppose so," Hartwell assented disappointedly. "But we took
+it that we were racing the Gridley High School Canoe Club."
+
+"Then after this you want to do more thinking," Dick laughed.
+"But don't feel too disappointed, Preston. Just as soon as we
+receive sanction from our Athletic Council we'll give you a race
+in earnest, and a chance for all the glory you are able to take
+away from us."
+
+There was some further good-natured talk, after which the two
+canoe clubs separated.
+
+Dick guided the "Scalp-hunter" back to camp. There, as soon as
+the canoe had been hauled ashore, Dave Darrin threw himself on
+the grass, remarking:
+
+"This morning teaches us something! We're in no class with those
+Preston High School boys. We've no business racing, in the name
+of our school, before next summer!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE GOOD WORD BY WIRE
+
+
+"We'll race within a few days," Dick declared serenely. "We've
+got to race soon, for our funds won't hold out long and we can't
+stay here all summer."
+
+"The Athletic Council will thank us for losing the race," murmured
+Greg Holmes, ironically.
+
+"We won't lose," Dick maintained, "unless you fellows throw the
+race against Gridley."
+
+"Throw the race?" echoed Tom Reade indignantly. "Dick Prescott,
+do you think we'd do a thing like that?"
+
+"I'm sure you wouldn't," their big chief admitted coolly.
+
+"Do you mean to say that we didn't do our best this morning?"
+questioned Danny Grin.
+
+"Our very best?" added Hazelton.
+
+"We all did the best that was in us---this morning," Dick went
+on. "But we'll be a lot better prepared when we get into a real
+race."
+
+"I don't believe I can paddle any harder than I did at the finish
+this morning," Reade argued. "In fact, I know I can't. My back
+aches yet with the work that I did."
+
+"I don't doubt it," Dick smiled. "I know that my back aches."
+
+"Then how are we going to win in any other race against Preston
+High School?" Darrin asked curiously.
+
+"Did you fellows study the paddling work of the Prestons this
+morning?" Prescott asked.
+
+"I saw their paddles ahead of us all the time," Greg murmured.
+
+"That was a good place to have their paddles, for study," Dick
+laughed. "Couldn't you see, from their paddling, why they beat
+us with ease?"
+
+"No! Could you?" challenged Tom.
+
+"Yes. The Preston fellows dip their paddles better than we do.
+They dip so that the blade always cuts the breeze, instead of
+meeting it. When they recover they turn their paddles so as to
+slip them out of the water without throwing any back strain on
+the canoe's progress. I was studying their paddling work all
+the time, and I hoped that you fellows were doing the same."
+
+"The Prestons have a lighter, swifter canoe, anyway," contended
+Dave.
+
+"I think they have some advantage over us, that way," Dick nodded.
+"At the same time I am certain that we ought to beat Preston
+by beating their style of paddling."
+
+"Beating their style of paddling?" echoed Reade. "Why, according
+to what you've told us we can't even equal their paddling."
+
+"We're going to equal it," Dick answered, "and we ought to beat
+it. At two o'clock, fellows, we're going out for two hours of
+drill. Then I'll try to explain what I think I saw of the Preston
+superiority in dipping and recovery. If I really observed correctly,
+then we ought to be able to do much better, for I also think I
+see how to improve on the Preston High School paddle work enough
+to make their performance look almost clumsy."
+
+"If you can do that," proclaimed Hazelton ungrudgingly, "then
+you're a wonder, Dick."
+
+"We shall see," smiled the big chief.
+
+"And if we don't see straight," mumbled Reade, "then Preston will
+hand us such a wallop that we won't even have the nerve to take
+up a challenge from Trentville High School."
+
+For the rest of the morning Dick & Co. were much more thoughtful
+than usual. They had met defeat---a thing they didn't relish.
+Yet they knew, in advance, how much worse they would feel if
+they met a defeat when officially entered as a Gridley High School
+crew---for the honor of their school was dear to them all.
+
+The noonday meal was over before one o'clock. Dick would not
+allow the "Scalp-hunter" to be put in the water a minute before
+two. He wanted to be sure that digestion had proceeded far enough
+so that they might do their best.
+
+At the time appointed, however, he took the crew out on the water,
+and there carefully explained what he thought he had learned of
+the better paddling style of the Preston High School boys.
+
+"You certainly did see a whole lot that I didn't see," Reade admitted,
+"and I believe that you saw it straight, too, Dick."
+
+"We can certainly shoot the old canoe ahead faster, already,"
+Dave murmured delightedly.
+
+"Now, Dick, what are the improvements you thought you might have
+on the Preston style?" Danny Grin asked eagerly.
+
+"To-morrow will be time enough to try out improvements, or any
+kind of frills," Prescott answered patiently. "For this afternoon
+let us confine ourselves to paddling as well as the Preston High
+School fellows do it. To-morrow we'll see if we can't do better
+than they do."
+
+After a little more practice it was surprising how much more easily
+they took to the new style of paddling.
+
+"Rest on your paddles for a few minutes," Dick ordered. "Get
+in some deep breaths. Then I'm going to pump up your speed to
+the best that you can do with the new stroke. We'll try to go
+to the hotel landing flying."
+
+When all was ready Prescott gave the word.
+
+"Now, your best speed, and all the strength you can properly put
+into the work. Go! One, two, three, four! One, two, three, four!"
+
+Across the lake sped the canoe, Dick & Co. fully aware that they
+were now traveling at a speed that had been impossible to them
+that same morning.
+
+"Stop paddling! Back water! Stop backing!"
+
+With deft movements of his own paddle, Dick swung the canoe in
+gently against the float.
+
+Out of the boathouse near by came Bob Hartwell.
+
+"I've been watching you fellows," he called.
+
+"That's fair enough," Dick answered.
+
+"You're doing some better than you did this morning," Hartwell
+went on. "You've almost got our stroke."
+
+"Almost?" repeated young Prescott, raising his eyebrows. "Haven't
+we improved a good deal on your Preston High School action?"
+
+Bob Hartwell began to laugh.
+
+"You fellows from Gridley are always world beaters, aren't you?"
+he demanded good-humoredly. "At first, I thought it was all brag
+on your part, and that you fellows were suffering from enlarged
+craniums complicated with bragitis. But now I begin to see that
+you talk confidently just in order to convince yourselves that
+you can't be beaten at anything. And I don't know that it's such
+bad 'dope,' either, as the sporting writers put it."
+
+"Let's hear you try some," urged Dick.
+
+"Brag?" asked Hartwell. "No; I don't believe I have mastered
+the idea well enough to do any really sincere bragging as yet.
+However, if you ever beat us at anything except brag, then I'm
+going to try to copy your form in the boasting line."
+
+By this time Dick & Co. were dragging their canoe up onto the
+float.
+
+"I hope Rip isn't sneaking anywhere about these grounds," muttered
+Danny Grin.
+
+"Who's Rip?" Bob Hartwell asked curiously. Then: "Oh, I beg your
+pardon for being too inquisitive," as he saw Dick frown at Dalzell.
+
+"I'm going to remain on the float, while you fellows go up into
+the hotel grounds," said Tom.
+
+"All of you go, and I'll stay and watch your canoe," suggested
+Bob Hartwell. "That is, if you're willing to trust me as sentry."
+
+"Of course we're willing," Dick responded. "But it's only right
+that one of our own crowd should do such work. Are you coming
+up with us, Hartwell?"
+
+"Why, yes," Bob answered, "if I can't be of any service to you
+here."
+
+Slowly the boys sauntered up through the walks. Then out on the
+porch came Manager Wright, waving a yellow envelope.
+
+"That's probably the answer from the Athletic Council of Gridley
+High School," Dick explained, turning to Hartwell. "You don't
+mind if I run on ahead and leave you, do you?"
+
+"You may run on ahead and leave me if you're as handy at running
+as you are at bragging," chuckled Bob. All of the boys in the
+group were soon at the porch. Mr. Wright descended the steps
+to hand Dick the envelope.
+
+Dick tore open the envelope hurriedly.
+
+"It's all right!" he called gleefully. "Mr. Howgate sends this
+word:"
+
+_"'Athletic Council approves and sanctions your representing Gridley
+High School on the water with your Canoe Club. Wish you success!
+Be careful not to risk lowering Gridley's standard in sports
+through recklessness.'"_
+
+"When do Gridley and Preston race in a regular event?" demanded
+Bob Hartwell promptly.
+
+"Mr. Wright has been most kind to us about several matters," Dick
+answered. "I'd like to ask him what date will be most satisfactory."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+"WON'T WIN AGAINST A MUDSCOW"
+
+
+"How can we help Mr. Wright by racing?" queried Hartwell.
+
+"By enabling me to advertise a canoe race between high school
+boys as an attraction to bring added guests to this hotel," the
+manager explained for himself. "Let me see. This is Thursday.
+If the race were to be held day after to-morrow---saturday---would
+that give both crews time enough to get ready?"
+
+"Saturday will suit Gridley," Dick answered promptly.
+
+"And Preston also," guaranteed Bob Hartwell.
+
+"At three in the afternoon on Saturday?" asked Mr. Wright.
+
+"Yes, sir," Prescott nodded. "But will you have sufficient time
+to advertise, Mr. Wright?"
+
+"Plenty of time," replied the manager, "if I send my letters away
+by tonight's mail. I will advertise in a Gridley paper, and also
+in Preston and Trentville. I will send copy to papers in a few
+other towns as well, and I will see to it that the railway folks
+know about it. Fortunately the railway people will attend to
+their own advertising, as it will give them some chance to bring
+extra passengers. Now, boys, does either crew wish to draw any
+expense money to help in preparing for the race?"
+
+"Preston High School doesn't want any expense money, thank you,
+sir," Bob declared quickly. "Our fellows all have abundant funds."
+
+"The Gridley High School crew is a lot of near paupers," Dick
+admitted with smiling candor.
+
+"Then you may have-----"
+
+"Thank you, Mr. Wright," Prescott went on. "I don't know that
+we could use money if we had it, but in any case I am certain
+that we couldn't accept it from the hotel management without risk
+of sacrificing our standing as amateurs. We might be ruled out
+as 'professionals' for accepting money for the race."
+
+"Pardon me," broke in Mr. Wright, as a bellboy handed him a telegram.
+As he read the message a smile appeared on his face.
+
+"Perhaps this will put a different aspect on the matter," beamed
+the hotel manager. "This telegram is from Mr. Howgate, and says:"
+
+_"'Am mailing you check for forty dollars. Please allow Prescott,
+Captain Gridley High School Canoe Club, to draw on you for that
+amount, for boat uniforms and other expenses. Money voted by
+Council from High School Athletic fund.'"_
+
+"That's thoughtful," murmured young Prescott, wholly taken aback.
+"However, I don't believe we shall need the money."
+
+"You ought to have some sort of uniform," suggested Hartwell. "We
+Preston chaps have canoe uniforms."
+
+"We can paddle just as well without special uniforms," smiled
+Dick,
+
+"But how would it look for good old Gridley High School?" hinted
+Bob generously. "Remember, in appearance, as well as in performance,
+you have the prestige and honor of your school to consider."
+
+"I think you will do well to accept the money and get uniforms,"
+Mr. Wright declared thoughtfully. "You will have to telegraph
+for them in order to have them here by Saturday."
+
+"I have the A.B. Lollard catalogue up in my room," suggested Hartwell
+"I'll run up and get it, and you fellows can look it through and
+make a quick decision."
+
+"When you have the choice of uniforms made," said Mr. Wright,
+"write your telegram and bring it to me to sign. The Lollard
+people know me, and will honor my order."
+
+Now that matters had been arranged so as to be strictly within
+amateur usages, Dick, Dave and the others found that they had
+a new cause for interest as they glanced through the bewildering
+display of uniforms offered in the catalogue.
+
+When the choice had been made Dick turned to young Holmes to say:
+
+"Greg, run down to the landing to relieve Tom, and ask him to
+hurry up here. We want him, too, to approve our selection or
+to state his disapproval."
+
+Reade arrived with a breathlessness that testified to his having
+run all the way. Needless to say, he heartily agreed with his
+chums as to the uniform selected by them.
+
+The uniform chosen was not expensive. It consisted of sleeveless
+cotton shirts, white cotton trousers, knee-length, and with a
+red stripe down the sides, and thin, light boating shoes.
+
+The total cost, per boy, was three dollars and eighty-three cents.
+Certainly not an expensive canoeing uniform! There would be
+some express charges to pay in addition.
+
+"You'll have about fifteen dollars left for anything else that
+you may need," suggested Mr. Wright.
+
+"Yes; but we don't wish to spend it," Dick replied. "It is only
+the thought of the Gridley High School that makes us decide on
+any uniform at all."
+
+"You couldn't have been more modest," smiled Bob Hartwell, as
+he thought of the more expensive uniforms of his own crew.
+
+The telegram was prepared. Mr. Wright signed it and sent it away.
+Then he hastened to his office to prepare his own advertising
+matter.
+
+As the Gridley girls were nowhere to be seen about the grounds,
+Dick did not inquire for them. Instead he and his chums hurried
+back to the lake, where they put in another hour in hard practice.
+Prescott kept his crew out on the lake, in about the middle,
+where his low---spoken directions could not be heard from the
+shore.
+
+"Are we going to win, now?" asked Dan Dalzell.
+
+"How can we help it, when we are to wear such dazzling uniforms?"
+queried Reade.
+
+"We've got to do a lot of hard work tomorrow, and on Saturday
+morning," Dave added. "I doubt if we yet paddle anywhere near
+the Preston High School performance."
+
+"We'll work hard to-morrow," Dick agreed, "but after that we will
+have to be satisfied with what we've done. Saturday morning we
+don't want to do any hard work. Just enough exercise to keep
+our muscles supple for the real fray of the afternoon."
+
+"We ought to stay out longer now," urged Hazelton.
+
+"Do you fellows think so?" asked Dick thoughtfully. "It seems
+to me that we've done enough hard canoe work for to-day. We don't
+want to go stale from too much training."
+
+"But we can't---we mustn't lose the race on Saturday," almost
+groaned Dave Darrin.
+
+"Then we'll do better not to overtrain," said Dick quietly. "Unless
+I hear a big kick I'm going to turn the canoe toward our camp."
+
+There was no objection, though some of the members of Dick & Co.
+frowned slightly. They had great confidence in Dick's judgment,
+yet he seemed to them over cautious in training.
+
+"I wish it were Saturday night," murmured Tom Reade, lying on
+the grass full length, after they had landed.
+
+"So that you'd know how it feels to be licked and to have your
+school licked, too?" inquired Danny Grin.
+
+"Stop that talk!" ordered Tom gruffly. "We're not going to be
+beaten. We'd hardly dare show our faces again in Gridley if Preston
+High School took us into camp."
+
+"Then how will the Preston fellows feel if we distance 'em?" Greg
+inquired.
+
+"Oh, it won't matter as much over at Preston," Tom replied coolly.
+"Preston hasn't such a big reputation for winning athletic events
+as Gridley has."
+
+"The more I think of it," muttered Dave, "the more I marvel at
+our cheek. We are barely more than freshmen. As yet we've entered
+the sophomore class only by promotion. Yet we get away from home
+and immediately start in to fight under the Gridley colors, just
+as though we were real juniors or seniors! My, but I'll hate
+myself if we get walloped Saturday afternoon!"
+
+"We'd all dislike ourselves," smiled Dick Prescott calmly. "That
+is why we haven't any thought of allowing ourselves to be beaten,
+either by Preston or Trentville."
+
+"I wonder if Trentville is as good as Preston?" asked Tom curiously.
+
+"We can't tell until we see them work," suggested Greg.
+
+"Who's going to eat, and when?" asked Dan. That started the crowd
+to making preparations for the camp supper. It was prepared in
+good time, and six healthy boys sat down to enjoy it. After that
+came a period of blissful idleness. Then, more or less reluctantly,
+the youngsters set about washing the dishes and setting the camp
+straight in general.
+
+"Better throw some wood on the fire; it's getting pretty dark,"
+suggested Dick. "I'll get the lantern and light it."
+
+Gr-r-r-r-r! came the voice of Towser, in the near distance.
+It was followed by barks and yelps, all in the voice of Hazelton's
+bull-dog.
+
+"What trouble has the pup gotten into?" demanded Harry, throwing
+an armful of wood on the campfire, then wheeling sharply.
+
+Gr-r-r-r! Wow-wow! Woof! sounded closer at hand, accompanied
+by considerable noise in the underbrush.
+
+"That pup's in trouble," declared Tom sagely. "Come along, fellows!
+Bring the lantern, Dick!"
+
+Six boys, headed by Dick with the lantern, went to meet the bull-dog.
+They came upon Towser, growling in a most excited manner, threshing
+something about him in the bushes as he came toward them.
+
+"Hold still, boy!" commanded Harry. "What is it, old chap?"
+
+Then he came upon the dog. In the darkness it was not easy to
+make out what ailed Towser. But Prescott came closer to the dog
+with the lantern.
+
+"Towser has his foot caught in a steel trap. I'm afraid his leg
+is broken," quivered Hazelton, as he threw himself on the ground
+beside his pet. "Hold still, boy! Let me take it off of you."
+
+The dog permitted himself to be held while Tom Reade pried open
+the jaws of the steel fox trap, the chain to which the pup had
+dragged over the ground.
+
+"That's a queer accident," commented Greg Holmes.
+
+"Accident?" flamed Harry. "This thing is no accident. It was
+done on purpose, and I wouldn't need but one guess to name the
+two-legged cur that did this!"
+
+All of the boys understood at once that Hazelton was accusing
+Fred Ripley of setting the trap.
+
+Towser, as soon as released, limped a little, but proved that
+his leg was not broken, though it had been cut in the trap.
+
+"Woof!" he exploded angrily, as soon as he found that he could
+run about on his injured leg. Then, showing his teeth, he growled
+menacingly and bounded through the woods, Dick & Co. following
+pell-mell.
+
+"Towser knows that his enemy is still near!" called Harry exultantly.
+"Come on, fellows! We'll catch that sneak!"
+
+A bull-dog's strong point is not his scent. He led the boys to
+the roadway, then halted, growling, plainly at fault.
+
+Perched up in a tree not fifty yards away, well hidden by the
+foliage, were Fred Ripley and another youth. For a few moments
+they listened breathlessly to the pursuit, then appeared to feel
+more at their ease.
+
+"You didn't work the trap trick quite right," whispered Fred to
+the youth in overalls beside him.
+
+"Better luck next time," whispered back the stranger. "But no
+matter. I see how we can fix the canoe so that it couldn't win
+a race against a mudscow!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+WHAT AILED GRIDLEY?
+
+
+"There's an automobile full of Gridley folks coming up to the lake
+to-day!" cried Susie Sharp excitedly as she ran to meet her girl
+friends at the landing stage.
+
+"How do you know?" asked Laura eagerly.
+
+"Mr. Wright has just received a telephone message, asking that
+arrangements be made to give them supper here. They're going
+back in the evening."
+
+"Dick will be so pleased!" cried Laura. "All of our boys will
+be delighted, I imagine," replied Susie dryly.
+
+"Of course; that is what I meant," explained Laura, flushing slightly.
+
+"I know. You think that Dick Prescott is the only boy at Lake
+Pleasant," teased Miss Sharp.
+
+"Stop that!" begged Clara Marshall. "Don't talk nonsense."
+
+At one end of the float lay the "Pathfinder." At the other end
+lay the "Scalp-hunter," as shining as a thorough overhauling and
+a coating of oil could make her.
+
+Over the latter canoe the Gridley High School girls had posted
+themselves as a sort of guard of honor.
+
+Not that there was any suspicion that either of the canoes would
+be tampered with. High school and college sports are "clean."
+No underhanded tricks are resorted to by competitors for the sake
+of winning.
+
+In the boathouse near by sat the members of both crews, mingling
+on the most friendly terms. With them were some of the officials
+of the race.
+
+Dotted along the water front of the hotel grounds were many little
+groups of waiting spectators in chairs, on campstools or sitting
+on the grass.
+
+In the morning buoys had been set on the lake at each end of a
+measured course. The course was to be a mile, around the upper
+buoy and returning to the starting line. The usual rules of boat
+and canoe racing were to apply as to clear water, fouling and
+the like, as well as the right of way at the upper buoy in case
+the rival canoes were close together.
+
+"It's half-past two o'clock now," announced the starter, glancing
+at his watch.
+
+"At two-forty," stated the referee, "I shall order both canoes
+into the water. As soon after that as each crew captain chooses
+he may put his men aboard and take such warming-up work as he
+may wish. At two-fifty-six the first gun will be fired, and both
+crews must come promptly to the judges' boat for alignment. At
+exactly three the second shot will be fired---the starting signal.
+Has either captain any questions to ask?"
+
+Neither captain had any questions.
+
+"Let me know, time-keeper, when it is two-forty," said the referee,
+going toward the door. "Both captains will be on the alert to
+avoid delays."
+
+As the referee glanced out he saw that at least four hundred spectators
+were on hand. Two stage loads of men, woman, boys and girls had
+already arrived from Preston. Trentville also had sent a delegation.
+
+"What's all that yelling with 'Gridley' in it?" cried Dick, jumping
+up and moving toward the door.
+
+He was followed by his chums. They reached the float in time
+to see the automobile bus from Gridley coming down to the water
+front. In it were some thirty people of all ages.
+
+"Oh, you Prescott!" yelled one irrepressible young man, through
+a megaphone. "Don't you dare make fools of us this afternoon!
+Gridley must win!"
+
+"Don't worry!" Dick shouted back, waving his hand. "Gridley is
+going to win!"
+
+"Yes, sirree!" called Bob Hartwell, laughingly. "Preston High
+School guarantees Gridley to be a winner---for second place!"
+
+People now came crowding down upon the float to such an extent
+that Mr. Wright had to use the services of four hotel employs
+in coaxing them to keep back out of the way of the crews.
+
+"No further admittance to the float, ladies and gentlemen!" called
+the hotel manager. "Keep it clear for the use of the crews!"
+
+"Remember, Prescott," shouted a voice, "nothing but a win!"
+
+"That's the Gridley way," Dick called back.
+
+"Crew captains!" shouted the referee. "Ready to launch your craft!
+Time for a bit of preliminary practice."
+
+"Take hold and launch!" cried Bob Hartwell, running forward.
+
+Over into the water went the Preston High School canoe with a
+splash. The Preston boys began to fill their places.
+
+"Gridley, stand by to launch!" called Prescott, "Slide her in,
+easily!"
+
+As graceful as a thing of life the big war canoe slipped into
+the water, then lay there like a swan. Dave Darrin took hold
+of the bow-line, the pretty craft resting lightly against the
+float.
+
+"Aren't you going to take your men out and warm them up, Prescott?"
+asked Referee Tyndall.
+
+"No, sir; only for the last five minutes. We want only work enough
+to start the blood to moving well."
+
+So only Dave stood by the canoe. Hatless, the Gridley High School
+boys paced up and down the float, awaiting word from Big Chief
+Prescott before embarking.
+
+"I wish Dick would put our boys to work at once," murmured Belle
+uneasily. "Look what a fine showing Bob Hartwell's Preston fellows
+are making out there."
+
+In truth the Preston boys were making a splendid showing with
+their brisk, steady, sturdy paddling. Many a cheer went up from
+shore for them.
+
+"Time for us, Gridley," announced Prescott, when some minutes
+had passed.
+
+Alertly his chums sprang to their posts. In a twinkling they
+were seated, each with his paddle in hand, holding lightly to
+the float.
+
+"Shove off," said Dick, in a very low voice. As the "Scalp-hunter"
+started for the middle of the lake a wild Gridley yell broke loose.
+
+But none of the boys paid heed. Each had his ears alert only
+for the orders of the captain.
+
+Somehow, as the canoe moved out, each one had the same feeling.
+The "Scalp-hunter" was not moving quite as it should do.
+
+"There is at least one of you fellows who isn't doing all he should,
+or just as he should," Dick murmured quietly. "Which one is it?"
+
+There was no immediate response, though all five of the boys gave
+renewed attention to their work. Still, all of them had the same
+uneasy impression that there "was a screw loose somewhere."
+
+"It's just as though we had a drag holding us back," Dick muttered
+disappointedly.
+
+"Perhaps it's only because we're not quite warmed up yet," Tom
+hinted.
+
+"No; it isn't that," Prescott responded. "I wish I knew just
+what does ail us. Take the second speed, fellows, and each of
+you watch his dip and recovery. Remember, it's the disciplined
+paddling that wins a canoe race."
+
+At the next speed they went forward a little faster, to be sure.
+Yet there was a decided lack of speed or a pull-back somewhere.
+
+"Don't lose your nerve, Gridley!" floated Hartwell's voice over
+the water as the Preston canoe shot by at a wind-jamming speed.
+
+"Want a tow, Gridley?" hailed someone from shore.
+
+"Next speed, fellows! Hit it up hard," called Dick Prescott.
+Perspiration from extreme nervousness broke out on his forehead.
+
+Strive as he would, the crew captain of the Gridleys could not
+shake off the gloomy depression that assailed him. Something
+was wrong---radically wrong! The "Scalp-hunter" was not showing
+a winning gait!
+
+"Best speed---and work, fellows!" called Dick, as quietly as ever,
+though in his voice there was a note almost of despair.
+
+Now, indeed, the Gridley craft sped through the water. Yet all
+of her crew, and many people on shore, realized that the war canoe
+was not showing a prize-taking gait.
+
+How Dick, Dave, Tom and the others worked, bending all their energies
+to the task! Yet all felt the same awful doubts.
+
+Bang! The first gun had sounded.
+
+"Down to the line, fellows!" Dick called. "Put in all the steam
+you can. I was wrong not to have warmed you up before. Get your
+blood to moving. One, two, three, four! Hump it! Hump it!"
+
+Their bodies streaming with perspiration, breath coming fast,
+their faces deeply flushed, Dick & Co. bent to their paddling.
+They were moving fast, yet not as fast as they should be moving
+and back.
+
+"What on earth can ail our boys?" cried Laura Bentley anxiously
+as she watched.
+
+"They're moving fast," replied Clara Marshall.
+
+"Yet not the way they should move," Laura insisted. "There's
+nothing about them of the easy, brisk form that Preston High School
+shows to-day."
+
+"Don't hint at defeat!" shuddered Belle Meade. "We might be able
+to stand a Gridley defeat, but the boys couldn't."
+
+Preston's canoe now rested on the water, ready to be aligned at
+the referee's order. Gridley's craft seemed to be straining as
+she neared the line.
+
+Suddenly three sharp, short, shrill blasts sounded from the whistle
+of the judges' launch.
+
+"Prescott!" roared the referee.
+
+"Now, what's up, I wonder?" Dick asked himself, with another
+sinking feeling at heart.
+
+The judges' boat was making fast time toward the Gridley High
+School entry.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"DINKY-BAT! HOT SAIL!"
+
+
+"Captain Prescott, what is wrong with your boat?" demanded Referee
+Tyndall, as the judges' launch stole up close.
+
+"Something seems to be wrong with us, I'll admit, sir," Dick made
+answer. "I'll be greatly obliged to you, sir, if you'll tell me
+what it is.
+
+"What are you towing?" asked the referee bluntly.
+
+"Towing?" repeated Dick in bewilderment.
+
+"That's what I asked," repeated the referee. "When you came down
+on this last spurt I'm sure that at one moment I saw a length
+of line rise above the water astern of you. Then, further back,
+I saw something else jerked to the surface."
+
+"Why, we can't be towing anything," Dick insisted. "You saw our
+canoe launched."
+
+"Late start, if you don't line the canoes up at once, referee,"
+warned the time-keeper.
+
+But Mr. Tyndall had his own views.
+
+"The starting time will be delayed," he announced sharply. "Captain
+Prescott, take your canoe to the landing stage."
+
+"All right, sir."
+
+"Captain Hartwell you will follow."
+
+"Very good, sir."
+
+Going in to the landing stage Dick gave his crew an easy pace,
+yet they were soon alongside the float.
+
+"Now, take your canoe out of water, Gridley," commanded the referee,
+stepping ashore from the launch. "I want a look at the craft."
+
+Dick & Co. lifted the war canoe to the float bow first. Just
+as the stern cleared the water a cry went up from scores of throats.
+
+For the referee had grasped a line made fast to the bottom of
+the canoe near the stern.
+
+Hauling on that line he brought in several yards of it---then,
+at the outer end of the line came a light blanket, dripping.
+Through the middle of the blanket the end of the line had been
+secured.
+
+Dick Prescott gasped. His chums rubbed their eyes. Bob Hartwell,
+who had landed, looked on in utter consternation.
+
+"For the love of decency!" gasped Referee Tyndall. "Who rigged
+on a drag like that."
+
+The blanket, towing below the surface, was a drag that could be
+depended upon, perhaps, to delay the canoe at least one length
+in every dozen that her crew could put her through the water.
+
+"None of our fellows did that trick," Dick declared hotly. "You
+saw us launch our canoe, Mr. Referee, and she was clear when
+we launched her."
+
+"I naturally wouldn't suspect the Gridley crew of rigging a drag
+on the Gridley canoe," remarked the referee dryly, as he followed
+the line back to the canoe. "See! Some scoundrel managed to
+twist a screw-eye into one of your frame timbers underneath.
+The line is made fast to the screw-eye. Captain Prescott, that
+could have been done by someone hidden under this float while
+your craft lay alongside. He could bring his mouth above water,
+under the timbers of this float. Then, with his hand and arm
+hidden under water the same rascal could easily reach out and
+fasten in the screw-eye."
+
+"Prescott," gasped Bob Hartwell, in a disgusted voice, "I hope
+you don't believe that any of our fellows, or their friends, could
+be guilty of such contemptible work!"
+
+"Hartwell," Dick answered promptly, resting a hand on the arm
+of the Preston High School boy, "I am offended that you should
+believe us capable of suspecting Preston High School of anything
+as mean as this. Of course we don't suspect Preston High School!"
+
+The referee himself now twisted the screw-eye out of its bed in
+the canoe frame. Then he gathered up the wet cord and blanket
+and hurled the whole mass shoreward.
+
+"I'd pay twenty-five dollars out of my own pocket," the race official
+declared hotly, "for proof against the scoundrel who tried to
+spoil clean sport in this manner!"
+
+Nearly all of the crowd of spectators had now surged down close
+to the float.
+
+"I think we could make a pretty good guess at who is behind this
+contemptible business," snarled Danny Grin, his face, for once,
+darkened by a threatening frown.
+
+"Who did it?" challenged Referee Tyndall. Dalzell opened his
+mouth, but Prescott broke in sharply with the command:
+
+"Be silent, Dan! Don't mention a name when you haven't proof."
+
+"Can it possibly be anyone from Preston?" asked Hartwell anxiously.
+"If it is, I beg you, Dalzell, to let me have the name---privately,
+if need be. I'd spend the summer running down this thing."
+
+"I know whom Dalzell has in mind, Hartwell," Dick rejoined. "It's
+no one from within a good many miles of Preston, either. But
+we have no right to make accusation without an iota of proof."
+
+"Then you decline to allow the name to be furnished?" blurted
+the referee.
+
+"I refuse, sir, for the same reason that you would," Dick answered
+coolly. "Only a coward, a knave or a fool will accuse another
+person without some reasonable proof to offer. No great harm
+has been done, anyway. The drag was found in time."
+
+"Get your canoe out, Hartwell," ordered Mr. Tyndall. "This time,
+when we launch them, we'll make sure that both craft are in good
+order."
+
+When the "Pathfinder" was hauled up on the float she was found
+to be free from any evidences of trickery.
+
+"Now, launch, and we'll watch each canoe until it puts off," announced
+Mr. Tyndall. "Captain Prescott, will ten minutes be enough for
+you before the sounding of the first gun?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"I'd rather you gave Gridley plenty of time, sir," urged Bob Hartwell.
+"If we can't win from Gridley High School fairly, we don't want
+to win at all."
+
+"First gun, then, at three-twenty-eight," called Mr. Tyndall.
+"Second gun at three-thirty."
+
+Slowly the "Pathfinder" followed the "Scalp-hunter" out into midlake.
+
+"How does your craft go now, Gridley?" hailed the big chief from
+Preston.
+
+"She goes like a canoe now," Dick called back joyously.
+
+Then he set his chums to easy paddling. All six of Dick & Co.
+felt a thrill of joy at realizing the difference in the canoe's
+behavior.
+
+"We'll win, all right," predicted Prescott joyously.
+
+"If we don't, we'll make motions that look like putting up a hard
+fight, anyway," Tom answered him.
+
+"I wish I had my foot on the neck of the cur that rigged the drag!"
+muttered Darrin vindictively.
+
+"I don't," Dick answered quietly. "The fellow who rigged the
+drag probably wasn't the same fellow who planned the scheme."
+
+"I'm going to provoke a fight with a certain party, one of these
+days, anyway," threatened Dave, his brow dark with anger.
+
+"Forget it now," Dick urged. "The fellow whose mind is ruled
+by an angry passion isn't in the best form for athletic work.
+Banish all unpleasant thoughts, all of you fellows."
+
+By degrees the big chief from Gridley warmed up his braves in
+the war canoe. He had them going in earnest, at nearly their
+best speed, just as the first gun was fired---a pistol in the
+hand of the starter on board the judges' boat.
+
+"We'll go over there in our best style," Prescott called. "Try
+to give the people on shore something worth looking at---they've
+waited long enough to see something! One, two, three, four!
+One, two, three, four!"
+
+In absolute precision the Gridley High School boys moved at their
+work, their swift, deft, strong strokes sending the birch bark
+craft darting over the water in a fashion that brought a cheer
+from shore.
+
+"Deep breathing just as soon as we're at rest at the line," Dick
+warned his chums. "At the start try to make the first breath
+carry you for four strokes!"
+
+In a short time the referee had the canoes with their noses at
+the line, and at an interval from each other satisfactory to him.
+
+"Thirty seconds to the start!" called the time-keeper. "Twenty
+seconds!"
+
+In the Gridley canoe each boy sat bent slightly forward, his paddle
+raised at the proper position.
+
+"Ten seconds!" called the starter. Then-----
+
+Bang! Away shot the canoes. Over all other sounds could be heard
+Dick's low-toned:
+
+"One, two, three, four! One, two, three, four!"
+
+The Preston boys heard him, and Dick noted, with amusement, that
+they unconsciously adapted their own stroke to his count.
+
+"Cut that numeral business," grunted Bob Hartwell, across the
+water. "You're queering our fellows."
+
+"They mustn't listen to our signals," Dick laughed back. "One,
+two, three, four!"
+
+"Come on, fellows; get ahead of that Gridley crowd, where we can't
+hear 'em," urged Hartwell. "Hanky pank!"
+
+At that the Preston canoe managed to get a slight lead. Dick
+did not vary his count, however. He had no objection to being
+led slightly to the upper buoy.
+
+Soon, however, Preston High School made the distance two lengths.
+Dick began to count a bit faster.
+
+"Put a little more steam on, fellows," he urged.
+
+So the gap was closed up somewhat. But Hartwell, glancing back,
+called:
+
+"Mumbleby hoptop!"
+
+Whatever that signal meant the Preston boys were now paddling
+a stronger and slightly swifter stroke. Dick, too, increased
+the stroke.
+
+Despite it all, however, Preston was now securing more and more
+of a lead by almost imperceptible gains. Dave Darrin, in the
+bow seat of the war canoe, eyed the water interval between the
+two canoes with a frowning glance.
+
+"More steam!" Dick urged. As the Gridley canoe went creeping
+up on the rival craft, Hartwell muttered another of his ridiculous
+code signals.
+
+"Preston hasn't let itself out yet, and we're next door to panting
+already," Tom Reade told himself, with a sinking heart. "We were
+fools to enter as a school crew without more practice!"
+
+At this time Dick Prescott was the only one in the war canoe who
+serenely ignored all doubts. Of course he couldn't be sure that
+he would win. In fact, all the chances appeared against him.
+ But the absurd habit, as it seemed to others, of feeling that
+Gridley could not be beaten, was strong upon him.
+
+More than half way to the upper buoy Preston High School led by
+more than two lengths.
+
+"Get on, Gridley! Get on! Do something!" came the distant yet
+distinct yells from shore. Many spectators, in carriages, or
+on bicycles, were following the rival crews.
+
+"Prescott, what ails you?" came a wailing cry from shore.
+
+There were other discouraging calls, too. Had Dick been less
+strong in his faith in Dick & Co. he might have gone to pieces
+under the nagging.
+
+Bob Hartwell, glancing smilingly back over one shoulder, saw the
+Gridley boys working.
+
+"We've got 'em stung, fellows," called the Preston High School
+big chief to his crew. "Take it easy, but don't let 'em gain
+anything. We won't try to increase the lead until we're on the
+last half of the home stretch."
+
+A hundred and fifty yards from the upper buoy Dick passed the
+word:
+
+"Now, hump a bit. We want to worry 'em as we get to the buoy.
+Make it hot for Preston! One, two, three, four!"
+
+Some of that distance was covered. As Preston rounded the buoy
+Hartwell and his crew came face to face with Gridley, about to
+round it.
+
+"One, two, three, four!" almost drawled Dick. He had already
+passed the signal to his own men, not one of whom obeyed his slow
+count, but on the other hand, Preston High School for the space
+of about fifteen seconds, slowed to that crawling count.
+
+"Brace up, you dubs! Paddle!" roared Hartwell. "Never mind that
+funeral march. Dipperty-dip!"
+
+Preston recovered from its brief trance and shot ahead. But Gridley
+was already around the buoy and coming fast.
+
+Half way home from the upper buoy found Preston going strongly,
+two and a half lengths ahead of Gridley High School.
+
+"Oh, you, Prescott, get up and run!" came the dismal, desperate
+advice from shore.
+
+As he mentally measured the distance, now, to the finishing line,
+Dick Prescott's eyes flashed.
+
+"Now, your reserve power, fellows!" he called in a low, tense
+voice. "Make every stroke count! Full muscle! Never mind your
+backs! One, two, three, four!"
+
+A splendid showing Gridley made. Soon the lead of the rivals
+was less than two lengths.
+
+"Steam-ho!" called Hartwell. "Hot sail!"
+
+Preston's paddles flashed in the sunlight in unison, in the best,
+swiftest stroke they had yet shown. Over on shore the Preston
+boosters let their lungs loose in cheering yells.
+
+"Wait for a tugboat, Prescott!"
+
+"You're up against the real thing, Gridley!"
+
+"Come on in, Hartwell! The other canoe is tied to the shore!"
+
+"More steam!" ordered Dick. "More steam! Your best, prize winning
+stroke now."
+
+Again Hartwell glanced backward. Now the prow of the war canoe
+was less than half a length from the stern of the Preston craft.
+
+Up and up it came. Hartwell, in a burst of energy, shouted his
+prize signal:
+
+"Dinky-bat! Hot sail!"
+
+The new spurt carried Preston High School ahead once more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+NATURE HAS A DISMAL STREAK
+
+
+"Come on, Prescott!"
+
+"Or else sink!"
+
+"Don't come back to Gridley!"
+
+The cries from shore, as the Gridley boosters noted the effects
+of the fine Preston work, were not encouraging.
+
+"Preston High School wins!"
+
+Indeed, it looked as though Hartwell's craft must be the winner.
+Shorter and shorter became the distance to the finish line.
+
+True, Big Chief Dick was bringing his prow close up to the stern
+of the "Pathfinder" once more, but Preston evidently had a little
+reserve steam left as yet.
+
+"Go it, Hartwell! Go it! You win! Hurrah!"
+
+Suddenly over the water traveled Dick Prescott's command:
+
+"Now, then, Gridley! Break your backs!"
+
+This time there was no counting, nor was there any need of any.
+From Dave back to Dick all six bent their full strength and wind
+to the task of making the "Scalp-hunter" dart over the water.
+It was a grueling, killing pace that Dick had set for his crew,
+but it did not need to last long. The finish line was close at
+hand.
+
+Hartwell saw the "Scalp-hunter's prow steal up on a level with
+the centre of his own canoe.
+
+"Go it, fellows---one last, big spurt!" he yelled.
+
+A sudden yell from shore told another story. The war canoe's
+nose was now six feet further along than the bow of the Preston
+canoe.
+
+"Come on, Dick! Come on! Come on!"
+
+"Speed! The last swift dash!" yelled Dick Prescott. "Bend to
+it!"
+
+Hartwell tried to call to his crew, but could not make himself
+heard. The yelling from the shore, and from the boats nearby
+drowned out all other sounds.
+
+The two canoes seemed to be rivaling express trains in their speed.
+Then the cheers of one faction drowned the groans of the other.
+
+Gridley High School had shot across the finish line by a length
+and a half lead over Preston High School.
+
+Just as the "Pathfinder" left the line astern there came from
+the Preston craft a sound like the report of a pistol.
+
+One of the Preston braves had snapped his paddle off just above
+the blade.
+
+As the "Scalp-hunter" swung about, Dick saw that broken-off blade
+floating on the water.
+
+"I'm glad that paddle didn't snap until you had crossed the line,"
+Dick panted. "If it had, the real result would have been in doubt."
+
+"Your crew won, Prescott!" called Bob Hart well in a husky voice.
+"Congratulations!"
+
+"Thank you," returned Dick. "You're surely a generous enemy."
+
+"Rivals, this afternoon, but enemies never!" protested young Hartwell.
+
+Now a blast from the whistle of the launch recalled the two canoes.
+Standing in the bow of the launch, Referee Tyndall announced
+so that those on shore might hear plainly:
+
+"Gridley wins by a length and a half!" From the shore came a
+wild cheer. There was also a frenzied waving of handkerchiefs
+and of parasols. Though the Gridley boosters might be few in
+number, they were great in enthusiasm.
+
+As the "Pathfinder" started in for the landing float a crowd made
+a rush to meet the canoes. It was not, however, the Preston craft,
+that the crowd wanted, for this was a Gridley crowd.
+
+Noting the fact with his keen eyes, Dick gave the word for easy
+paddling. Then he swung the war canoe about, heading toward camp.
+
+That proved not at all to the crowd's liking.
+
+"Come back, Prescott! This way, Gridley! We want you!"
+
+"Why don't you land, Dick?" queried Tom Reade.
+
+"What! Land at the mercy of that crowd!" exclaimed Prescott.
+"That is a Gridley crowd. They're so pleased over our winning
+that what they'd do to us might be worse than what they'd have
+done if we had lost."
+
+"Where are you going?" asked Dave, somewhat disappointed.
+
+"Camp is good enough for us, I guess. It's a safe place, anyway,"
+Prescott replied.
+
+A few minutes later the "Scalp-hunter" touched lightly on the
+beach in front of camp.
+
+Towser greeted them with a joyous bark.
+
+"So you've been watching the race instead of the camp, have you?"
+demanded Tom, eyeing the dog in mock reproach.
+
+"Oh, but I'm tired!" muttered Darrin, after they had beached the
+canoe. "This green grass looks inviting."
+
+He threw himself down at full length on the grass.
+
+"Up, for yours," commanded Dick, grasping him by one arm and pulling
+Dave to his feet. "Don't you know that your blood is almost at
+fever heat after the strain of the race? Do you want to get a
+chill that will keep the whole camp up to-night?"
+
+"I want to lie down," muttered Darrin. "And I want to sleep."
+
+"Then get off your racing clothes, put on your other clothes,
+then roll yourself well in your blankets and lie down in the
+tent," Dick ordered. "That's what I'm going to do."
+
+Now that the strain was over every member of Dick & Co. found
+himself so weary that the putting on of ordinary clothes was a
+process which proceeded slowly. After a while, however, all six
+had rolled themselves in their blankets and lay on the leaf-piled
+floor of the tent.
+
+All but Dick and Harry were asleep, presently, when an automobile
+stopped near the camp.
+
+"Anyone at home?" called Referee Tyndall, poking his head in past
+the flap of the tent and viewing the recumbent lads. "All here?
+That's good. I'm a committee of one, sent over here by the Gridley
+folks at the hotel. They're ordering a supper and they want you
+boys to come over promptly. You're to be the guests of honor."
+
+"Will you be good enough to present the Gridley people with our
+best thanks," returned Dick promptly, rising to greet the referee,
+"and ask them very kindly to excuse us? Assure them, please,
+that we're in strict training, with more races to come, and that
+banquets would perhaps spoil us for the next race."
+
+"I'm afraid I'll have difficulty in getting that message through,"
+protested Mr. Tyndall. "Your Gridley friends are bound to have
+you over at the hotel."
+
+"They can't get us there with anything less than the state militia,"
+declared Dave, who had awakened. "We can fight and whip any smaller
+body of armed men that tries to drag us away from our rest.
+Our friends are good to us but can't they understand that we ache?"
+
+"You _do_ look rather played out," assented Mr. Tyndall, after surveying
+the various wrapped bundles of high school boy humanity. "But
+can't you raise enough energy to come over in an hour?"
+
+"If the Gridley people are really our friends," protested Tom
+Reade, opening his eyes, "they'll let us sleep through until to-morrow
+morning. We nearly killed our tender young selves in that last
+big spurt, and now we must rest our bones and aching muscles."
+
+"But what can I tell the folks at the hotel?" begged Mr. Tyndall.
+
+"Tell 'em that we appreciate their kindness," laughed Dick.
+
+"All right. I'll tell them---something," murmured Mr. Tyndall,
+as he turned away.
+
+"Up, all of you fellows!" commanded Dick Prescott. "This doesn't
+look very gracious on our part, when an entertainment has been
+arranged for us. We'll go, and attend to our aches to-morrow."
+But when the referee of the afternoon noted how stiffly they
+all moved he found himself filled with compassion.
+
+"Don't you try to come over, boys," he urged. "You're too stiff
+and sore to-night. Some people, myself included, don't realize
+that fifteen-year-old boys haven't the bodily stamina of men of
+twenty-five. You did a splendid bit of work this afternoon,
+and now you're entitled to your rest."
+
+"We'll get over there, somehow," Dick promised.
+
+"No; you won't. Don't you try it. The Gridley visitors would
+be brutes to try to drag you out to-night. I shan't let you go,
+and I shall tell the home folks that you're enjoying a well-won
+rest."
+
+"But don't you let any of the Preston High School fellows know
+how crippled you found us," begged Dave Darrin.
+
+"What would you care, if I did?" laughed Mr. Tyndall. "You fellows
+won the race, didn't you? And I'll wager that the Preston boys
+are feeling a whole lot worse than you are. Don't come! Good
+night."
+
+"Tyndall is a brick to let us off," sighed Tom gratefully, as
+he sank down once more.
+
+Later on Dick & Co. emerged from the tent, started a fire, and
+had supper, though they did not pay great attention to the meal.
+
+"I wouldn't want to race every day," grunted Reade, as he squatted
+near the fire after supper.
+
+"If we did," Dick retorted, "we'd speedily get over these aches
+and this stiffness."
+
+For an hour or so the boys remained about the fire. Dan Dalzell
+was the first to slip away to his blankets. Hazelton followed.
+Then the movement became general. Soon all were sound asleep.
+
+Nor did any sounds reach or disturb them for hours. Not one of
+the sleepers stirred enough to know that the sky gradually became
+overcast and that there was a distant rumbling of thunder.
+
+Hardly had the campfire burned down into the general blackness
+of the night when an automobile runabout, moving slowly and silently,
+stole along the roadway.
+
+In it sat the son of Squire Ripley. Fred, having brooded for
+hours over the failure of his scheme to make Dick & Co. lose the
+canoe race, had at last decided to pay a stealthy, nocturnal visit
+to the camp of the boys he disliked, with the express purpose
+of doing whatever mischief his hands might find to do.
+
+His father's family car and automobile runabout were both at the
+hotel garage, and at his disposal. Soon Fred Ripley was speeding
+away over the country road in the automobile runabout.
+
+As he neared the camp he extinguished the running lights, then
+went on slowly so as to make no noise. At last he stopped the
+car.
+
+Gr-r-r-r! came out of the darkness. Faithful Towser was still
+at his post. He came forward slowly, suspiciously out of the
+darkness. He may have recognized his enemy, for Towser came close
+to the car, showing his teeth in an ugly fashion.
+
+Fred lost no time in starting his car forward. "I wish that pup
+would have the nerve to get in front of the car," he muttered
+as he drove slowly away from the camp. "What fun it would be
+to run over the brute! I don't dare to get out of the car while
+he's on guard. I forgot about him for the time being, though
+goodness knows I've cause to remember him."
+
+Towser uttered one or two farewell growls. Two hundred yards
+further on Fred let out the speed in earnest, at the same time
+switching on the electric running lights.
+
+"I'll come back late to-night," Fred reflected. "I'll leave the
+machine a little way down the road, and come up here on foot.
+In the meantime I'll think of some scheme to get square with
+Dick Prescott and his crowd. I'll hunt up a good stout club,
+too, and then if that confounded dog is troublesome I'll settle
+him."
+
+For an hour or more Fred ran the car at random over one country
+road after another.
+
+"I wonder if that pup ever goes to sleep," he muttered. "I'd
+really like to know. If I'm going back that way to-night I'd
+better be turning about, for there is a bad storm coming."
+
+Turning the car, he drove swiftly back again. In about twenty
+minutes he reached a part of the road directly above the camp.
+
+Overhead the lightning was flashing brightly. Heavy thunder followed
+each flash. Large drops of rain were falling, but Fred, bent
+on his evil errand, did not mind. At any rate he was not afraid
+of lightning. Aided by the flashes he searched along the side
+of the road until he found a branch of a tree that he shaped into
+a club with his knife.
+
+"I won't wake Prescott's muckers," he reflected, "and I want to
+be sure to attract the dog's notice if he is on guard."
+
+A broad, white streak of lightning showed the tent from the road
+as Ripley, armed with the club, drew nearer to it.
+
+Fred halted. "They're all asleep, the muckers!" he muttered.
+"I'm glad of that. Where is that dog? Why doesn't he come around?
+I'm ready for him now."
+
+Fred stole stealthily along, keeping a sharp lookout for the bull-dog.
+
+Suddenly the sky was rent by a vivid flash of lightning so glaring
+that the lawyer's son covered his eyes with his hands.
+
+Bang! Crash! Almost instantly the thunder followed the flash.
+
+"It's time to be getting out of here if I don't want to get drowned
+on the way back to the hotel," Ripley decided. "I'll have to
+postpone getting square with Prescott. Besides, the storm will
+waken those fellows and I don't want to be caught here."
+
+There came another flash, that descended near the water. The
+crashing noise of the thunder came at the same instant.
+
+Fred, facing the tent, saw the bolt strike the ridge pole. Evidently
+the current ran down one of the poles, for he saw the bluish white
+electric fluid running over the ground, coming from inside the
+tent. The tent sagged, then fell.
+
+"Gracious!" shivered this evil traveler of the night. "It will
+be a wonder if that bolt didn't stretch them all out. I wonder
+if it killed Dick Prescott and his crowd?"
+
+Uncontrollable curiosity seized upon Fred. Turning about he ran
+toward the tent. Violently he tugged at the canvas. As he lifted
+it another sharp flash showed him the six Gridley High School
+boys lying motionless in a row.
+
+"The lightning did finish them!" gasped young Ripley, overcome
+with fright and awe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+FRED IS GRATEFUL---ONE SECOND!
+
+
+For some moments Fred Ripley stood there, spellbound, regarding
+the still figures of Dick & Co. with fascinated fear.
+
+Most of the time he stood in darkness, but as the flashes of lightning
+came he again saw the six motionless figures. Even the fearful
+crashes of thunder failed to arouse the sleepers.
+
+"Oh, this is grewsome!" gasped Ripley at last, the coward in him
+coming to the surface strongly. "I can't stand this any longer!"
+
+Unconsciously he spoke aloud, his voice rising to a wail. Then
+as he let the folds of canvas fall, a voice inside called angrily:
+
+"Quit that! I want to get out."
+
+It was Dave Darrin's voice, and Dave was the quickest-tempered
+one of the six boys.
+
+Fred knew that it behooved him to get away from the spot at once.
+There was a wriggling under the canvas. Ripley turned to flee.
+
+Gr-r-r-r! Towser stood barring his path.
+
+"Hurry up, Darrin!" appealed Fred, as Towser moved closer, showing
+his teeth. "Hurry! Or this dog will chew me up."
+
+"Who's there?" called Darrin, thrusting his head out of the collapsed
+tent, then drawing the rest of his body after.
+
+Another flash of lightning showed Ripley's frightened face.
+
+"Oh, you, is it?" uttered Dave in a tone full of scorn.
+
+"Hurry and quiet this bull-dog!" the lawyer's son insisted.
+
+"Don't worry," retorted Darrin calmly. "Towser wouldn't sink
+his teeth very deep in you! He's a self-respecting dog."
+
+Now that one of the members of the canoe club was on the spot,
+the bull pup displayed less ferocity. He contented himself with
+eyeing Fred, ready to spring at a second's notice.
+
+"What has happened?" demanded Dave, looking rather bewilderedly
+at the tent.
+
+"Your shack was struck by lightning," Fred answered glibly, and
+then, ever ready to lie, he added, "I was passing by in the car,
+in a hurry to get back to the hotel, and I saw the thing happen.
+The lightning ran along the ridge-pole, then down into the tent
+and out at the sides along the ground. I'm afraid same of your
+fellows have been struck. At first I thought all of you had been
+killed, so I ran down here to investigate."
+
+But Dave paid little heed to the last part of this statement.
+He had seized hold of one side of the canvas, holding it up.
+
+"Dick!" he called lustily. "Tom, Greg, Dan, Harry!"
+
+There was no response. The thunder continued to boom louder than
+ever.
+
+"Hold this canvas up," Dave Darrin ordered sharply, and Ripley,
+knowing that Towser was eyeing him, obeyed. Inside crawled Darrin,
+shaking each of his friends in turn and calling to them.
+
+"I can't wake 'em! I can't get 'em to speak," reported Darrin,
+crawling out again, his face white with anguish. "I'm afraid
+they've been-----"
+
+"Yes," nodded Ripley, in a hoarse voice. "They're dead!"
+
+"How did you say you got here?" demanded Dave suddenly. "In a
+car?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then we'll prop the canvas up to let air inside the tent, and
+then you'll drive me to the Hotel Pleasant as fast as you can go!"
+
+"Maybe I won't," jeered Fred.
+
+"Maybe you will," retorted Dave Darrin indignantly. His voice
+rang with righteous contempt. "Either you'll stand by at a time
+like this, or I'll fall upon you tooth and nail---with the very
+able help of the dog!"
+
+Gr-r-r-r! approved Towser, again showing his teeth.
+
+"I---I'll take you!" quavered Ripley.
+
+"Of course you will," nodded Darrin. "Wait till I see if the
+lantern is all right."
+
+He crawled into the tent, found the lantern and struck a match.
+Curiously enough the lantern had not been injured. Placing the
+lantern outside, Darrin sharply commanded his chance companion
+to aid in propping the canvas so that those underneath could get
+air.
+
+"Now, come along," ordered Darrin, when this had been done. "Towser,
+watch the---the gentleman!"
+
+Thus they started up the slope, when they heard a growl just ahead
+of them. In the same instant Towser, uttering a yelp, turned
+and darted away as fast as he could go.
+
+"Now, we'll see whether you'll boss me," grunted Fred Ripley,
+brandishing the club that he held in his left hand. "Your dog
+is no good any more."
+
+"Neither will you or I be any good any more if we don't keep our
+nerve," uttered Darrin quietly, as he turned the lantern's rays
+against the object in their path. "There's only one thing in
+the world Towser would run away from, and that's just what is
+ahead of us---a mad dog!"
+
+At this instant Fred, too, caught sight of the object in their
+path. A large dog, of doubtful breed, stood before them, its
+head down, but its bloodshot eyes watching them cunningly. It's
+dripping jaws carried conviction that the animal was rabid.
+
+Fred did not cry out or stir. He was too frightened to do either.
+But Dave very stealthily put down the lantern. Then, his muscles
+wholly steady, he snatched up an eight-foot pole that lay on the
+ground.
+
+"Now, come on, you beast!" challenged Darrin, making a slight
+thrust with the pole.
+
+Enraged at the challenge, the rabid dog sprang forward, its mouth
+wide open. Without faltering, Dave made a thrust that jammed
+the pole hard into the animal's mouth.
+
+Staggered by the blow, the dog fell back on its side. It never
+rose again, for now Darrin used the pole as a club, raining down
+blows upon the dangerous animal until he was sure that there was
+no life left in it.
+
+"Darrin, that was wonderful nerve of yours!" gasped Fred with
+admiration wrung from him in spite of himself. "And you saved
+my life!"
+
+"I wasn't thinking of that," said Dave grimly, as he picked up
+the lantern. "Don't you believe I'll ever brag about having saved
+your life. Now to the car, and be quick."
+
+Fred, stung by the contemptuous answer, felt his resentment raging.
+He darted forward so swiftly that he might have been able to
+leap into the car and get away with it, had not something else
+happened.
+
+For Towser, though he had run away from a rabid specimen of his
+own species, had circled about. Now he leaped into the automobile,
+growling, just as Fred would have sprung in.
+
+"That's right, Towser. Hold the sneak!" called Dave, arriving
+on a run and leaping into the car. "Now, Ripley, hang you, do
+some quick and honest work!"
+
+"Kick that dog out of the car first," pleaded Fred.
+
+"I won't," Darrin retorted. "The dog is my guarantee for your
+good behavior to-night."
+
+As soon as might be they ran around the lower end of the lake,
+then raced for the hotel.
+
+There Dr. Bentley was aroused. While he was dressing he sent
+a bell-boy to order his own big car.
+
+Just when Ripley vanished from the scene no one about the grounds
+or the hotel seemed to know or care.
+
+Dr. Bentley, dressed in record time, came down.
+
+"Now, we'll drive fast, Darrin," the doctor announced, as he dropped
+his bag into the car and seated himself at the wheel. "Struck
+by lightning, did you say? It was a fearful storm, but it is
+stopping now."
+
+Ere they reached the camp the stars were out. There was no sign
+of nature's dangerous mood.
+
+Dr. Bentley first of all ordered that the canvas be lifted and
+cast aside. The tent was badly wrecked and burned, though the
+rain had prevented the rising of flames that might have burned
+the bodies of the five unconscious boys.
+
+"Throw your coat off, Darrin, and do the work of four men for
+a few minutes," said Dr. Bentley tersely.
+
+"I'll do the work of a hundred," replied Dave, "if I can find
+the way."
+
+After some minutes of hard work Tom Reade opened his eyes. Shortly
+after this the puffing of one of the hotel launches was heard.
+For the doctor, while hurrying into his clothes, had left word
+with Mrs. Bentley what to do. The launch brought another and
+much larger tent, with cots, bedding and other things, as well
+as four capable workmen.
+
+Greg came to next. Neither he nor Reade, however, were good for
+much at the time. By the time that the new tent was up, and the
+cots arranged those who were still unconscious were carried in
+there. Then Greg and Tom were helped into the drier quarters.
+
+It was Dick who longest resisted the efforts to bring him to
+consciousness. At last, however, he opened his eyes.
+
+"It was a mercy that none of you were killed," uttered Dr. Bentley
+devoutly. "A little bit more of the current and you might have
+been done for."
+
+But now that he had attended to his young friends, Dr. Bentley
+did not think of returning to the hotel. He remained through
+the night, despite the fact that his charges became steadily stronger
+and at last went sound asleep.
+
+In the morning, before eight o'clock, the launch was over again
+on that side of the lake. This time it brought Mrs. Bentley,
+Mrs. Meade and the girls, as well as a lot of daintily prepared
+food fresh from the hotel kitchen.
+
+"This is a mighty pleasant world!" sighed Dick Prescott, full
+of luxurious content.
+
+"Yes when you have some good friends in the same world with you,"
+Tom added.
+
+Dave and Dan slipped away to remove the body of the rabid dog
+killed during the night.
+
+The tent they had brought with them from Gridley would never be
+of service again, so Dick & Co. were highly delighted when informed
+that Manager Wright begged them to accept the use of this larger,
+finer tent, and also of the cots, during their stay at the lake.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+TRENTVILLE, THE AWESOME
+
+
+As the "Scalp-hunter" swung around the upper buoy and headed down
+the course she had a lead of a clean two lengths over the Trentville
+High School canoe.
+
+There was a larger crowd on the lake to-day and more steam and
+gasoline craft were out.
+
+As Dick & Co. shot down the line, still leading, steam and pneumatic
+whistles broke forth into a noisy din.
+
+Over on the western shore, on the grounds of the larger hotel,
+only one little knot of Gridley people stood to watch and cheer.
+These were the Bentleys, Mrs. Meade and the same group of girls
+that had watched the other race.
+
+No excursion had come up from the home town to-day, for no one
+in Gridley had believed that their high school youngsters could
+defeat the seasoned Trentville High School canoe crew.
+
+Only two days before Trentville had won from Preston High School
+by nearly five lengths.
+
+What show was there for Dick & Co. or for Gridley High School?
+
+Hence the smallness of the Gridley crowd present.
+
+However, some hundreds of people who looked on were eager only
+to see the best crew win, as they had no ties binding them either
+to Gridley or to Trentville.
+
+But the unexpected had happened.
+
+In the first place, when the Trentville canoe and crew arrived
+at the lake Dick Prescott had insisted that Preston High School
+and Trentville High School race together first.
+
+Thus he had opportunity to watch the Trentville work. Moreover,
+by delaying his own race against Trentville, Dick had had more
+time to train and drill his crew into form, both as to paddling
+and endurance.
+
+He had profited well by these opportunities. To-day, from the
+outset, he had handled his crew so that a slight lead over Trentville
+had been maintained. This had been gradually increased, and now
+that the buoy had been turned with such a handsome lead, none
+on shore or in the other boats believed that Trentville High School
+had any further chance.
+
+Pascal, however, who captained the Trentville canoe, had another
+view of the matter. It was Ted Pascal's third summer in a canoe.
+He had drilled more than one crew, and knew all the ins and outs
+of the sport.
+
+"I guess Prescott thinks he has the whole thing, by this time,"
+smiled Pascal to himself. "Poor chap. He's a nice young freshman,
+and I hate to fool him. But we'll soon begin our work. The Gridley
+crew must be well tired by now."
+
+Presently Ted Pascal passed the word quietly over the heads of
+his perspiring but confident crew.
+
+"Tighten up a little bit, now---a little bit at a time," was the
+message Pascal gave his followers.
+
+By the time that the home course had been half covered it was
+noted that the "Slip-over," as the Trentville craft was named,
+was creeping up fast on its rival.
+
+Dick, too, quickly became aware of this.
+
+"Trentville is showing a lot of new form, fellows, and coming
+right up on us," Dick called quietly. "This race isn't won!
+The fact, we're near to losing it. Form! form! muscle! Don't
+fumble again, Hazelton! One, two, three, four!"
+
+But still the Trentville High School craft continued to creep
+up on them. The Gridley High School girls on shore became so
+anxious that they forgot to wave their handkerchiefs and cheer.
+
+"More push! Power, as well as speed," Dick panted, for now the
+grueling speed was beginning to tell on even the leader of Dick
+& Co.
+
+The prow of the "Slip-over" now passed the stern of the
+"Scalp-hunter." Reade saw this, too, and uttered a groan.
+
+From the shore and the boats holding spectators came new volleys
+of cheers, for most of these spectators were wholly impartial,
+and wanted only to see an exciting race.
+
+"Let yourself out, Gridley!" boomed a voice over the water.
+
+Dick and Co. were doing their best---or what amounted to much
+the same thing---believed that they were, at any rate.
+
+Yet the Trentville canoe crept steadily up, then led by a quarter
+length, a half length. It looked as though the Trentville crew
+would soon be a length ahead of the Gridley boys.
+
+Everyone of Dick's chums was desperate. So was Dick himself,
+but he kept as cool as possible.
+
+"Bring our prow up!" he called steadily. "No matter what happens,
+bring our prow up flush with Trentville!"
+
+By some miracle the Gridley boys found strength enough left in
+their arms and backs to accomplish this feat.
+
+Then the "Scalp-hunter" dropped behind again, an inch at a time.
+
+"We caught 'em once!" called Dick in an even voice. "We must
+do it again. One, two, three, four! Hump! hump! Put in the
+power!"
+
+By inches the "Scalp-hunter" crawled up, but Dick & Co. felt
+completely exhausted.
+
+"You've been doing well, kid," called the even voice of Ted Pascal
+over the water, "but you can't do any more. We take this race!"
+
+"Do you?" dared Dick.
+
+"Yes; you're all in, and we have reserve steam left."
+
+"Have you?" snapped young Prescott. "Then now is the time to
+prove it."
+
+Taking a deep breath, Dick Prescott shouted:
+
+"Remember what Gridley demands! No defeats. Dash ahead, Gridleys!
+Now---go in and kill yourselves for the honor of your school!"
+
+Dick was far from meaning that literally, but his quick eye had
+measured the remaining distance of the course.
+
+He was captain enough to know just what each of his men could
+endure, and for how long they could stand up under it.
+
+"Life is of little use to the vanquished!" Dick shouted on. "Go
+in to win---kill yourselves!"
+
+At an earlier point on the course it would have been fearfully
+bad leadership. It would have resulted in disaster had any of
+Dick & Co. had any form of serious physical weakness.
+
+But Dick Prescott knew his boys!
+
+"Kill yourselves!" he shouted out again, as he saw the two canoes
+running neck and neck. "For the honor of Gridley High School!"
+
+Right noble was the response, though flesh and blood could not
+stand this new and savage grilling for long.
+
+"Wake up, Trentville!" shouted Ted Pascal, when he saw the
+"Scalp-hunter" gaining. "Wake up! Let out all of your steam!
+Push!"
+
+Dick Prescott said no more. His straining gaze was now fixed
+on the finish line. Not one of his chums even glanced at the
+imaginary line. All their thoughts, like all their glances, were
+on their paddles.
+
+"A final dash, now!" called Dick. "Slam up the pace for Gridley!"
+
+But Trentville was showing its boasted reserve steam.
+
+Close as they now were to the finish, Pascal had no thought of
+permitting defeat to come to his crew.
+
+No dinning of whistles was there now. Every spectator waited
+breathlessly for the outcome that would be reached in the next
+few seconds.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+Then the end came.
+
+Pascal sank back on his seat with a groan when he had put in the
+last dip of his paddle that could do any good.
+
+Frantic indeed was the cheering, and now once more came the deafening
+screech of whistles.
+
+From the judges' launch, as soon as the din had died down a bit,
+came the announcement through a megaphone:
+
+"Gridley High School wins by three quarters of a length."
+
+Dick heard the news, then ordered quietly:
+
+"Paddle---easily."
+
+A turn of his own blade swung the prow around so that the "Scalp-hunter"
+glided in toward the hotel landing float.
+
+To-day he had no jubilant mob of Gridleyites to fear in the excess
+of their joy. Only some very gentle friends of their own town
+came hurrying forward to congratulate them.
+
+But Dr. Bentley gripped Dick's arm as soon as that young man stepped
+from the canoe.
+
+"Bring your crew along and follow me, Prescott," whispered the
+physician. "You are a limp-looking lot. That was a wild, splendid
+finish, but I fear you may have put it too hard to your crew.
+I want to examine you all, to make sure that not too much harm
+has been done by your desperate 'kill yourself' order."
+
+Dr. Bentley led the way to the boathouse, while a hotel employ
+took charge of the "Scalp-hunter."
+
+He listened briefly at each boy's heart, then made them all sit
+still for ten minutes. At the end of that time he examined them
+again as to heart beat. Half an hour later he made a third examination.
+
+"I don't believe anyone of you has sustained any lasting injury,"
+said Dr. Bentley at last. "But, Prescott, don't you ever dare
+give a 'kill yourself' order again. That is my order, and an
+emphatic one. You may recall that I happen to be medical director
+of the Gridley High School Athletic Association. If you youngsters
+ever try a pace like that again, then undoubtedly you will all
+be disqualified from future athletic events. Don't forget."
+
+After that lecture Dick & Co. were allowed to sponge with hot
+water, rub down and put on ordinary clothing. Then they went
+forth to meet their friends.
+
+Ted Pascal, however, was the first to rush forward. He had been
+waiting for their appearance.
+
+"Prescott, you're a great fellow as a crew captain!" the big
+chief of the Trentvilles declared. "I was sure we had you beaten,
+and even now I can't imagine how you left us to the rear. But
+it was a great race, and I congratulate you!"
+
+"And we all thank you for your good will," Dick answered promptly.
+"Truth to tell, Pascal, I thought, too, that you almost had us
+beaten."
+
+"Almost?" echoed Ted. "Why not wholly?"
+
+"Because Gridley is never quite beaten. It's our way, you know---one
+that was adopted by a past generation of Gridley boys and has
+been lived up to ever since."
+
+"I've heard a lot about that 'Gridley way,'" laughed Ted Pascal,
+"but to-day was the first time that I've ever had it played on me."
+
+"Do you play football?" asked Dick.
+
+"No."
+
+"Baseball?"
+
+"I tried, but couldn't make the nine," Pascal confessed.
+
+"Then I don't know that you're likely to have the 'Gridley' way
+played upon you again not unless you meet some of our girls in
+a tennis game."
+
+The two crews mingled, passing some ten minutes in talk and in
+good-humored chaff. But at last Dick broke away and drew out
+from the canoe talk as he saw Laura, Belle, Susie and the other
+girls awaiting them at a point farther up in the hotel grounds.
+
+"I know the girls have been waiting to speak to us," Dick told
+his chums, "and they've been mighty kind to us. Come along."
+
+"We thought you would never get around to talking with poor mortals
+like us," Laura admitted, as the boys joined the high school
+girls.
+
+"It was mainly your father's fault," Dick laughingly, protested.
+
+"How was that?"
+
+"You'll have to ask him. Perhaps we're not at liberty to reveal
+what the Athletic Association's medical director had to say to us."
+
+"Especially when it's in the nature of a 'roast,'" added Danny
+Grin.
+
+"If my father was severe with any of you I am certain that he
+had good reason," replied Laura gravely, though her eyes twinkled.
+"But what a splendid race you made against Trentville and at
+one time we felt sure that you were beaten."
+
+"We all felt the same way at one time," Tom Reade interjected.
+
+"All except Dick," added Darry. "Why, if anyone were to kill
+Dick Prescott, Dick would insist on the fellow coming around the
+next day and proving his death."
+
+"It was a splendid race, anyway," Belle glowed. "Do you notice
+anything, boys?"
+
+"Where?" asked Tom, looking blankly around.
+
+"Anything about us?" Susie put in.
+
+"Nothing," drawled Tom, "except that you're the finest, daintiest
+and sweetest-looking lot of girls we know. But that's true every
+other day in the week."
+
+"We didn't ask you anything like that," Susie pouted, "though
+doubtless it's all true enough. But don't you notice what we're
+all wearing?"
+
+"I think I see what you mean," Greg suggested hopefully. "Each
+one of you is wearing the Gridley High School pin."
+
+"Correct!" assented Susie warmly. "But can't you guess why we're
+wearing the pins? It's because when Gridley boys can win such
+a race as you won to-day it's a real honor to wear the pin."
+
+"And a bigger honor to have it worn on our account," Dick laughed.
+
+"I was waiting to see who would be the first boy to say something
+really nice!" cried Clara Marshall.
+
+"Have you heard of any more canoe clubs coming this way---high
+school clubs with which you could arrange races?" asked Laura.
+
+"No," said Dick, with a shake of his head. "Even if there were
+a dozen coming here I'm afraid we'd have to lose the chance."
+
+"Why?" asked Belle quickly.
+
+"Because we can remain here only two or three days longer."
+
+"Oh, that's a shame," broke in Susie. "Do you really have to
+go back to Gridley?"
+
+"Yes," said Dick solemnly.
+
+"Is the reason one that you may properly tell us?" Laura inquired.
+
+"It's one that we're not ashamed of, because we can't help it,"
+Prescott rejoined. "Our vacation up here is nearly at an end
+just because our funds are in the same plight---nearly at an end,
+you see."
+
+"Oh, what a shame!" cried Clara sympathetically.
+
+"To be short of money is more than a shame," blurted Tom Reade.
+"It is a crime, or ought to be. No one has any right to be
+poor---but what can we do?"
+
+"Oh, well, there are plenty of pleasant times to be had in good
+old Gridley in the summer time," Dick declared stoutly. "And
+we shall have our canoe there."
+
+While chatting the young people had been walking up through the
+hotel grounds until now they stood just behind the stone wall
+that separated the ground from the road.
+
+"Why---look what's coming!" urged Dave Darrin, in a voice expressive
+of mock interest.
+
+All looked, of course.
+
+Fred Ripley, his hat drawn down over his eyes, came trudging along.
+
+In one hand he carried a dress suit case, and from the way his
+shoulder sagged on that side, the ease appeared to be heavy.
+
+On young Ripley's face was a deep scowl.
+
+"Judging from his appearance," suggested Tom Reade, "Rip is walking
+all the way to the Land of Sweet Tempers. Probably he's doing
+it on a wager, and is just beginning to realize what a long road
+lies ahead of him. I wonder if he'll, arrive at his destination
+during his lifetime?"
+
+Fred's shoes, usually so highly polished, were already thick with
+dust. His collar, ordinarily stiff and immaculate, was sadly
+wilted and wrinkled. His whole air was one of mingled dejection
+and rage.
+
+"I wonder what can have happened to him?" asked Susie curiously.
+
+"I think his conscience may be chasing him," smiled Dick.
+
+What really had happened was that Squire Ripley had been present
+when his son had made a very disrespectful answer to a white-haired
+man, one of the guests at the Lakeview House where the Ripleys
+were stopping.
+
+In a great rage the lawyer had decided to send his son home for
+that act of gross disrespect to the aged.
+
+To make the punishment more complete, Mr. Ripley had ordered his
+son to make the long journey on foot over the hills to the railway
+station. Only enough money had been handed the young man to buy
+his railway ticket home. The dress suit case had been added
+in order to make his progress more difficult.
+
+"A young man who cannot treat the aged with proper respect must
+be dealt with severely," said Lawyer Ripley to his son. "You
+will reach home fagged out from your long tramp. For your fare,
+until your mother and I return, you will have to depend on such
+food as the servants at home can spare you from their larder.
+Don't you dare order anything from the stores to be charged against
+me. Now, go home, drowse out your summer in the hot town and
+reflect on what a mean cad you have shown yourself to be to-day."
+
+While Fred was thinking this all over he glanced up suddenly,
+to see fourteen pairs of Gridley eyes fixed upon him. The young
+people, as soon as they found themselves observed, immediately
+turned their glances away from the sullen looking young pedestrian
+from their school.
+
+"I wonder what has happened to Fred Ripley?" Susie repeated, when
+the object of their remark was some distance away. "Something
+has gone very wrong with him. A blind man could see that much."
+
+During this time Fred was thinking to himself:
+
+"If the guv'nor subjects me to this degradation just for one sharp
+answer to an old man, what would that same guv'nor do to me if
+he knew all the things that I've been engaged in up here at the
+lake? What if he knew that I hired that farmer's son to swim
+under the float and attach that drag to the canoe? What would
+the guv'nor do if he knew that I tried to wreck Prescott's outfit?"
+
+Fred shivered at the mental prospect of his father's stern, grim
+wrath.
+
+But young Ripley, as sometimes happens, wasn't caught just then.
+He would go on for the present planning mean tricks against those
+whom he had no just reason to dislike. Yet his time was sure
+to come.
+
+Soon after Dick & Co. were compelled to bid adieu to Lake Pleasant.
+They had had a splendid time, and had acquitted themselves with
+great credit in this entry into high school athletics. They had
+had pleasure enough to last them all the rest of the summer in
+memory.
+
+The cost of transporting their canoe, on the homeward trip, was
+borne out of the funds of the Gridley High School Athletic Council.
+
+Dick & Co. entered three more canoe races against high school
+teams that summer. All these were run off on the home river,
+and Dick & Co. had the great glory of winning them all "the Gridley
+way."
+
+After the summer, came the opening of the school year again.
+Our readers may learn what happened to Dick & Co. in their sophomore
+year in the second volume of the "_High School Boys Series_,"
+which is published under the title, "_The High School Pitcher;
+Or, Dick & Co. on the Gridley Diamond_."
+
+As to what befell our young friends in the summer vacation which
+followed their sophomore year, all that is told in the second
+volume of the "_High School Boys Vacation Series_." That
+interesting volume is published under the title, "_The High
+School Boys' Summer Camp; Or, The Dick Prescott Six Training for
+the Gridley Eleven_." It will be found to be a splendid story
+of real American boys who know how to get the most out of both
+work and play, and to make each year of life a preparation for
+a better year to come. In this volume the friends of Dick & Co.
+will find these six sturdy boys leading a life full of healthy
+excitement and adventure in the woods.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12728 ***
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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #12728 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/12728)
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The High School Boys' Canoe Club, by H.
+Irving Hancock
+
+
+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: The High School Boys' Canoe Club
+
+Author: H. Irving Hancock
+
+Release Date: June 25, 2004 [eBook #12728]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HIGH SCHOOL BOYS' CANOE CLUB***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Jim Ludwig
+
+
+
+The High School Boys' Canoe Club
+or
+Dick & Co.'s Rivals on Lake Pleasant
+
+By H. Irving Hancock
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTERS
+ I. The "Splendid" War Canoe
+ II. "RIP" Tries Out His Bargain
+ III. Buying Fuel for a Bonfire?
+ IV. Hiram Pries a Secret Loose
+ V. Birch Bark Merchants
+ VI. Meeting the Fate of Greenhorns
+ VII. "Danny Grin" is Silent
+ VIII. What an Expert Can Do
+ IX. Dick Trembles at His Nerve
+ X. Putting Up a Big Scheme
+ XI. All Ready to Race, But-----
+ XII. Susie Discomfits a Boor
+ XIII. The Ripley Heir Tries Coaxing
+ XIV. The Liar has a Lie Ready
+ XV. At the Greatest of Feasts
+ XVI. A Scalp-Hunting Disappointment
+ XVII. The Good Word by Wire
+XVIII. "Won't Win Against a Mudscow"
+ XIX. What Ailed Gridley?
+ XX. "Dinky-Rat Hot Sail!"
+ XXI. Nature Has a Dismal Streak
+ XXII. Fred is Grateful---One Second!
+XXIII. Trentville, The Awesome
+ XIV. Conclusion
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE "SPLENDID" WAR CANOE
+
+
+"It's the wreck of one of the grandest enterprises ever conceived
+by the human mind!" complained Colonel W.P. Grundy, in a voice
+broken with emotion.
+
+A group of small boys grinned, though they offered no audible
+comment.
+
+"Such defeats often---usually, in fact---come to those who try
+to educate the masses and bring popular intelligence to a higher
+level," was the colonel's declaration, as he wiped away a real
+or imaginary tear.
+
+On a nearby lot stood a large show tent, so grayed and frayed,
+so altogether dingy as to suggest that it had seen some summers
+of service ere it became briefly the property of Colonel Grundy.
+
+Near the entrance to the tent a temporary platform had been built
+of the board seats taken from the interior of the tent.
+
+Near the platform stood a grim-visaged deputy sheriff, conversing
+with an auctioneer on whose face the grin had become chronic.
+
+Some distance from the tent stood a group of perhaps forty men
+of the town of Gridley.
+
+"The whole outfit of junk won't bring five hundred dollars," predicted
+one of these men. "How much did you say the judgments total?"
+
+"Seventeen thousand four hundred dollars," replied another. "But
+the man who attached the show has a claim for only six hundred
+and forty dollars, so he may get most of his money."
+
+Here the auctioneer stopped talking with the deputy sheriff long
+enough to go over to the platform, pick up a bell and ring it
+vigorously. A few more stragglers came up, most of them boys
+without any money in their pockets.
+
+Off at one side of the lot six boys stood by themselves, talking
+in low tones, casting frequent, earnest glances toward the platform.
+
+These youngsters were Dick Prescott, Dave Darrin, Greg Holmes,
+Tom Reade, Dan Dalzell and Harry Hazelton. Collectively they
+were known in the boydom of Gridley as Dick & Co.
+
+Our readers are already familiar with every one of these lads,
+having first been introduced to them in the "_Grammar School Boys
+Series_," with its four volumes, "_The Grammar School Boys of
+Gridley_," "_The Grammar School Boys Snowbound_," "_The Grammar
+School Boys in the Woods_" and "_The Grammar School Boys in Summer
+Athletics_." The varied and stirring exploits of Dick & Co.,
+as told in these books, stamped the six chums as American boys
+of the best sort.
+
+Then, in "_The High School Freshmen_," the first volume of the
+"_High School Boys Series_," our readers went further into the
+history of Dick & Co., and saw how even freshmen may impress their
+personalities on the life and sports of a high school. The pranks,
+the fights, the victories and achievements of that first year
+in high school had done much to shape the characters and mould
+the minds of all six of our boys.
+
+The present narrative deals with all that happened in the vacation
+after Dick Prescott and his friends had finished their freshman
+year. The summer now lay before them for whatever might come
+to them in the way of work and pleasure. Though none of the six
+yet knew it, the summer was destined to bring to them the fullest
+measure of wonder and excitement.
+
+And now let us get back to Dick & Co., that we may see just what
+befell them.
+
+"Pshaw! There comes Fred Ripley," exclaimed Harry Hazelton.
+
+"And he probably has a few ten dollar bills in his pockets," remarked
+Greg Holmes, rather enviously. "He will buy something."
+
+Fred Ripley, as readers of "The High School Freshmen" remember,
+was the son of a wealthy local lawyer, and a bitter enemy to Dick
+Prescott and his friends.
+
+"Fred just came here to buy something and then look at us with
+his superior smile," grunted Hazelton. "What do you say if we
+all walk away before the bidding begins?"
+
+"Then Rip would grin," returned Tom Reade. "He'd know just why
+we went away. I came here to see what's going to happen, and I
+won't be chased away from here by Fred Ripley."
+
+"Let's see if Fred can have any real fun with us," proposed Dick,
+with a quiet smile.
+
+"He can have fun enough with us, if he guesses why we are really
+here," Dave Darrin uttered resentfully. "Ripley seems to think
+that money is made and supplied to him just in order that he may
+rub gall and wormwood into those whom he doesn't like!"
+
+Fred kept well away from Dick & Co., though the six boys saw that
+he occasionally sent a covert look in their direction.
+
+"Time to begin," said the deputy sheriff, after glancing at his
+watch.
+
+Up to the platform jumped the auctioneer, bell in hand. Holding
+it with both hands he again rang vigorously for a full minute.
+The net result was to bring one shabby-looking man, two grammar
+school boys without a cent of money, and three children of not
+over four years of age into the lot.
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen," began the auctioneer, in his glib tones,
+"we are presenting to-day a most unusual opportunity. Prizes
+will be distributed to many enterprising people of Gridley, though
+these prizes are all so valuable that I trust none of them will
+go for the traditional 'song.' It is seldom, indeed, in any community,
+however favored it may be in general, that such a diversified
+lot of excellent things is put under the hammer for purchase by
+discriminating buyers! As you all know, Colonel W.P. Grundy's
+Great & Colossal Indian Exposition & Aboriginal Life Delineations
+has met with one of the too-common disasters of the road. This
+great show enterprise must now be sold out in its entirety."
+
+After an impressive pause, the silence was broken by a sob. Those
+in the crowd who were curious enough to turn, beheld the colonel
+with a handkerchief to his eyes, his shoulders heaving. Somehow
+the colonel's noisy grief failed to excite the sympathy of those
+assembled. It was suspected that the wrecked showman was playing
+for sympathy.
+
+"Such a wealth of treasures is here offered," continued the auctioneer,
+"that for the first time in my career I confess myself unable
+to decide which article or lot to lay before you first."
+
+"You said that last week at Templeton," laughed a man in the crowd.
+"Go on!"
+
+Whereupon the auctioneer once more addressed his hearers in a
+burst of vocal fireworks.
+
+"I wonder what Prescott and his mucker friends are here to bid
+on?" Fred Ripley was asking himself. "Whatever it is, if it's
+nothing that I want for myself I'll bid it up as high against
+them as I can. For, of course, they've pooled their funds for
+whatever they want to get. They can't put in more than a quarter
+apiece, so a dollar and a half is all I have to beat. I'll wager
+they already suspect that I'm here just to make things come higher
+for them. I hope they do suspect!"
+
+It was just after the Fourth of July. The summer sun shone fiercely
+down upon the assemblage.
+
+"Perhaps, first of all," announced the auctioneer, after pausing
+to take breath, "it will be the proper thing to do to offer the
+tent itself. At this point, however, I will say that the foreclosing
+creditor of the show himself bids two hundred dollars on the tent.
+No bid, unless it be more than two hundred dollars, can be accepted.
+Come, now, friends, here is a fine opportunity for a shrewd business
+man. One need not be a showman, or have any personal need of
+a tent, in order to become a bidder. Whoever buys this tent to-day
+will be able to realize handsomely on his investment by selling
+this big-top tent in turn to some showman in need of a tent.
+Who will start the bidding at three hundred dollars?"
+
+No one started it. After the auctioneer had talked for five minutes
+without getting a "rise" out of any Gridley citizen, he mournfully
+declared the tent to be outside of the sale.
+
+"Has anyone here any choice as to what he wants me to offer next?"
+questioned the salesman of the afternoon.
+
+There was no response.
+
+"Come, come, gentlemen!" rebuked the auctioneer. "Don't let the
+July sun bake your intellects, or the first cool day that comes
+along will find you all filled with unavailing regrets. Hasn't
+some one a choice as to what should be offered next?"
+
+Still receiving no reply, he heaved a sigh, then added:
+
+"I see that we shall have to start action in some way. Therefore
+we'll bring out something that is action personified, with grace
+mingled. Bring out the ponies. Gentlemen, I am now going to
+offer you your choice of eight of the handsomest ponies you ever-----"
+
+"But there are forty ponies and thirty-two good wagon horses,"
+piped up a business man in the audience.
+
+"There were," corrected the auctioneer, mournfully. "But most
+of the live stock was rented. Colonel Grundy had hoped to buy
+the stock gradually out of the receipts of the show. All that
+he owned in the way of live stock consisted of eight ponies.
+And here they come! Beauties, aren't they?"
+
+Despite the heat of the day it was as though a frost had settled
+down over the scene. Many of the men present were butchers, grocers
+or others who had hoped to pick up cheap horses to be used in
+their business.
+
+"Ponies are no good in this town," cried one man. "Lead 'em away.
+Come on, neighbors."
+
+"Wait, wait!" urged the auctioneer. "There are some bargains
+yet to come that will interest you all. Since we have the ponies
+on the spot let us begin to run them off. It will teach you all
+how to bid quickly when you see wonderful bargains bought up under
+your noses!"
+
+The bidding, however, was lax at first. A stable boy mounted
+one of the little animals, riding about at reckless pace.
+
+"Now, start the bidding!"
+
+After five minutes talking an opening bid of five dollars for
+the pony had been made and this had been advanced to seven.
+
+With all the zeal at his command the auctioneer drove the bidding
+along. It reached fourteen dollars, and there stopped. At last
+the pony was knocked down to a man who thought he could use the
+animal in a very light delivery wagon.
+
+"Now, gentlemen, wake up!" begged the auctioneer. "Let us have
+some bidding worthy of the fair name of Gridley for good judgment
+in business matters. Lead the roan pony forth."
+
+Undoubtedly the first pony had been a fair bargain at fourteen
+dollars. The bidding on the second animal began at ten dollars,
+going quickly to eighteen. From that point the offers traveled
+slowly until twenty-six dollars had been named. At this price
+the pony was sold.
+
+From that time on the ponies were "knocked down" rather briskly,
+though the highest-priced one of the first seven brought only
+thirty-one dollars.
+
+Now came the eighth.
+
+"You see what this animal is for yourselves, gentlemen," declared
+the auctioneer. "We don't need to have this sleek little animal's
+paces shown. We are in a hurry to get through. Who opens with
+twenty dollars?"
+
+"He is a handsome little animal, isn't he?" exclaimed Dick Prescott,
+crowding forward and gazing at the pony with glistening eyes.
+
+"I wish I had the money to buy him," whispered Dave Darrin.
+
+"Maybe I couldn't use that kind of a cut-down horse!" glowed Tom
+Reade, while Harry and Dan looked on longingly.
+
+"That's what the muckers are here after!" thought Fred Ripley,
+who had been watching them closely. "Now, no matter how much
+money they may think they have, I'll show them how easy it is
+for a fellow of my financial standing to step in and get the chestnut
+pony away from them!"
+
+"Who starts the bidding with twenty dollars?" demanded the auctioneer.
+
+"Ten," finally responded a man in the crowd.
+
+"Thank you. But, gentlemen, ten dollars is a shame for a beautiful
+animal like this. Who makes it twenty? Start it right up now!"
+
+Presently the bidding had reached sixteen dollars. Dick and his
+chums had crowded still closer to the pony, looking on with lively
+interest.
+
+"Here's where I sting Prescott and his crew!" muttered Fred Ripley
+under his breath. Then, aloud, he called:
+
+"Twenty!"
+
+"Thank you," smiled the auctioneer, nodding in Ripley's direction.
+"Here is a young man of sound judgment and a good idea of money
+values, as his manner and his whole appearance testify."
+
+"Someone hold Rip, or he'll burst," laughed Greg Holmes in Dick's
+ear.
+
+But Fred thought the chums were conferring as to how far they
+could go with what means the six of them might have at hand.
+
+"They will get going soon," thought Fred gleefully.
+
+Just then Dick Prescott piped up:
+
+"Twenty-two!"
+
+"Twenty-two? Thank you," bowed the auctioneer. "Another young
+gentleman of the finest judgment. Who says twenty-five?"
+
+"Twenty-three," offered Fred.
+
+"Twenty-five," called Prescott promptly.
+
+An instant after Dick had made this bid he felt heartily ashamed
+of himself. He hadn't intended to buy the pony, and didn't have
+the money. He had obeyed a sudden instinct to tease Fred Ripley,
+but now Dick wished he hadn't done it.
+
+"Twenty-six!" called young Ripley.
+
+The auctioneer looked at Prescott, but the latter, already abashed
+at his own conduct, made no further offer.
+
+"Twenty-eight!" called a man in the crowd, who knew that the wealthy
+lawyer's son usually got whatever he wanted very badly. This
+new bidder thought he saw a chance to get the pony, then later
+to force Fred to pay a still higher price for the animal.
+
+"Thirty!" called Ripley, with a sidelong glance at Dick & Co.
+
+"Did I hear you offer thirty-five?" queried the auctioneer, singling
+out Dick Prescott.
+
+But Dick remained mute. However, in the next instant Greg Holmes,
+ere Prescott could stop him, blurted out with:
+
+"Thirty-two!"
+
+"Thirty-four!" called Ripley briskly.
+
+Greg opened his mouth, but Dick nudged him. "Don't bid, Greg.
+You'd feel cheap if you had to take the pony and couldn't produce
+the money," Dick admonished him.
+
+"Thirty-five!" called the man who had raised the bidding before.
+
+"Thirty-six," from Ripley.
+
+"Thirty-eight!" called the man.
+
+"Thirty-nine!" offered Fred, though he was beginning to perspire
+freely.
+
+"Forty!" promptly offered the man.
+
+"Forty-one!" said Fred.
+
+And there it hung. After three minutes more of hard work on the
+auctioneer's part the pony went to Ripley at forty-one dollars.
+
+"I don't know what my father will say to me for this," groaned
+the lawyer's son. "But, anyway, Prescott and his crew didn't
+get the chestnut pony, and this is the last piece of live stock,
+so there's none left for them."
+
+He cast a triumphant look in the direction of those whom he termed
+"the mucker boys."
+
+"Rip was bidding to keep us from getting a look-in!" whispered
+Tom Reade gleefully.
+
+"That was what I thought," nodded Dick Prescott. "That was why
+I threw in a couple of bids---just to make him pay for his meanness.
+But I'm sorry I did it."
+
+"Step up and pay your money!" ordered the auctioneer. "Don't
+keep us waiting all day."
+
+"Won't a deposit do?" demanded Fred, coming forward.
+
+"Yes; we'll take fifteen dollars, and hold your purchase until
+one hour after the sale closes," replied the auctioneer. "Then,
+if you don't come along fast with the remainder, your deposit
+will be forfeited."
+
+"I'll raise the money all right," drawled Ripley, with an important
+air, as he passed up three five dollar bills. "Give me a receipt
+for this, please."
+
+"You've money enough there to pay it all," said the auctioneer.
+
+"Yes; but I may bid on something else," Fred replied.
+
+"Good luck to you," laughed the auctioneer.
+
+Presently along came a miscellaneous lot of the weapons that had
+been used by cowboys and Indians connected with the show. The
+auctioneer tried to close these out in one lot, but there were
+no bids.
+
+Several of the younger men did brisk, but not high bidding for
+the rifles. These were disposed of.
+
+Then tomahawks were offered for sale, singly. The first ones
+offered went at an average of twenty-five cents each. At last
+Dan Dalzell secured one for a nickel, paid his money and proudly
+tucked his purchase under his arm.
+
+"Bring out the grand war canoe!" called the auctioneer at last.
+
+Now every drop of blood in Dick Prescott's body tingled. His
+chums, too, were equally aroused. It was this that they had hope
+of securing---if it went off at a price next to nothing!
+
+So intensely interested were the six young high school athletes
+in the proceedings now that each one steeled himself to prevent
+betraying the fact. All were aware that Fred Ripley's malicious
+eyes were watching them. If he suspected that they wanted the
+canoe he could put the bidding up to a figure that would make
+their wishes impossible of fulfillment.
+
+Dick yawned. He looked intensely bored.
+
+"Come along," proposed Dave in an audible voice. "There's nothing
+here we can get."
+
+"Yes; it's getting tedious," hinted Tom Reade.
+
+Dalzell and Hazelton also appeared to lose all interest in the
+auction.
+
+"I was in hopes they'd want that canoe," muttered Fred Ripley,
+feeling as though he had been cheated out of a great pleasure.
+"As it happens I know all about that canoe. Wow! Wouldn't they
+groan if they put up all their money for the canoe---_and then
+found out_!"
+
+Just then the canoe was brought out. It was bolstered up on a
+long truck, drawn by a pair of horses. Twenty-eight feet long,
+slender and of graceful lines, this canoe, with its oiled birch
+bark glistening in the sun, was a thing of beauty. It was one
+of the genuine articles that the show had carried---of real Indian
+model and workmanship.
+
+"Gaze upon it, gentlemen!" cried the auctioneer enthusiastically.
+"Did you ever see the like of this grand war canoe? History
+in every line of it! Picture to yourselves the bygone days in
+which such a canoe, filled with painted braves, stole along in
+the shadows fringing the bank of some noble stream. Portray to
+your own minds such a marauding band stealing down stream upon
+some settlement, there to fall upon our hardy pioneers and put
+them to the death!"
+
+"I'm glad I'm living now, instead of in those days," called a
+man from the crowd, raising a laugh.
+
+"Gentlemen, before you are through," suggested the auctioneer,
+"one of you will be the proud and happy possessor of this magnificent
+war canoe. It is a priceless gem, especially when considered
+in the light of good old American history. Now, who will start
+the bidding? Who will say, clearly and distinctly, thirty dollars?"
+
+"We're not brave enough in these days!" called a voice from the
+crowd.
+
+"That's right, friends---have fun with me," retorted the perspiring
+auctioneer. "But don't let this valuable, beautiful trophy get
+away from you."
+
+Yet, though the auctioneer labored for a full five minutes he
+couldn't raise a bid.
+
+"Take it away! Take it back!" ordered the auctioneer wearily.
+"I was in hopes it would appeal to the artistic sense of this
+town, but it doesn't! Take it away."
+
+"If no one else wants it," drawled Dick Prescott, "I'll offer
+two dollars."
+
+"Thank you for good intentions, anyway," replied the salesman
+on the platform. "Two dollars I'm bid. Who says ten? Now, do
+wake up, friends!"
+
+But the bidding lagged.
+
+"This beautiful war canoe!" cried the auctioneer desperately.
+"It was the pride of the show. A real Indian canoe, equipped
+with gunwale seats and six Indian paddles. And only two dollars
+offered. Gentlemen, do I hear three? No! Last call! It's
+pitiful---two dollars!"
+
+Dick Prescott and all his friends were now in the seventh heaven of
+prospective delight. It seemed unreal, that they could get this
+treasure for any such sum.
+
+"If I must do it, I must," groaned the auctioneer. "Two I'm offered.
+Does anyone say more. Make it four! No? Make it three! No?
+Last call! Going, going-----"
+
+In another instant the big war canoe would have been knocked down
+to young Prescott at two dollars. Dick was "all on edge," though
+he strove to conceal the fact.
+
+"At two dollars, then!" groaned the auctioneer. "Two dollars!
+All right, then. Going, going-----"
+
+Just then the word "gone" would have been uttered, and the canoe
+gone to Dick & Co.
+
+"Three dollars!" called Fred Ripley.
+
+There was a pause, while the auctioneer exhorted the crowd to
+wake up.
+
+"Four," said young Prescott, at last, but he spoke with pretended
+indifference.
+
+"Five," chimed in a man who now seemed to take an interest. The
+bidding now went up slowly, a dollar at a time, with these three
+bidders, until twelve dollars was reached. Then the man dropped
+out. Dick was outwardly calm, though his chums shivered, for
+they knew that their combined capital did not reach the amount
+now being offered.
+
+"I'm afraid that canoe is going to Dick's head," whispered Harry
+Hazelton anxiously to Tom Reade.
+
+"Let him alone," retorted Tom in a low voice. "It's one of Dick
+Prescott's good points that he generally knows what he's doing."
+
+"But we have only-----"
+
+"Never mind if we're worth a million, or only a single dollar,"
+interrupted Reade impatiently. "Watch the battle between our
+leader and Rip, the Mean!"
+
+Now the bidding became slower, fifty cents at a time being offered,
+bids coming only when the auctioneer threatened to "knock down."
+
+"I don't want to get this confounded canoe fastened onto me,"
+grumbled Fred Ripley to himself. "I want to stick Prescott and
+his crowd for all I can, but I must look out that I don't get
+stung. I know better than to want that canoe, no matter how good
+it _looks_!"
+
+"Sixteen," said Dick at last, feeling more desperate inwardly
+than his face showed.
+
+"Sixteen-fifty," from Ripley.
+
+"Seventeen," offered Dick, after a pause.
+
+"Seventeen-fifty," announced Fred, after another long bait.
+
+"Eighteen!" followed up young Prescott. He was in a cold perspiration
+now, lest the fight be forced too far.
+
+To his astonishment, Fred Ripley, an ugly sneer on his face, turned
+his back on the bidding.
+
+"Are you through, gentlemen?" demanded the auctioneer, after a
+keen look in the direction of the lawyer's son.
+
+"I am," Ripley growled over his shoulder.
+
+"I am offered eighteen! Eighteen! Eighteen! Who says nineteen?
+Make it eighteen-fifty! Who says eighteen-fifty? Eighteen and
+a quarter! Are you through, gentlemen? Then going, going---gone!
+Sold to Master Prescott at eighteen dollars. Young man, I congratulate
+you. Walk right up and pay your money! All, or a deposit?"
+
+Dick, who had been collecting loose change from his chums, now
+came forward.
+
+"I'll pay a deposit of seven dollars," he announced.
+
+"Hand it here, then. Seven dollars; thank you. Here's your receipt.
+Now, remember, Prescott, you have until the end of one hour after
+the sale closes. Then, if you're not here with the other eleven
+dollars, you must expect to forfeit this deposit."
+
+"I know," Dick nodded.
+
+Then he hurried off to his chums.
+
+"Come along," he said, with desperate energy, as he led them away
+from the field. On the sidewalk he halted.
+
+"We've got it, fellows!" he exulted. "We've got it! Hooray!"
+
+"Yes; we've got it, if we've got eleven dollars more---which we
+haven't," Greg remarked.
+
+"We've eleven dollars more to raise," Prescott went on hurriedly.
+"Roughly, that's two dollars apiece. We must hustle, too."
+
+"No hustle for mine," yawned Dan Dalzell. "I'll just step down
+to my bank and get the money. Will two dollars be enough, Dick?"
+
+"Stop that talk," ordered Dave Darrin, getting a grip on Dan's
+shirt collar. "If you don't, I'll thrash you! Dick has a scheme.
+Out with it, old chap!"
+
+"The scheme is simple enough," said Prescott hurriedly. "We must
+each get two dollars, and get it like lightning. That will come
+to a dollar over the amount we need, but we shall need the extra
+dollar, anyway. So hustle! Borrow the money from anyone who'll
+let you have it. Offer to work the money out at any time---any
+old kind of work. The only point is to come running back with
+the money. Get it in any honest way that you can, and don't one
+of you dare to fail, or we'll lose our deposit money and our canoe.
+Start!"
+
+Nor did Prescott lose any time himself, but raced down the street,
+turned into Main Street and ran on until he came to the little
+cross street on which stood the bookstore conducted by his father
+and mother.
+
+"Mercy, Dick! What makes you run so?" asked Mrs. Prescott. Dick
+was rejoicing to discover that there was, at this moment, no customer
+in the store.
+
+"Mother," replied her son, "I want to borrow three dollars this
+minute. I'll be responsible for it---I'll pay it back. Please
+let me have it---in a hurry!"
+
+Then, briefly, he poured out the story. Mrs. Prescott's hand
+had already traveled toward the cash register.
+
+"We're very short of money just now, my boy. Try to earn this
+and pay it back quickly. You know, trade is slow in the summer
+time, and we have several bills to meet."
+
+"Yes, I'll pay it back, mother, at the first chance---and I'll
+make the chance---somehow," promised young Prescott. "Thank you."
+
+The money in his hand, Dick raced back to the lot where the show
+tent still stood.
+
+He was back before any of the others and waited impatiently.
+Dave Darrin came up ten minutes later.
+
+"Did you get it?" asked Dick anxiously.
+
+"Yes," replied Dave laconically, pushing two one dollar bills
+into Dick's hand.
+
+One by one the other boys arrived. Each had managed to round
+up his part of the assessment.
+
+With thirteen dollars in his hand, Dick went up to the auctioneer's
+clerk.
+
+"I am ready to pay the other eleven dollars on the canoe," Prescott
+announced, speaking as calmly as possible.
+
+"All right," agreed the clerk. "But you'll have to find some
+man you can trust to take the bill of sale. We can't pass title
+to a minor."
+
+"Why didn't you tell me that before?" Dick demanded.
+
+"That's all right. It wasn't necessary before, but it is now.
+Just find some man who will treat you all right and give you
+the canoe. Then we'll take the money and make out the bill of
+sale to him."
+
+Fred Ripley now sauntered up, offering his money. He was given
+the same directions for finding a man to whom title could pass.
+
+Dick looked about him. Then across the lot, and over on the further
+side of the street he saw his father.
+
+Dick returned quickly to the lot with Mr. Prescott, explaining
+the situation. The bookseller listened gravely, but offered no
+objections. He stepped over, paid the money for Dick, then said:
+
+"I must be going. Turn the canoe over to my son."
+
+"Yes, sir," replied the auctioneer's clerk. "Men, haul out the
+truck that has the canoe on."
+
+Mr. Prescott had already walked away. Dick and his chums greeted
+the coming of truck and canoe with a wild whoop. Then they piled
+up on the truck to inspect their treasure.
+
+Fred Ripley, returning with Mr. Dodge, a local banker, saw the
+six youngsters climbing up to look at their purchase. A broad,
+malicious grin appeared on Ripley's face.
+
+"Sold! sold!" gasped Dave Darrin. Then his face flushed with anger.
+For the canoe, which looked well enough on exhibition, proved
+to have three bad holes in her hull, which had been carefully
+concealed by the manner in which the craft had been propped up
+on the truck.
+
+The great war canoe looked worthless---certain to sink in less than
+sixty seconds if launched!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"RIP" TRIES OUT HIS BARGAIN
+
+
+Had a meaner trick ever been played on boys with whom it was so
+hard to raise money?
+
+"Ha, ha, ha!" chuckled Fred Ripley, so loudly that the dismayed,
+angry boys could not fail to hear him.
+
+"You sneak! You knew it all the time!" flared Dave Darrin, gazing
+down in disgust at the lawyer's son.
+
+"Maybe I did know," Fred admitted, yet speaking to Mr. Dodge.
+"You see, one of my father's clerks served the papers which attached
+the show."
+
+There was no help for Dick & Co. They had parted with their money
+and their "property" had been turned over to them.
+
+It is an ancient principle of law that the buyer must beware.
+The auctioneer had been most careful not to represent the canoe
+as being fit for service. He had offered it as an historical
+curiosity!
+
+Dick & Co. looked at the canoe anxiously.
+
+"What shall we do with it?" asked Dave Darrin moodily.
+
+"Make a bonfire of it?" asked Danny Grin.
+
+"Might as well," Greg nodded.
+
+"No, sir!" Dick interrupted. "Tom, what do you say? You're one
+of the really handy boys. Can't this canoe be patched up, mended
+and put in commission?"
+
+"It might be done," Tom answered slowly.
+
+The other five stood regarding him with eager interest.
+
+"But we'd have to get an Indian here to show us how to do it."
+
+"Where are the Indians that were here with the show?" asked Harry
+Hazelton.
+
+"They went away as soon as the show was attached," Dick answered.
+"Probably they're hundreds of miles from here now. They were
+only hired out to the show by their white manager, and they've
+gone to another job. Besides, they were only show Indians,
+and probably they've forgotten all they ever knew about
+canoe-building---if they ever did know anything."
+
+"Then I don't see but that we're just as badly off as ever," sighed
+Greg. "We're out eighteen dollars and the fine canoe that we
+expected would provide us with so much fun."
+
+"The paddles look all right, anyway," spoke up Harry Hazelton,
+lifting one out of the canoe and looking it over critically.
+
+"Oh, yes, the paddles are all right, and the river is close at
+hand," spoke Dave Darrin vengefully. "All we need is a canoe
+that will float."
+
+"If it were a cedar canoe we might patch it easily enough," Prescott
+declared. "But I've heard that there is so much 'science' to
+making or mending a birch bark canoe that an amateur always makes
+the job worse."
+
+"Haw, haw, haw!" came boisterously from Fred Ripley. He and Mr.
+Dodge were now standing before the table of the auctioneer's clerk.
+Fred was paying down the remaining twenty-six dollars on the
+price he had bid for the handsome chestnut pony.
+
+"Yes, you're laughing at us, you contemptible Rip!" scowled Dave,
+though he spoke under his breath. "You can afford to lose money,
+for you always know where to get more. You knew this canoe was
+worthless, and you deliberately bid it up on us---you scoundrel!"
+
+"Shall we make Colonel Grundy a present of this canoe?" suggested
+Danny Grin dolefully.
+
+"The poor old man hasn't money enough to get the canoe away from
+here, even if he wanted to," replied Dick, in a voice of sympathy.
+
+"But how did the show folks manage to use this canoe?" asked Tom
+Reade.
+
+"They didn't, except on a truck in a street parade, I imagine,"
+Dick replied. "And that must be how the holes came to be in the
+bottom. The sun got in its work on the bark and oil, and blistered
+the body of the canoe so that it broke or wore away in spots.
+Oh, dear!"
+
+The sale was over, but a few odds and ends remained. Fred Ripley,
+having now paid the whole of his forty-one dollars through Mr.
+Dodge, ordered his handsome new purchase led out.
+
+A man came out, holding the pony's halter. He walked slowly,
+the pony moving contentedly after him.
+
+"A fine little animal!" glowed Fred, stroking the glossy coat.
+
+"He---er---looks rather old, doesn't he?" ventured Mr. Dodge.
+
+"Not so very old," Fred answered airily. "There is a lot of life
+and vim left in this little fellow. And he can show speed, too,
+or I'm all wrong."
+
+Then Fred's eye roved toward the pile of stuff on which no one
+had bid.
+
+"There's a good saddle," suggested Ripley. "The real western
+kind," nodded the auctioneer.
+
+It looked the part.
+
+"I'll give you two dollars for the saddle," Fred offered.
+
+"You'll pay ten if you get that saddle," replied the red-faced
+auctioneer.
+
+"Put it up and let us see how the bids will run," proposed Ripley.
+
+"The sale is closed. Anything that is sold now will go at private
+sale," retorted the auctioneer.
+
+"Oh, come now!" protested Ripley. "I'd like to trade with you."
+
+"You can, if you produce the price. At least, your friend can.
+I can't deal with you, for you're a minor."
+
+Fred tried vainly to persuade the auctioneer to lower the price
+of the saddle, but finally concluded to pay ten dollars for it
+and two dollars for a bridle. A worn saddle cloth was "thrown
+in" for good measure. Ripley handed the money to the auctioneer's
+clerk.
+
+"Saddle up," directed Fred, tossing a quarter to the man who held
+the pony's bridle.
+
+Though flushed with his bargain, Fred was also feeling rather
+solemn. He had parted with nearly all of the sixty dollars his
+father had handed him that morning as his summer's spending money.
+He was beginning to wonder if his pony would really take the
+place of all the fun he had planned for his summer vacation.
+
+"Here is your mount, sir," called the man who had done the saddling.
+"Now, let's see what kind of a horseman you are."
+
+"As good as you'll find around Gridley," declared Fred complacently.
+
+Putting a foot into the left stirrup, he vaulted lightly to the
+animal's back.
+
+"He has a treasure, and we're stung," muttered Dave Darrin in
+a low voice. "Those that have plenty of money and can afford
+to lose don't often lose!"
+
+Before starting off Fred, glancing over at Dick & Co. standing
+dolefully on the truck, brayed insolently:
+
+"Haw, haw, haw!"
+
+Dave clenched his fists, but knew that he could do nothing without
+making himself ridiculous.
+
+"Get up, Prince!" ordered young Ripley, bringing one hand smartly
+against the animal's flank.
+
+"He's going to call his pony 'Prince,'" whispered Danny Grin.
+
+"It looks like an appropriate name," nodded Dick wistfully.
+
+For some reason the pony didn't seem inclined to start. Fred
+dug his heels against the animal's side and moved away at a walk.
+
+"A-a-a-ah!" murmured a crowd of small boys enviously.
+
+"Now, show a little speed, Prince," ordered Fred, digging his
+heels in hard.
+
+The pony broke into a trot. Someone passed Ripley a switch, with
+which he dealt his animal a stinging blow. Away went pony and
+rider at a slow canter.
+
+"Fine gait this little fellow has," exulted Fred, while cheers
+went up from the small boys.
+
+Suddenly the animal slowed down to a walk. Fred applied two sharp
+cuts with the switch, again starting his mount. Fred turned
+and came cantering back toward the group, feeling mightily proud
+of himself.
+
+Suddenly the pony stopped, trembling in every limb.
+
+"Get off, young man!" called someone. "Your pony is going to
+fall!"
+
+Fred got off, feeling rather peculiar. He wished that the six
+fellow high school boys over on the truck would move off.
+
+Mr. Dodge hurried over to the young man, looking very much concerned.
+
+"Fred," murmured the banker, "for all his fine looks I'm afraid
+there is something wrong with your pony."
+
+"What is it?" asked Fred, looking, as he felt, vastly troubled.
+
+At that moment an automobile stopped out in the road.
+
+"Beg your pardon, Mr. Dodge," called the chauffeur, "but are you
+going to want me soon?"
+
+"I want you at once," called back the banker, adding in a lower
+voice to Fred:
+
+"Flannery, my new chauffeur, was a coachman for many years. He's
+a fine judge of horseflesh."
+
+Flannery came up, an inquiring look on his face.
+
+"I want you to look this pony over and tell me just what you think
+of him," directed the banker.
+
+Flannery went over the pony's "lines" with the air of an expert,
+as, indeed, he was.
+
+"Fine-looking little beast," said Flannery. "He has been well
+fed and groomed."
+
+Then he looked into the pony's mouth, examining the teeth with
+great care.
+
+"Used to be a nice animal once," decided Flannery, "but he was
+that a long time ago. He's about twenty-five or twenty-six years
+old."
+
+"_What_!" exploded young Ripley, growing very red in the face.
+
+"Thinking of buying him, sir?" asked the chauffeur respectfully."
+
+"I've already bought him," confessed Fred ruefully.
+
+Flannery whistled softly. Then he took the pony by the bridle,
+dragging him along over the ground at a trot, the crowd making
+way for him.
+
+"Wind-broken," announced the ex-coachman, leading the trembling
+animal back. "Bad case, too."
+
+"A veterinary can cure that," Fred declared, speaking more airily
+than his feelings warranted.
+
+"Hm!" replied Flannery dryly. "You find the veterinary, Master
+Fred, and I'll show the gentleman how to make his fortune if he
+can cure wind-broken horses."
+
+"Then what good is the pony?" demanded Fred in exasperation.
+
+"Well, the hide ought to fetch three dollars, and there are a
+good many pounds of soap fat in him," replied Flannery slowly.
+
+"And is that all the good there is in this pony?" cried Ripley.
+He felt like screaming.
+
+"It's all the good I can see in him, sir," replied Flannery.
+
+"Then I won't take this pony," young Ripley declared, flushing
+hotly. "It's a downright swindle. Here, my man, hand my money
+back and take your old soap box."
+
+"Not to-day," declared the auctioneer briefly. He and his clerk
+were now preparing to depart.
+
+"You'd better!" warned Fred.
+
+"I won't."
+
+"Then I'll have you arrested."
+
+"Try it."
+
+"Run and get a policeman," Fred ordered, turning to a crowd of
+small boys.
+
+"All right," smiled the auctioneer. "If you'll be quick about
+it I'll wait for your policeman."
+
+But Mr. Dodge, who had shaken his head toward three boys who had
+shown signs of being willing to run for a policeman, now led young
+Ripley to one side.
+
+"No use making any fuss about it, I'm afraid, Fred. You saw the
+pony when it was offered for sale, didn't you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And you didn't ask to have him run? You didn't demand the privilege
+of trying him yourself?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"What representations did the auctioneer make about the pony?"
+pressed Mr. Dodge.
+
+"Why, he said the pony was a fine-looking animal-----"
+
+"And that's no lie," responded Mr. Dodge gravely. "What else?"
+
+"That's the only representation that I did make," broke in the
+auctioneer, who had strolled slowly over to them. "I also said
+that the pony showed all of his good points."
+
+"I'm afraid you'll have to swallow your loss, Fred," suggested
+the banker. "I'm sorry that I had even an innocent part in this
+trade."
+
+"Trade?" screamed Fred, now losing all control of himself. "It
+wasn't a trade at all! It's piracy! It's highway robbery! It
+was a barefaced swindle, and this swindler"
+
+Fred glared at the auctioneer.
+
+"Go slowly, young man," advised the salesman of the afternoon.
+
+"You're a swindler, and a mean one, taking downright advantage
+of other folks," stormed young Ripley. "But you won't get away
+with this swindle. My father is a lawyer---the best lawyer in
+the place---and he'll give you good reason to shiver!"
+
+"All right, young man. Send your father after me---if he'll take
+the case. But I'm going down to see him, anyway, for I must give
+him an accounting of the money taken in this afternoon. Come
+along, Edson," to his clerk.
+
+Very red in the face, Fred Ripley stood with his fists clenched,
+trying to avoid the eyes of the many grinning men and boys gathered
+around him.
+
+Dick & Co. had gotten down from the truck. They did not join
+in the fun-making at the enemy's expense, though naturally they
+did not feel very sorry for young Ripley.
+
+"Will you ride your pony home, sir?" asked the man who had done
+the saddling.
+
+"No," said Fred shortly. He felt tempted to tell the man to lead
+the worthless animal away and shoot it. Then he changed his mind.
+
+"Take this half dollar," he said, "and take the pony down and
+leave it in our stable."
+
+For another thought had just occurred to Fred Ripley. If he
+kept a close mouth, and watched his chance, he hoped that he
+might yet be able to make some sort of "trade" with the pony
+as an asset.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+BUYING FUEL FOR A BONFIRE?
+
+
+"Well, what are we going to do with our magnificent war canoe?"
+asked Greg Holmes dolefully. "Does the bonfire idea go?"
+
+"It doesn't," Dick retorted. "Although we don't know anything
+about such a job, and though it is supposed to need a sure enough
+expert to do it, we're at least going to try the thing out and
+see if we can't make this canoe float, and carry us safely, at
+that!"
+
+"We'd better decide how to get it away from here, anyway," proposed
+Tom Reade. "We haven't any lease of this lot."
+
+Over near the road a group of men and boys were laughing heartily.
+It was at the lawyer's son that their mirth was directed. As
+for Dick & Co., the Gridley crowd felt only sympathy. The proceedings
+of the afternoon had but emphasized the old idea that at an auction
+sale one must either use great judgment or take his chances.
+
+"Say," called Dick, "there goes the very man we ought to ask for
+advice. Harry, will you run over and ask Hiram Driggs to come
+here?"
+
+Hazelton, nodding, hurried away at full speed. "Hiram Driggs
+is an awfully high-priced man," sighed Tom Reade.
+
+"Perhaps his mere advice won't come high," young Prescott answered.
+"If it does, we'll begin right by telling him that we have no
+money---that we've nothing in fact but a birchbark white elephant
+on our hands."
+
+Driggs came over promptly, his keen, shrewd eyes twinkling.
+
+"So you boys have been buying away from my shop, and have been
+'stung,' eh!" queried Driggs, a short, rather stout man, of about
+forty.
+
+"Robbed, I'd call it," replied Dave Darrin.
+
+"Same thing, at a horse trade or an auction sale," hinted Hiram
+dryly as he got up on the truck. "Let's have a look at your steam
+yacht."
+
+For a few moments Driggs looked the canoe over in grim silence.
+
+"Whew!" was time final comment.
+
+"Pretty bad, isn't it?" Dick inquired.
+
+"Well, for my part, I'd sooner buy a real wreck," Driggs announced.
+"This may be an auctioneer's idea of honor. What was his name?"
+
+"The auctioneer's name? Caswell," Dick answered.
+
+"I'll make a note of that name," said Driggs, drawing out notebook
+and pencil, "and keep away from any auction that has a man named
+Caswell on the quarter-deck. Now, boys, what do you want to know
+about this canoe that your eyes don't tell you?"
+
+"About how much would it cost us to fix her?" asked Prescott.
+
+"Thirty dollars---maybe thirty-two," said Driggs, after another
+casual look at the canoe.
+
+"Let's announce the bonfire for to-night," urged Greg.
+
+"We haven't any such sum of money, Mr. Driggs," Dick went on.
+
+"Too bad, boys, for you'd probably have a lot of fun in this craft.
+If you want to sell it, maybe I could allow you four dollars
+for the craft as she stands."
+
+"We'd hate to part with the canoe," Dick continued.
+
+"I know, I know," remarked Driggs sympathetically. "It was wanting
+a boat badly when I was a boy that drove me into the boat business.
+But I didn't have to handle birch bark then, or my first craft
+would have sunk me. Say, boys, great joke how young Ripley got
+stung so badly, wasn't it?"
+
+"I know about how he feels," remarked Dick.
+
+"Yes, of course," smiled Driggs. "But you boys are entitled to
+some honest sympathy. I don't imagine young Ripley will get much
+sympathy, will he?"
+
+"Not a heap," Greg Holmes answered.
+
+"Well," resumed Driggs, "I ain't a mite sorry for the boy and
+his make-believe pony. But I wish I could help you with your
+boat, for I know you haven't any loose money to throw around like
+young Rip."
+
+Driggs dug his hands deep into his pockets and wrinkled his brow
+in thought.
+
+At last he looked up hopefully.
+
+"I'll tell you what I've been thinking about, boys. The town
+will be laughing at young Ripley to-morrow. But Rip, he'll be
+passing the laugh around on you young fellers, too. Now, I don't
+mind Rip's troubles; but it's different with you boys, and I know
+how it stings to part with all the money you could scrape together.
+Now, let's look this job over. I could say about thirty dollars
+for this job. It will cost twenty, and the other ten dollars
+would be profit, interest on my investment in my shop and so forth.
+Now, I'll let this job go at just the cost---twenty dollars,
+and throw off the profit and trimmings. Yes---to you young fellows---I'll
+call the job twenty dollars."
+
+"That's kind of you," said Dick, with a grateful sigh. "But we
+want to be honest with you, Mr. Drigg---Twenty dollars, or five,
+or a hundred---it would be all the same to us. We haven't the
+money."
+
+"Not so fast," returned Driggs, his eyes twinkling. "I'll give
+you credit, and treat the debt as a matter of honor between us."
+
+"But I don't know how we'd pay you back," Dick went on. "As it
+is, we've borrowed a good bit of money that we've got to pay back."
+
+"Exactly," agreed Driggs, "and you want to pay the other money
+back before you pay me. Yes; I'll take the job at cost---twenty
+dollars, and I'll throw in the use of one of my teams and trucks
+to come up here and get the canoe."
+
+"But I'm afraid, sir, that we'd be a very long time paying you."
+
+"No, you won't," Driggs disputed. "I don't allow long time bills,
+but I'll show you a way to pay me back fairly early, if you boys
+have the energy---and I believe you have. Now, you see, first
+off, boys, we'll need a lot of birch bark. I haven't any in stock,
+and the kind that is sound and good for canoe building is scarce
+these days. Now, first off, you'll have to range the woods for
+bark. Do you know where to find it?"
+
+"Yes," Dick nodded. "Over on that place they call Katson's Hill."
+
+"But that's about eleven miles from here," objected Driggs.
+
+"I know it is," Prescott answered. "But the point is that Katson's
+Hill is wild land. No tax assessor knows who is the owner of
+that land, and it wouldn't bring enough money to make it worth
+while to sell it at a sheriff's sale. So a number of farmers
+turn their cattle in there and use it for free grazing ground.
+As no owner can be found for the land we won't have to pay for
+the birch bark that we cut there."
+
+"That's so," Driggs acknowledged. "But it's an awful distance,
+and over some mighty rough bits of road. You'll be about dead
+after you've packed a load of birch bark in from Katson's Hill."
+
+"That wouldn't be anything, compared with having to do without
+our canoe," Dick returned.
+
+"Maybe not," Driggs conceded. "Now, boys, is there much of that
+birch bark on Katson's Hill?"
+
+"There must be several shiploads," Dave Darrin replied.
+
+"Good enough. Then, see here. I'll take this job at twenty dollars,
+if you boys will get the birch bark. After you've brought in
+enough to patch the canoe then you can bring in enough more to
+amount to twenty dollars. Is that a go?"
+
+"It's wonderfully kind of you," Dick answered gratefully.
+
+"Not much it isn't," Driggs grinned, "and it will make that young
+Ripley cub feel mighty sore and cheap when he finds that he was
+the only one who got 'skinned' at this auction. But before you
+get through cutting and hauling birch bark you may think I'm a
+pretty hard taskmaster. I'll call it a go, if you boys will."
+
+"We'll pay our full debt, Mr. Driggs, and pay you a load of thanks
+besides."
+
+"All right," nodded Driggs, jumping down off the truck, in haste
+to get away from the embarrassment of being thanked. "Some of
+you just hang around here until my man, Jim Snowden, gets up here
+with the truck. After Jim starts away with your war canoe then
+you can leave the rest to me, except cutting and hauling several
+loads of birch bark to square up matters."
+
+Driggs beat a hasty retreat now. When he had gone the members
+of Dick & Co. exchanged glances. Then Holmes began to dance
+his best idea of a jig.
+
+"We'll have that bonfire at eight o'clock tonight, Greg," Dick
+reminded him with a smile.
+
+"Will you?" demanded Greg, scowling fiercely. "If any of you
+fellows have any matches, then just keep away from that canoe,
+or I'll fight. We can't afford to take any risks. Whoop!"
+
+"Whoop!" answered Harry Hazelton, standing on his head.
+
+"Whoop!" echoed Dave Darrin, giving Danny Grin a playful punch
+that sent Dalzell sprawling.
+
+They were as happy a lot of boys as one could wish to see. They
+were to have their canoe and all the sport that that meant. It
+was to be a safe craft---as good as new! For Hiram Driggs was
+a dependable and skilful boat builder.
+
+"Hey, too bad you fellows got stung so fearfully," cried a grammar
+school boy in passing. "I'm mighty sorry."
+
+"Thank you," Dick answered. "But we're going to have the canoe
+repaired. We'll be having lots of fun in the war canoe after
+a few days."
+
+"How you going to get her fixed?" asked the other boy.
+
+"Hiram Driggs has taken the job, and you know what he can do with
+boats."
+
+"Whee! I'm glad on you're going to have the canoe fixed all right,"
+nodded the other boy, and passed on.
+
+Forty-five minutes after Driggs' departure Jim Snowden came up
+with the truck. With the help of the boys he loaded the canoe
+from the other truck, then started away.
+
+By this time the news had spread to other boys that Dick & Co.
+would soon have their war canoe afloat in fine order---that Hiram
+Driggs stood sponsor for the prediction.
+
+That evening Fred Ripley had a somewhat unpleasant talk with his
+father.
+
+"You've no business with pocket money," said Squire Ripley sternly.
+"You have no idea of the value of it."
+
+"I thought I had made a good bargain," said Fred sullenly.
+
+"So does every fool who parts with his money as easily as you
+do," returned the lawyer. "Well, enjoy yourself, my boy. If
+you'd rather have that paralyzed pony than the money I gave you
+to enjoy the summer with, I suppose you're entitled to your choice,
+though I don't like your judgment."
+
+"Of course," suggested Fred, "since I've met with misfortune you
+won't be too hard on me. You'll let me have a little more money,
+so I won't have to go through the summer like a mucker."
+
+"I'll give you no more spending money this summer," retorted the
+lawyer, adding, grimly: "If I did, you'd probably go and buy a
+cart to match your horse."
+
+In fact Fred felt so uncomfortable at home that, just after dark,
+he started up Main Street.
+
+"Where's your horse, Fred?" called Bert Dodge. "Why are you walking
+when you own one of the best steeds that ever came out of Arabia?"
+
+"Shut up, won't you?" demanded Fred sulkily.
+
+Bert chuckled for a while before he went on:
+
+"Of course, I'm sorry for you, Fred, but it's all so funny that
+I can't help laughing."
+
+"Oh, yes, it must be awfully funny," replied young Ripley testily.
+
+"But you can afford it," said Bert. "You can get more money from
+your father."
+
+"I suppose so," Ripley assented, not caring to repeat his interview
+with his father. "Anyway, I'm glad that Dick Prescott and the
+rest of his crowd got fooled as badly as I did. And they can't
+get any more money this summer."
+
+"I guess they must have gotten some already," Bert rejoined.
+"Didn't you hear the news about that canoe?"
+
+"What news?" asked Fred quickly.
+
+"Why, they've engaged Hiram Driggs to put the canoe in good order."
+
+"Where did they get the money?" asked Fred, his brow darkening.
+
+"I don't know," was Bert's rejoinder. "But they must be able
+to raise money all right, for Driggs has the canoe down at his
+yard, and he has promised it to them in a few days."
+
+This news came like a slap in the face to the lawyer's son. He
+remained with Bert for another hour, but all the time Fred brooded
+over the fact that Dick & Co. were to have their canoe after all.
+
+"At that, I don't know that they will have their canoe," Fred
+remarked darkly to himself as he started homeward.
+
+Shortly after midnight Fred Ripley sneaked away from his home,
+turning his face in the direction of Hiram Driggs' boatyard.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+HIRAM PRIES A SECRET LOOSE
+
+
+When he left home Fred Ripley had no clearly defined idea as to
+what he meant to do.
+
+However, he had in one pocket a keen-bladed pocket knife. Well
+wrapped in paper a short but sharp-edged chisel rested in one
+of the side pockets of his coat.
+
+At the outset his only purpose was to do irreparable mischief
+to the war canoe. The means of accomplishing that purpose he
+must decide upon when he reached the boatyard.
+
+How dark it was, and how hot! Late as the hour was the baking
+heat of the day did not seem to have left the ground. Fred walked
+along rapidly, fanning his perspiring face with his straw hat.
+
+"They'll have their war canoe in the water in a few days, will
+they?" the lawyer's son muttered. "Humph!"
+
+Through the side streets he went, keeping a sharp lookout. Conscious
+of the fact that he was bent on an unworthy errand, Fred did not
+care to be recognized abroad at this unusual hour.
+
+In a few minutes he had reached the boatyard. This was surrounded
+by a high board fence, and the gate was locked.
+
+"It won't do to get over the fence," young Ripley decided. "I
+might be seen and watched. But I know a way."
+
+At one corner of the yard the fence ran almost, though not quite
+to the bank of the river.
+
+Keeping well within the shadow of the fence, young Ripley hastened
+toward this point.
+
+Here the amount of space was not sufficient for him to step around
+the end of the fence. However, by grasping it on both sides Fred
+could swing himself around it and into the boatyard. He did so
+with ease, then halted, peering cautiously about the yard.
+
+"No one here," the lawyer's son decided at last. "Whew! I wouldn't
+dare even to stumble over a tramp taking a nap here. This is
+ticklish business, or it would be if I were caught here. Now,
+where is the canoe?"
+
+Early in the evening the moon had shone, but now the stars gave
+all the light there was to be had. It was so close in the yard
+that Fred soon pulled off his jacket, carrying it or his arm.
+
+Nowhere in the open yard was the canoe to be seen. There were
+three semi-open sheds. Into each of these in turn Ripley peered.
+The canoe was nowhere to be found.
+
+"I'm a fool to lose my sleep and take all the risk for this!"
+grunted the boy, halting and staring moodily about him in his
+great disappointment. He now glared angrily at a large building,
+two-thirds boathouse and one-third boat-building shop.
+
+"Hiram Driggs had the canoe taken in there!" muttered the boy.
+"Just my luck. I couldn't get into that building unless I broke
+a window---and I don't dare do that."
+
+Still determined to get at the canoe, if possible, Fred stole
+down to the inclined platform from which boats were carried to
+the water. But the water-front entrance to the boathouse also
+proved to be locked.
+
+"There's no show for me here," grunted the young prowler. "I
+wonder if any of the windows have been left unlocked."
+
+His good sense told him that it would be a serious matter indeed
+to raise a window and enter the building---if he were caught.
+
+But Fred, after a few moments of strained listening, decided to
+take the chance. At any hazard that he dared take he must get
+to the war canoe and put it out of commission for all time.
+
+He tried three of the windows. All of them proved to be locked.
+
+"I'm going to have some more of my usual luck," groaned young
+Ripley. "I wonder why it is that I always have such poor luck
+when I have my heart most set on doing a thing?"
+
+He was slipping along to the fourth window when he heard a sound
+that almost caused his heart to stop beating.
+
+Merely the sound of footsteps pausing by the gate to the boatyard---that
+was all, for a moment. But Fred cowered in acute dread.
+
+"Who's in there?" called a steady voice, that filled Fred Ripley
+with consternation, He knew that voice! It belonged to a member
+of the Gridley police force.
+
+"Talk about your tough luck!" shivered Fred. "This is the limit!
+Now, I'm in for it."
+
+For a few moments he crouched close to the boathouse nearly paralyzed
+with fright. His consternation increased when a sound over by
+the fence indicated that the policeman was trying to mount that
+barrier.
+
+Now, Fred's courage returned, or enough of it to enable him to
+try to escape. Bending low, he turned and ran swiftly, almost
+noiselessly. His speed astonished even himself. He gained the
+corner of the fence by which he had entered the yard. Taking
+a firm hold, he swung himself around the fence and out of sight
+just as the policeman's head showed over the top of it.
+
+Fortunately for the fugitive, the policeman, in climbing the fence,
+had made noise enough to drown the slight sounds produced by Ripley's
+frenzied flight.
+
+His first thought being of burglars, the policeman drew his revolver
+as soon as his feet touched the ground inside the yard. With
+his left hand he held an electric pocket flash lamp, whose rays
+he flashed into the dark places.
+
+Fred did not stop until he found himself safely within the grounds
+of his home. There he halted, fanning himself with his hat and
+taking long breaths. If discovered by anyone he could easily
+claim that he had found the night too hot to sleep inside and
+had come outdoors for air.
+
+The next morning, about ten o'clock, Hiram Driggs, who had already
+been visited by Dick & Co., on their way to Katson's Hill, was
+called upon by Policeman Curtis of the Gridley force. Curtis,
+being off duty, was in citizen's clothes.
+
+"Did you miss anything out of the plant this morning, Mr. Driggs?"
+inquired the guardian of life and property.
+
+"Nothing that I know of," Driggs answered. "Why?"
+
+"I thought I heard burglars about here last night, while on duty,"
+the policeman explained. "I came up over the fence, and looked
+about the place, but couldn't find anything. Yes, I did, too,
+though. I'll talk about that in a moment. You see, I went off
+duty at one o'clock this morning, so I didn't spend much time
+here. I'm on house reserve duty to-day. Now, for what I found
+here. I didn't find a living soul in the yard, but on the ground,
+near one of the open sheds, I came upon a chisel wrapped in a
+newspaper. I hid it, then, but I'll show it to you now. Maybe
+it belongs to the shop, and if so I've no business with it. But,
+if you don't recognize the chisel as yours, then I'll take it
+up to the station house and turn it over to the chief."
+
+"After all that stretch o' talk," smiled Driggs, "you ought to
+show me a whole case full of chisels."
+
+"I hid it over here," Curtis explained, going over to one of the
+open sheds. "I tucked it in under this packing case. Here it
+is, now, just where I left it. Do you recognize it as yours?"
+
+From the newspaper wrapping Driggs took the small but keen-edged
+implement. He regarded it curiously. Then he turned the paper
+over slowly.
+
+"Do you recognize it?" persisted the policeman.
+
+"Mebbe," said Driggs. "I guess you can leave it here. But, in
+case any question should come up about it in the future, suppose
+you write your autograph on the handle of the chisel."
+
+Driggs passed over his fountain pen, the policeman obligingly
+obeying the request for his signature on the wood.
+
+"Now, just for good measure, write your name across the top of
+the newspaper, too," Driggs proposed. Curtis did so.
+
+"You seem to attach a good deal of importance to this find," hinted
+the policeman.
+
+"Mebbe," assented Driggs indifferently. "Mebbe not. But you
+and I will both know this paper and the chisel again, if we see
+it, won't we?"
+
+"We ought to," nodded the policeman. "But you don't consider
+the matter as important enough, then, to interest the police?"
+
+"I wouldn't think o' bothering the police force about a trifling
+little matter like this," returned Driggs carelessly.
+
+Just as soon, however, as the policeman had gone, Driggs darted
+into his private office. There he took up the telephone receiver
+and asked for Lawyer Ripley's residence number.
+
+"Is Master Fred at home!" he inquired, when a servant of the Ripley
+household answered the telephone. Fred was at home, the servant
+replied, and then summoned Fred to the telephone.
+
+"Well, who is it, and what is it?" asked Fred crossly.
+
+"Hiram Driggs," responded the boat builder dryly. "That's 'who
+is it.' As to 'what is it,' if you'll take a quick run over to
+my office at the boatyard I'll tell you the rest of it."
+
+"What on earth can you want to see me about?" Fred demanded.
+
+Even over the wire, the note of dismay in Ripley's voice was plainly
+evident to Driggs, who chuckled.
+
+"I can't tell you, over the wire, all that I want to see you about,"
+Driggs replied. "You'd better come over here at once. I can
+promise you that it's something interesting."
+
+"I---I don't believe I can come over to-day," Fred answered hesitatingly.
+"The weather is too hot."
+
+"Mebbe the weather will get hotter, if you don't come," Hiram
+Driggs responded calmly.
+
+"That's a joke, eh?" queried Fred. "Ha, ha, ha!"
+
+"Depends upon the feller's sense of humor," Driggs declared.
+"Well, you're coming over, aren't you?"
+
+"Ye-es, I'll come," Fred assented falteringly, for his guilty
+conscience made a coward of him. "You're a fine fellow, Mr. Driggs,
+and I'm glad to oblige anyone like you. I'll be right over."
+
+"Thanks, ever so much, for the compliment," drawled Driggs in
+his most genial tone. "Such a compliment is especially appreciated
+when it comes from a young gentleman of your stripe. Good-bye."
+
+That word "stripe" caused Fred Ripley to have a disagreeable chill.
+He remembered that "stripes" are an important part of the design
+on a convict's suit of state-furnished clothes.
+
+"But he needn't think he can prove anything against me," Fred
+muttered to himself, as he started down the street. "Of course,
+I know I lost that chisel last night, and Driggs may have found
+it in his boatyard. But he can't prove that the chisel belongs
+to me, or to our house. There are lots more chisels just like
+that one. If Driggs tries to bluff me he'll find that I'm altogether
+too cool for him!"
+
+Nevertheless, it was an anxious young man who walked into the
+boat builder's office a few minutes later. Hiram Driggs, smiling
+broadly, held out his hand, which Fred took.
+
+"Sorry I wasn't here when you called last night," said Driggs
+affably.
+
+"I don't know what you mean," Fred rejoined promptly. "I didn't
+call at your house last night."
+
+"Oh, no," Driggs replied. "I meant when you called here."
+
+"I didn't call here, either."
+
+"Ever see this before?" asked Driggs, holding up the chisel.
+
+"Never," lied Fred.
+
+"That's curious," said Driggs musingly. "Officer Curtis, the
+man on this beat, found the chisel here, and it was wrapped up
+in part of this newspaper."
+
+Driggs brought forth from one of the drawers of his desk the newspaper
+in question.
+
+"What has that scrap of paper to do with it?" asked Fred, speaking
+as coolly as he could.
+
+"Why," explained Driggs, turning the paper over, "here's the mail
+sticker on this side, with your father's printed name and address
+pasted on it just as it came through the post-office."
+
+Fred gasped audibly this time. Driggs surveyed his face with
+a keen, tantalizing gaze.
+
+"Mebbe 'twas your father, then, who was in the yard last night,
+and who refused to answer the policeman's hail," suggested the
+boat builder. "I'd better go up to his office and show him these
+things and ask him, I guess."
+
+"But I don't believe my father will know anything about it," spoke
+young Ripley huskily.
+
+"Then your father will want to know something about it," Driggs
+went on. "He's a man of an inquiring turn of mind. Let's run
+up to his office together and ask him."
+
+"No, no, no!" urged Fred, his face growing paler.
+
+"Then why were you here last night?"
+
+"I wasn't here," protested the boy.
+
+"Perhaps I can tell you why you were here," Driggs went on, never
+losing his affable smile. "You don't like Dick Prescott, and
+you don't like his boy friends. Prescott has been too many for
+you on more than one occasion. But that is no reason why you
+should enter my yard after midnight. That is no reason why you
+should want to do harm to a war canoe or to any other property
+that happens to be in my yard. I really don't know whether you're
+to be blamed for being a glib liar, Ripley. You've never given
+yourself much practice at telling the truth, you know. But I
+have this to say: If anything happens to that canoe, or to anything
+else here, I shall make it my business to get hold of Officer
+Curtis, and he and I will drop in and show your father this chisel,
+and this piece of paper that it was wrapped in. As you will see,
+Curtis has written his signature on the paper and on the handle
+of the chisel, so that he may identify them again at any time.
+Now, Ripley, I won't look for you to pay this yard any more visits
+except in a proper way and during regular business hours. Good
+morning!"
+
+Hiram Driggs held out his hand as smilingly as ever, and Fred
+took it in a flabby grasp, feeling as though he were going to
+faint. Then without a word Ripley slunk out of the office, while
+Driggs gazed after him still smiling.
+
+"The mean scoundrel!" panted Fred, as he hurried away, his knees
+trembling under him. "There isn't a meaner fellow in town than
+Hiram Driggs, and some day he'll go and tell my father just for
+spite. I know he will! Now, I've got to find some good way
+to account for that paper and chisel I'll put in the day thinking
+up my story."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+BIRCH BARK MERCHANTS
+
+
+Away over on Katson's Hill six high school boys, stripped to their
+undershirts and trousers, were toiling hard, drenched in perspiration
+and with hands considerably the worse for their hard work.
+
+"What we're finding out is that it's one thing to strip bark for
+fun, and quite another thing to take it off in pieces large enough
+for a boat-builder," Dick Prescott declared.
+
+"It isn't as fast work as I thought it would be, either," Dave
+Darrin declared, running his knife slowly down the trunk of a
+young birch.
+
+"What we need is to bring a grindstone along with us," Tom Reade
+grunted, as he examined the edge of the largest blade in his jackknife.
+"I simply can't cut with this knife any more."
+
+"I couldn't cut with a fine razor," declared Greg Holmes. "Look
+at the blisters on my hands from the cutting I've already done."
+
+"Never mind your aches and pains," comforted Dave Darrin. "We're
+doing this to pay charges on our canoe, and Hiram Driggs has been
+mighty kind about the whole business. Think of the fun we're
+going to have when that canoe is launched; Now, fellows, Hiram
+Driggs has been mighty good to us, so I want to propose a plan
+for your approval. Whenever Driggs tells us that we've cut and
+hauled enough birch bark to pay him, then we must come out here
+and get still a few more loads, to pay him in good measure and
+show that we appreciate his kindness. Never mind how much our
+backs ache or our hands smart. Do you agree?"
+
+"I'll fight any fellow in the crowd who doesn't agree," announced
+Tom Reade.
+
+"You can't get up a fight with me on that score," retorted Greg.
+The others also quickly assented to Dave's plan.
+
+By and by the youngsters halted for half an hour to eat the luncheons
+they had brought with them. Then they went at their work again.
+
+At half-past three o'clock in the afternoon they tied up in bundles
+as much of the bark as each boy could carry, then started homeward.
+
+"We ought to get home in time for supper," Dick declared hopefully.
+
+It was about eight o'clock in the evening when they reached Greg's
+gate. The return was harder than they had expected. The road
+seemed to be twice as rough as it had been in the morning; they
+were utterly fagged, and discovered that even a load of birch
+bark can weigh a good deal under certain circumstances.
+
+"Pile it up in the back of the yard," Greg suggested, "and we'll
+take it around to Mr. Driggs in the morning."
+
+"Then we can hardly get back to Katson's Hill to-morrow, if we
+wait until the boatyard opens at eight o'clock," said Dave. "We
+ought to start for the hill before six, as we did this morning."
+
+"We'll none of us feel like going to Katson's Hill early to-morrow
+morning," smiled Dick wearily. "Fellows, I guess we'll have
+to put in twice as much time, and go every other day. I'm afraid
+it's going to be a little too much for us to do everyday."
+
+So this was agreed upon, though rather reluctantly, for Dick &
+Co. were anxious to repay Driggs at the earliest date.
+
+Not one of the six boys appeared on Main Street that evening.
+Each of them, after eating supper, crept away to bed to ease
+the aching of his muscles in slumber.
+
+The next morning they met at Greg's gate shortly after seven o'clock.
+
+"The loads will seem lighter to-day," laughed Dick.
+
+"But to-morrow---oh, me, oh, my!" groaned Reade, making a comical
+face.
+
+"It's the 'White Man's Burden,' you know," Dick laughed.
+
+"What is?" Dave inquired.
+
+"Debt---and its consequences."
+
+"My father has a horror of debt," Tom announced.
+
+"Well, I guess the black side of debt shows only when one doesn't
+intend to make an effort to pay it," Dick suggested. "The whole
+business world, so we were taught at high school, rests on a foundation
+of debt. The man who doesn't contract debts bigger than he can
+pay, won't find much horror in owing money. We owe Hiram Driggs
+twenty dollars, or rather we're going to owe it. But the bark
+we're going to take in to him to-day is going to pay a part of
+that debt. A few days more of tramping, blistered hands and aching
+backs, and we'll be well out of debt and have the rest of the
+summer for that great old canoe!"
+
+"Let's make an early start with the bark," proposed Tom. "I want
+to see if the stuff feels as heavy as it did late yesterday afternoon."
+
+"Humph! My load doesn't seem to weigh more than seven ounces,"
+Darrin declared, as he shouldered one of the piles of bark.
+
+"Lighter than air this morning," quoth Tom, "and only a short
+haul at that."
+
+When Hiram Driggs reached his boatyard at eight o'clock he found
+Dick & Co. waiting for him.
+
+"Well, well, well, boys!" Mr. Driggs called cheerily. "So you
+didn't back out."
+
+"Did you think we would, sir?" Dick inquired.
+
+"No; I knew you boys wouldn't back out. And I don't believe you
+threw away any bark on the way home, just to lighten your loads."
+
+Hiram went about the yard starting the day's work for his men,
+then came back to the boys.
+
+"Now, just bring the bark over to the platform and we'll look
+it over and sort it," suggested the boat builder.
+
+Dick & Co. carried their loads over to the platform, where they
+cut the lashings.
+
+"We'll make three heaps of the stuff," Driggs proposed. "One
+heap will be the worthless stuff that has to be thrown away.
+Another heap will be for the pieces that are good but small; they'll
+do for patches. The third heap will be the whole, sound strips.
+Mebbe I'd better do all the sorting myself."
+
+So the boys stood by, watching Driggs as he sorted the bundles
+of bark with the speed of a man who knows just what he wants.
+A quantity of the bark went on to the "worthless" heap, yet there
+was a goodly amount in each of the other piles by the time that
+the boat builder was through sorting it.
+
+"You've done first rate, boys," he announced at last. "Is there
+much more of that bark on Katson's Hill?"
+
+"We ought to be able to bring in fifty times as much bark as we've
+brought already," Dick answered.
+
+"I wish you would," Driggs retorted.
+
+"And give up the whole of our summer vacation?" Danny Grin asked
+anxiously.
+
+"Well, there is that side to it, after all," Driggs admitted quickly.
+"It must be a tough job on your backs, too. But, boys, I wouldn't
+mind having a lot of this stuff, for birch bark canoes are coming
+into favor again. The only trouble is that birch bark is hard
+to get, these days, and costs a lot to boot. So it makes birchbark
+canoes come pretty high. At the same time, there are plenty
+of wealthy folks who would pay me well for a birch-bark canoe.
+Now, I know that you boys, owning a canoe that will soon be in
+the water, won't be anxious to give up your whole summer to doing
+jobs for me. But couldn't you bring in a lot more bark if you
+had a team of horses and a good-sized wagon?"
+
+"Of course we could," Dick nodded. "But we haven't any horses
+or a wagon."
+
+"I was thinking," Driggs went on slowly. "I can spare my gray
+team and the big green wagon. Any of you boys know how to drive?"
+
+"All of us do," Dick answered, "though I guess Tom could handle
+a team better than any of the rest of us."
+
+"Then suppose you take my team out at six o'clock to-morrow morning?"
+Driggs suggested. "I'll have to charge you four dollars a day
+for it, but I'll take it in bark as payment. With the wagon you'll
+be able to bring in a lot more bark than you could without a wagon."
+
+"It's a fine idea, sir," glowed Dick, "and you're mighty kind
+to us."
+
+"Not especially kind," smiled the boat builder. "I can use a
+lot of this bark in my business, and I'm glad to get it on as
+reasonable a basis as you boys can bring it to me. You see, it's
+lucky that Katson's Hill is wild and distant land. If we had
+a land owner to deal with he'd make us pay high for the privilege
+of stripping the bark."
+
+"But why couldn't you send your own workmen out to cut the bark?"
+Dick asked. "They've as much right on Katson's Hill as we have."
+
+"Oh, yes; I could do that," Driggs assented. "And I could make
+a little more money that way, mebbe. But would it be square business,
+after you young men have trusted me with your business secret
+as to where bark can be had for nothing?"
+
+That was a ruggedly honest way of putting it that impressed Dick
+& Co.
+
+"I'll tell you what you---might do, Mr. Driggs," hinted Tom Reade.
+"You might lend us a grindstone, if you have one to spare. Then
+we can sharpen our knives right on the spot and cut bark faster."
+
+"You can have the grindstone," Driggs assented. "And I'll do
+better than that. I can spare half a dozen knives from the shop
+that are better than anything you carry in your pockets. Oh,
+we'll rush this business along fast."
+
+Six utterly happy high school boys reported at Hiram Driggs' stable
+at six o'clock the next morning. They harnessed the horses, put
+the grindstone in the wagon and all climbed aboard. Two seats
+held them all, and there was room for a load of bark, besides,
+several times as large as Dick & Co. could carry on their backs.
+
+Work went lightly that day! The shop knives cut far better than
+pocket knives could do, and the stone was at hand for sharpening.
+Six laughing and not very tired boys piled aboard the wagon that
+afternoon, with what looked like a "mountain" of prime birch bark
+roped on.
+
+For seven more working days Dick & Co. toiled faithfully, at the
+end of which time they discovered that they had about "cleaned"
+Katson's Hill of all the really desirable bark.
+
+"Your canoe will be dry enough to launch in the morning," said
+Driggs, as he received the last load at his stable. "Come down
+any time after eight o'clock and we'll put it in the water."
+
+Were Dick & Co. on hand the next morning?
+
+Dan Dalzell was the last of the six boys to reach post outside
+the locked gate of the yard, and he was there no later than twenty-one
+minutes past seven.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+MEETING THE FATE OF GREENHORNS
+
+
+At five minutes before eight Hiram Driggs arrived, keys in hand.
+
+"I see you're on time," he smiled, unlocking the gate and throwing
+it open. "Now come in and we'll run your canoe out on the river
+float."
+
+Even in the dim light of the boathouse Dick & Co. could see the
+sides of the canoe glisten with their coating of pitch and oil
+that lay outside the bark. The war canoe looked like a bran-new
+craft!
+
+"Do you like her?" queried Driggs, with a smile of pride in the
+work of his yard.
+
+"Like her?" echoed Dick, a choking feeling in his throat. "Mr.
+Driggs, we can't talk---yet!"
+
+"Get hold," ordered the boat builder. "Carry her gently."
+
+Gently? Dick & Co. lifted their beloved treasure as though the
+canoe carried a cargo of eggs.
+
+Out into the morning sun they carried her, letting her down with
+the stern right at the water's edge.
+
+"O-o-o-oh!" It would be hard to say which one of Dick & Co. started
+that murmur of intense admiration.
+
+"Now, if you can take your eyes off that canoe long enough," proposed
+Driggs, after all hands, the builder included, had feasted their
+eyes for a few minutes upon the canoe, "come into the office and
+we'll attend to a little business."
+
+Not quite comprehending, the high school boys followed Driggs,
+who seated himself at his desk, picking up a sheet of paper.
+
+"Prescott, I take it you're the business manager of this crowd,"
+the boat builder went on. "Now, look over these figures with
+me, and see if everything is straight. Here are the different
+loads of bark you've brought in. I figure them up at $122.60.
+See if you make it the same?"
+
+"Of course I do," nodded Dick, not even looking at the figures.
+
+"Careless of you, not to watch another man's figuring," remarked
+Hiram Driggs. "Now, then, the bark you've brought in comes to
+just what I've stated. Against that is a charge for the team
+and wagon, eight days at four dollars a day---thirty-two dollars.
+Twenty dollars for fixing your canoe. Total charges, fifty-two
+dollars. Balance due you for bark, seventy dollars and sixty
+cents. That's straight, isn't it?"
+
+"I---I don't understand," faltered Dick Prescott.
+
+"Then see if this will help you to understand," proposed Driggs,
+drawing a roll of bills from his pocket and laying down the money.
+Here you are, seventy dollars and sixty cents."
+
+"But we didn't propose to sell you any bark," Dick protested.
+"All we expected to do was to bring you in good measure to pay
+you for all your kindness to us."
+
+"Kindness to you boys?" demanded Driggs, his shrewd eyes twinkling.
+"I hope I may go through life being as profitably kind to others.
+Boys, the bark you've sold me will enable me to make up several
+canoes at a fine, fat profit. Take your pay for the goods you've
+delivered!"
+
+Dick glanced at his chums, who looked rather dumbfounded. Then
+he picked up the bills with an uneasy feeling.
+
+"Thank you, then," young Prescott continued. "But there is one
+little point overlooked, Mr. Driggs. You did the canoe for us
+at cost, though your price to any other customer would have been
+thirty dollars."
+
+"Oh, we'll let it go at that," Driggs suggested readily. "I'm
+coming out finely on the deal."
+
+"We won't let it go at that, if you please, sir," Dick Prescott
+retorted firmly.
+
+Dick placed a ten dollar bill on the desk, adding:
+
+"That makes the full thirty dollars for the repairing of the canoe."
+
+"I don't want to take it," said Driggs gruffly.
+
+"Then we won't take any of this money for the bark," insisted
+Dick, putting the rest of the money back on the table.
+
+"If you corner me like that," muttered Driggs, "I'll have to take
+your ten dollars. Now put the rest of the money back in your
+pocket, and divide it among your crowd whenever you're ready.
+Wait a minute until I make out a receipt for repairing the canoe.
+I'll put the receipt in your name, Prescott."
+
+Driggs wrote rapidly, then reached for another paper.
+
+"And now," he laughed, "since you're so mighty particular about
+being exact in business, you may as well sign a receipt for the
+money paid you for the bark."
+
+Signatures were quickly given.
+
+"Now, I reckon you boys want to get out to your canoe," the builder
+hinted.
+
+"Yes, but we can't take Dick with us," Tom declared. "Not with
+all that money belonging to the company in his pocket. Dick,
+before you step into the canoe you'd better leave the money with
+Mr. Driggs, if he'll oblige us by taking care of it."
+
+Driggs dropped the money in an envelope, putting the latter in
+his safe.
+
+"Call and get it when you're going away," he said.
+
+"Some day, when we recover, Mr. Driggs," said Dick earnestly,
+"we're going to come in and try to thank you as we should."
+
+"If you do," retorted the boat builder gruffly, "I'll throw you
+all out. Our present business deal is completed, and the papers
+all signed. Git!"
+
+Driggs followed them out to show them how to launch the canoe
+with the least trouble.
+
+"Have any of you boys ever handled a paddle before?" inquired
+Hiram Driggs.
+
+"Oh, yes; in small cedar canoes," Dave answered.
+
+"All of you?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Then you ought to get along all right in this craft. But be
+careful at first, and don't try any frolicking when you're aboard.
+Remember, a canoe isn't a craft that can be handled with roughness.
+Don't anyone try to 'rock the boat,' either. In a canoe everyone
+has to sit steadily and attend strictly to business."
+
+"A war canoe! Isn't it great?" chuckled Dan, as he started to
+help himself to a seat.
+
+But Tom grabbed him by the coat collar, pulling him back.
+
+"First of all, Danny Grin, shed that coat. Then ask Dick which
+seat you're going to have. He's the big chief of our tribe of
+Indians."
+
+"Better all of you leave your coats here," suggested Driggs.
+"You can get 'em when you come back. And you can keep the canoe
+here without charge, so you'll have a safe place for it. Some
+fellows, you know, might envy you so that they might try to destroy
+the canoe if you left it in a place that isn't locked up at night."
+
+When the boys were ready, in their shirt sleeves, Dick assigned
+Dave Darrin to the bow seat. The others were placed, while Prescott
+himself took the stern seat, from which the steering paddle must
+be wielded.
+
+"All ready, everyone," Dick called. "Dave, you set the stroke,
+and give us a slow, easy one. We mustn't do any swift paddling
+until we've had a good deal of practice. Shove off, Dave."
+
+Darrin pushed his paddle against the float, Dick doing likewise
+at the stern. Large as it was, the canoe glided smoothly across
+the water.
+
+"Now, give us the slow stroke, Dave!" Dick called.
+
+Soon the others caught the trick of paddling in unison. Each
+had his own side of the craft on which to paddle. Dick, alone,
+as steersman, paddled on either side at will, according as he
+wished to guide the boat.
+
+"You're doing finely," called Hiram Driggs.
+
+"Let's hit up the speed a bit," urged Dan Dalzell.
+
+"We won't be in too big a hurry about that," Dick counseled.
+"Let us get the knack of this thing by degrees."
+
+"Whee! When we do get to going fast I'll wager there is a lot
+of fine old speed in this birch-bark tub!" chuckled Tom Reade.
+
+Dick now headed the canoe up the river. For half a mile or more
+they glided along on a nearly straight course.
+
+To say that these Gridley high school boys were happy would be
+putting it rather mildly. There was exhilaration in every move
+of this noble sport. Nor was it at all like work. The canoe
+seemed to require but very little power to send her skimming over
+the water.
+
+At last Dick guided the canoe in an easy, graceful turn, heading
+down the river once more.
+
+"Now, you can try just a little faster stroke, Dave," Dick suggested.
+"And make it just a bit heavier on the stroke, fellows, but don't
+imagine that we're going to try any racing speed."
+
+"Hurrah!"
+
+"Zip!"
+
+"Wow!"
+
+It was great sport! Just the small increase in the stroke sent
+the handsome big war canoe fairly spinning down the river.
+
+"I never dreamed it would be like this!" cried Dave Darrin, in
+ecstasy. "Fellows, I don't believe there is any fun in the world
+equal to canoeing in a real canoe."
+
+"It beats all the little cedar contraptions that some folks call
+canoes!" Tom Reade declared.
+
+"I am almost beginning to think," announced Danny Grin, "that
+I'd rather go on canoeing than go home for my dinner."
+
+"That idea would last until about half-past twelve," chuckled
+Reade. "This is glorious fun, all right, but dinner has its
+place, too. As for me, I want to get my dinner strictly on time."
+
+"Glutton!" taunted Greg Holmes.
+
+"Don't you believe it," Reade retorted. "I want my dinner right
+on time so that I can get back for a longer afternoon in the canoe."
+
+"Fellows," announced Dave Darrin solemnly, "we've got to form
+a canoe club."
+
+"Humph!" retorted Greg Holmes. "We don't want to belong to any
+club where the other fellows have only the fourteen or sixteen
+foot cedar canoes."
+
+"We don't have to," Dave explained. "We'll limit the membership
+to those who own war canoes like this one. In other words, we'll
+be the whole club."
+
+"What's the need of our forming a club?" asked Greg Holmes. "We're
+as good as being a club already. We're always together in everything,
+aren't we?"
+
+"Still, it won't do any harm to have a regular club name for the
+summer," Dick Prescott suggested.
+
+"What would we call the club?" asked Hazelton.
+
+"Why not call it the Gridley High School Canoe Club?" Dick demanded.
+
+"Best name possible," Tom agreed.
+
+"Some of the other high school fellows might get sore at us, though,"
+Tom hinted. "They might say we had no right to take the high
+school name."
+
+"We won't take it for ourselves only," Dick smiled. "We'll keep
+the club membership open to any set of six fellows who will own
+and run a war canoe. We'll keep the membership as open as possible
+to the high school fellows."
+
+"Humph! And then Fred Ripley, Bert Dodge and a few others with
+plenty of cash would get a canoe and insist on coming in and spoiling
+the club."
+
+"They might," Dick assented, "but I don't believe they would.
+Fred Ripley, Bert Dodge and a few others of their kind in the
+Gridley High School wouldn't spend five cents to join anything
+we're in."
+
+Toot! toot! sounded a whistle shrilly behind them.
+
+Dick turned carefully to glance at the bend above them.
+
+"Steam launch, with an excursion party," he informed the others.
+"I think I see Laura Bentley and Belle Meade in the bow waving
+handkerchiefs at us."
+
+Dan Dalzell turned abruptly around. Harry Hazelton did the same.
+
+"Look out!" cried Greg, as he shifted swiftly to steady the craft.
+
+Just then Tom Reade turned, too. His added weight sent the canoe
+careening. There was a quick scramble to right the craft.
+
+Flop! The canoe's port rail was under water. She filled and
+sank, carrying a lot of excited high school boys down at the same
+time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+"DANNY GRIN" IS SILENT
+
+
+Dick Prescott sank into the water not more than two or three feet.
+Then his head showed above the surface of the river. He struck
+out vigorously, looking about him.
+
+"The canoe is done for!" he gasped.
+
+Too-oot! too-oot! too-oot! The steam launch was now speeding
+to the scene, its whistle screeching at a rate calculated to inform
+everyone in Gridley of another river disaster.
+
+Up came Greg, then Dave. Tom Reade's head appeared down stream.
+Harry Hazelton bobbed up not six feet from Dick. Hazelton blew
+out a mouthful of water, then called:
+
+"Everyone up, Dick?"
+
+"All but Dan."
+
+"What-----"
+
+"I guess he's all right. Danny Grin is a good swimmer, you know."
+
+Half a dozen river craft were now heading their way, but the launch
+was the only power boat in sight.
+
+Five members of Dick & Co. now got close together.
+
+"We've got to go down after Danny Grin," Reade declared. "You
+fellows watch, and I'll get as close to bottom as I can."
+
+Tom sank. To the anxious boys he seemed to be gone for an age.
+He came up alone.
+
+"Did you see Dan?" Dick faltered. "Not a glimpse of him," returned
+Tom despairingly.
+
+"See the canoe?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then you couldn't have gone down in the right place," Dick argued.
+
+"I'll try it, fellows!" exclaimed Darrin. Down went Dave. He
+soon came up, treading water. As soon as he had blown out a mouthful
+of water he exclaimed:
+
+"I found Dan, but I couldn't stay under long enough. He went
+down with the canoe. He's lying in it now."
+
+"Look out, there! We'll pick you up," called a voice from the
+launch, which now darted toward the boys. A bell for half speed,
+then another for "stop" sounded, and the hull of the launch divided
+the frightened swimmers.
+
+"Let me get aboard!" cried Dick, taking a few lusty over-hand
+strokes.
+
+Willing hands hauled him into the launch at the bow, while girls'
+cries and anxious questions filled the air.
+
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"Who-----"
+
+But Dick waited to answer no one. Standing in the bow of the
+launch, he pointed his hands, then dived into the river.
+
+While he was below the surface of the water the other canoeists
+swam alongside, helping themselves aboard.
+
+"Oh, Dave!" cried Laura Bentley. "What's wrong?"
+
+"Dan Dalzell hasn't come up," Darrin choked. "Here, clear the
+way. I'm going down after Dick."
+
+He was gone like a flash. Seconds ticked by while a score of
+pale faces watched over the side of the launch.
+
+Then, at last, up shot Dave. He was followed almost instantly
+by Dick, his arms wrapped around the motionless form of Dan Dalzell.
+
+"Get close and we'll haul you in!" called Tom Reade, a boat-hook
+in his hand.
+
+"Is Dan drowned!" demanded a dozen voices.
+
+"Don't ask questions now!" cried Tom Reade impatiently, without
+looking about him. "Keep quiet! It's a time for work."
+
+Abashed, the questioners became silent. Tom caught the boat-hook
+through the collar of Dan's flannel shirt. With the aid of the
+launch's helmsman Reade drew Dan in and got him aboard. Young
+Dalzell's eyes were closed, nor did he speak.
+
+Then Dick and Dave were pulled aboard the launch.
+
+"Dan didn't seem to be able to free himself," Darrin explained
+breathlessly. "His foot was wedged under a cleat in the canoe."
+
+"Carry Dan aft," ordered Dick, while he was still clambering over
+the rail. "Lay him face down."
+
+Then, drenched as he was, Dick hastened aft, where he directed
+others how to pat Dan on the back and to work his arms.
+
+"We've got to get that water off his lungs," Dick explained.
+"Don't stop working for a moment. I wish we had a barrel to roll
+him on!"
+
+"We will have soon," replied the launch's helmsman, rushing back
+to his post and ringing the bell. Thus recalled to his post,
+the engineer turned on the speed.
+
+The craft made swiftly for Hiram Driggs' float. A few moments
+later it ran alongside.
+
+Warned by the whistle, Driggs and two of his workmen came running
+out to the float.
+
+"Get a barrel as quickly as you can!" shouted young Prescott.
+
+By the time Dalzell had been hustled ashore the barrel was in
+readiness. Dan received an energetic rolling. Three or four
+little gushes of water issued from his mouth.
+
+"Keep up the good work," ordered Dick feverishly. "We'll bring
+him around soon."
+
+When they saw that no more water was coming from Dalzell's mouth
+the workers placed him in a sitting position, then began to pump-handle
+his arms vigorously.
+
+A tremor ran through the body of Danny Grin.
+
+"Hurrah!" cried Dick. "He's going to open his eyes!"
+
+This Dan did a few moments later. "Keep on working his arms,"
+commanded Prescott.
+
+"Quit!" begged Dalzell in a faint whisper. "You're hurting me."
+
+"Good enough!" chuckled Dick. "Keep on at his arms until he can
+talk a whole lot more."
+
+"But isn't it cruel?" asked a girl.
+
+"No," rejoined Tom Reade, turning to her. "Did you ever bring
+a drowning man to?"
+
+"Never, of course."
+
+"Then let our Dick have his way. He generally knows what he's
+about. No rudeness intended you understand," Reade added, smiling.
+
+"This lad's all right, now," declared Hiram Driggs. "Help him
+to his feet and walk him about a bit until he gets the whole trick
+of breathing again. Dalzell, didn't you know any better than
+to try to swallow the whole river and ruin my business?"
+
+A faint grin parted Dan's lips.
+
+"Oh, I'm so thankful," sighed Laura Bentley. "Dick, I was afraid
+there would be but five of you left when I saw Dan being hoisted
+aboard!"
+
+Soon Dalzell was able to laugh nervously. Then a scowl darkened
+his face.
+
+"I'm the prize idiot of Gridley!" he muttered faintly.
+
+"What's the matter now?" Dave Darrin demanded.
+
+"The canoe is lost, and it's all my fault," moaned Dalzell. "Oh,
+dear! Oh, dear!"
+
+"Bother the canoe!" cried Dick impatiently. "We're lucky enough
+that no lives have been lost."
+
+"But I---I turned and upset the craft," wailed Dan.
+
+"There were others of us," said Greg sheepishly. "If we had had
+the sense of babies none of us would have turned, and there wouldn't
+have been any accident."
+
+"This is no time to talk about canoe etiquette," Prescott declared.
+"Let us be thankful that we're all here. We'll wait until Dan
+is himself again before we do any talking."
+
+"I'm all right," protested Dan Dalzell.
+
+"Yes; I believe you are," Driggs nodded.
+
+"'T' any rate, you won't die now of that dose of river water."
+
+"Party ready to come back aboard the launch?" called the helmsman.
+
+"Oh, don't hurry us, just now!" appealed Laura Bentley, going
+over to him quietly. "We're all so interested and concerned in
+what is going on over here."
+
+So the helmsman waited, grumbling quietly to himself.
+
+Some twenty of the high school girls had chartered the launch
+for a morning ride up the river. Dainty enough the girls looked
+in their cool summer finery. They formed a bright picture as
+they stood grouped about Dick & Co. and the other male members
+of the party.
+
+"You fellows can say all you want to," mumbled Dan, "but the canoe
+is gone for good and all! We won't have any more fun in it this
+summer."
+
+"Was that what ailed you, Dan?" teased Darrin. "You felt so badly
+over the loss of the canoe that you tried to stay on the bottom
+of the river with it?"
+
+"My foot was caught, and I couldn't get it loose," Dan explained.
+"I was trying to free myself, like mad, you may be sure, when
+all at once I didn't know anything more. You fellows must have
+had a job prying my foot loose."
+
+"It was something of a job," Dick smiled, "especially as our time
+was so limited down there at the bottom with you. The river
+must be twenty feet deep at that point."
+
+"All of that," affirmed Hiram Driggs.
+
+By this time the high school girls had divided into little groups,
+each group with a member of Dick & Co. all to itself. The girls
+were engaging in that rather senseless though altogether charming
+hero worship so dear to the heart of the average schoolboy.
+
+"What caused the accident?" inquired one girl.
+
+"Gallantry," smiled Greg. "We were all so anxious to see you
+girls that we all turned at the same time. We made the canoe
+heel, and then it filled and went down. But you can't blame us,
+can you?"
+
+"But you've lost your fine big canoe," cried Laura Bentley, looking
+as though her pretty eyes were about to fill with tears.
+
+"Yes," Dick admitted, "and, of course, it's too bad. But a lot
+of other worse things might have happened, and I guess we'll get
+over our loss some way."
+
+"But that canoe meant so much for your summer fun," Laura went
+on. "Oh, it's too bad!"
+
+"Maybe the canoe isn't lost," suggested Hiram Driggs.
+
+"What do you mean, Mr. Driggs?" cried Laura, turning to him quickly.
+
+"Is there any way of bringing the canoe up again?" asked Belle
+Meade eagerly.
+
+"There may be," Driggs replied quietly. "I'm going to have a
+try at it anyway."
+
+"All aboard that are going back to the dock," called the helmsman
+of the launch, who was also her owner.
+
+Laura turned upon him with flashing eyes.
+
+"I don't believe there is anyone going," she said. "We wouldn't
+leave here anyway, while there's a chance that the high school
+boys can get their canoe back to the surface of the water. You
+needn't wait, Mr. Morton. When we're ready we can walk the rest
+of the way."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+WHAT AN EXPERT CAN DO
+
+
+"I don't say that I can surely raise the canoe," Mr. Driggs made
+haste to state, "or that it will be worth the trouble if we do
+raise it. That canoe may have sunk on river-bottom rocks, and
+she may be badly staved by this time. But I've sent one of my
+men to fire the scow engine, and I'm going out to see what can
+be done in the matter."
+
+"And may we wait here?" asked Laura Bentley, full of eagerness.
+
+"Certainly, young ladies."
+
+"Oh, that's just fine of you, Mr. Driggs," cried Belle Meade.
+
+Smoke soon began to pour out of the short funnel of the working
+engine on the boatyard scow. It was a clumsy-looking craft---a
+mere floating platform, with engine, propeller, tiller and a derrick
+arrangement, but it had done a lot of good work at and about the
+boatyard.
+
+"You want to get aboard the scow now, boys," called Mr. Driggs.
+"If we do anything real out yonder I'll have need of some willing
+muscle."
+
+"Can't some of the girls go, too?" called a feminine voice. "We're
+all dreadfully anxious, you know."
+
+Hiram pursed up his mouth, as though reluctant. Then he proposed,
+grudgingly:
+
+"A committee of two girls might go, if they're sure they'll keep
+out of the way when we're working. Just two! Which of the young
+ladies ought we to take, Mr. Prescott?"
+
+"Why, I believe Miss Bentley and Miss Meade will be as satisfactory
+a committee as can be chosen," Dick smiled.
+
+Some of the girls frowned their disappointment at being left out,
+but others clapped their hands. Laura and Belle stepped on the
+scow's platform.
+
+"I wouldn't try to go, if I were you, Dan," urged. Dick, as young
+Dalzell stepped forward to board the scow.
+
+"I'm all right," Dan insisted.
+
+"Sure you're all right?" questioned Hiram Driggs, eyeing Danny
+Grin's wobbly figure.
+
+"Of course I am," Dan protested, though he spoke rather weakly.
+
+"Then there's a more important job for you," declared Mr. Driggs.
+"Stay here on the float with the rest of the young ladies, and
+explain to them just what you see us doing out yonder."
+
+There was the sound of finality about the boat builder's voice,
+kindly as it was.
+
+"Cast off," ordered Driggs, taking the tiller. "Tune up that
+engine and give us some headway."
+
+Clara Marshall was thoughtful enough to run back and get a chair,
+which she brought down to the float and placed behind Dalzell.
+
+"Sit down," she urged.
+
+"Thank you," said Dan gratefully, "but I didn't need a chair."
+
+Nevertheless the high school girls persuaded him to be seated.
+
+"I---I wasn't drowned, you know," Dan protested as he sat down.
+
+"No; but you got a little water into your lungs," responded one
+of the girls. "I heard Mr. Driggs tell Dick Prescott that, as
+nearly as they could guess, you opened your mouth a trifle just
+before Dick and Dave reached you and freed you from that awful
+trap. Mr. Driggs said that if you had been under water two minutes
+longer there would have been a different story to tell."
+
+"I wonder how long I was under water?" mused Dan.
+
+"Long enough to drown, Danny Grin," replied Clara Marshall gravely.
+
+Meanwhile the scow was making slow headway out into the river
+and slightly up stream.
+
+"Dick, don't you think this canoeing is going to prove too dangerous
+a sport for you boys?" asked Laura, regarding him with anxious
+eyes.
+
+"Not when we get so that we know how to behave ourselves in a
+canoe, Laura," young Prescott answered.
+
+"Yet, no matter how skilful you become, some unexpected accident
+may happen at any moment," she urged.
+
+"You wouldn't have us be mollycoddles, would you?" asked Dick
+in surprise.
+
+"Certainly not," replied Laura with emphasis.
+
+"Yet you would advise us to avoid everything that may have some
+touch of danger in it."
+
+"I wouldn't advise that, either," Laura contended with sweet
+seriousness. "But-----"
+
+"You'd like to see us play football some day, wouldn't you?"
+
+"I certainly hope you'll make the high school eleven."
+
+"Football is undoubtedly more dangerous than canoeing," Dick claimed.
+
+"It seems too bad that boys' best sports should be so dangerous,
+doesn't it?" questioned young Miss Bentley.
+
+"I can't agree with you," Dick answered quietly. "It takes danger,
+and the ability to meet it, to form a boy's character into a man's."
+
+"Then you believe in being foolhardy, as a matter of training?"
+asked Laura, with a swift flash of her eyes.
+
+"By no means," Prescott rejoined. "Foolhardy means just what
+the word implies, and only a fool will be foolhardy. If we had
+been trying to upset the canoe, as a matter of sport, that would
+have been the work of young fools."
+
+It was not difficult to locate the spot where the canoe had gone
+down. The river's current was not swift, and the paddles now
+floated not very far below the spot where the cherished craft
+of Dick & Co. had gone down.
+
+"Do you want the services of some expert divers, Mr. Driggs?"
+asked Dave, turning from a brief chat with Belle Meade.
+
+"Not you boys," retorted the boat builder. "You youngsters have
+been fooling enough with the river bottom for one day."
+
+"Then how do you expect to get hold of the canoe, sir?" asked
+Tom Reade.
+
+"We'll grapple with tackle," replied Driggs, going toward an equipment
+box that stood on the forward end of the scow. "We'll use the
+same kind of tackle that we've sometimes dragged the bottom with
+when looking for drowned people."
+
+Laura Bentley slivered slightly at his words. Driggs' keen eyes
+noted the fact, and thereafter he was careful not to mention drowned
+people in her hearing.
+
+The tackle was soon rigged. Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton, who
+possessed the keenest interest in things mechanical, aided the
+boat builder under his direction.
+
+Back and forth over the spot the scow moved, while the grapples
+were frequently shifted and recast.
+
+"Stop the engine," called Driggs. "We've hooked into something!"
+
+Laura turned somewhat pale for a moment; Belle, too, looked uneasy.
+The same thought had crossed both girls' minds. What if the
+tackle had caught the body of some drowned man?
+
+"We'll shift about here a bit," Driggs proposed, nodding to the
+engineer to stand by ready to stop or start the engine on quick
+signal.
+
+Before long the grappling hook of another line was caught;
+
+"The two lines are about twelve feet apart," Driggs announced.
+"My idea is that we've caught onto two cross braces of the canoe.
+If so we'll have it up in a jiffy."
+
+Both lines were now made fast to the derrick, in such a way that
+there would be an even haul on both lines. Belting was now connected
+between the engine and a windlass.
+
+"Haul away, very slowly," Driggs ordered.
+
+Up came the lines, an inch at a time. Belle and Laura could not
+resist the temptation to go to the edge of the scow and peer over.
+
+"I see something coming up," cried Belle at last.
+
+"It's the canoe," said Tom Reade, trying to speak carelessly,
+though there was a ring of exultation in his voice.
+
+Nearer and nearer to the surface of the water came the canoe.
+
+"Now, watch for my hand signal all the time," called Driggs.
+"I don't want to get the middle part of the canoe more than an
+inch above the surface."
+
+When the point of the canoe's prow rose above the surface of the
+water a cheer went up from the scow that carried the news instantly
+back to the landing float.
+
+Danny Grin stood up, waving his hat and cheering hoarsely, while
+the girls who surrounded him waved handkerchiefs and parasols.
+
+Then the gunwale appeared just above water along the whole length.
+
+"It will be a hard job to bail her out now," Dave declared.
+
+"Not so hard that it will worry you any," Driggs smiled.
+
+He dragged a pump over, allowing its flexible pipe to rest down
+into the water in the canoe.
+
+"Now, some of you youngsters get hold of the pump handles," Driggs
+ordered.
+
+Five high school boys got hold with a will. Gradually, as the
+water was emptied out of her the canoe rose higher and higher
+in the water.
+
+There was no cheering, now, from the boys on the scow. They were
+using all their breath working the pump, while Driggs carefully
+directed the bottom of the flexible tubing.
+
+"There!" declared Driggs at last. "Barring a little moisture,
+your canoe is as dry as ever it was, boys. I can't see a sign
+of a leak anywhere, either. But don't make a practice of tipping
+it over every day, for I can't afford to leave my work to help
+you out. There's your canoe, and she's all right."
+
+Dick got hold of the painter at the bow, while Driggs released
+the grappling tackle.
+
+What a cheer went up from the scow, and what a busy scene there
+was on the float as the young women jumped up and down in their
+glee over the good fortune of Dick & Co.
+
+"Now, we'll cruise down and get the paddles," Driggs proposed.
+
+"As soon as we pick up a couple of them, Dick and I can take the
+canoe and get the rest," Dave suggested.
+
+"You cannot, while the young ladies are with us," Hiram Driggs
+contradicted. "Do you want to scare them to death by having another
+upset?"
+
+Laura shot a grateful glance at kindly Hiram Driggs. The scow
+moved forward, cruising among the paddles until all of them had
+been recovered.
+
+"Now, Mr. Driggs, won't you stop a moment?" asked young Prescott.
+"It will be a bit humiliating to be towed into dock. Wait, and
+let us get into the canoe. We'd rather take it ashore under
+our own power."
+
+Laura hoped Hiram Driggs would veto the idea, but he didn't.
+
+The canoe was brought alongside, and five boys stepped carefully
+into it, seating themselves.
+
+"Room for one young lady in here, if we can find a fair way of
+drawing lots between them," suggested Dick playfully.
+
+"They won't step into the canoe, just now, if I can prevent them,"
+Driggs declared flatly. "You boys want just a few minutes' more
+practice at your new game before you risk the lives of these girls."
+
+"You're right, I'm afraid, Mr. Driggs," Dick Prescott admitted
+with a smile. "But, before long, we hope to take out as many
+of the high school girls as care to step into this fine old war
+canoe."
+
+"I hope you won't forget that," Belle Meade flashed at him smilingly.
+
+"We won't," Dave promised her. "And you and Laura shall have
+the first invitation."
+
+"I shall be ready," Laura replied, "just as soon as you boys feel
+that you can take proper care of us in the canoe."
+
+"You'll have to do your own share of taking care," Tom Reade responded.
+"About all a passenger has to learn in a canoe is to take a seat
+right in the middle of the canoe, and to keep to that place without
+moving about."
+
+Dick & Co., minus Danny Grin, now paddled off, reaching the float
+some moments before the scow got in.
+
+"Young ladies," said Dick, as he stepped to the float, "I don't
+know how many of you will care about going out in our canoe, but
+we wish to invite all who would like it to try a trip within the
+next few days. Four boys and two girls can go out at a time,
+and in case of mishap that would leave two good swimmers to look
+after each girl. We shall be glad if you will permit us to invite
+you in couples."
+
+Despite the accident of the morning the invitation was greeted
+with enthusiasm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+DICK TREMBLES AT HIS NERVE
+
+
+Hiram Driggs refused to accept any money for his trouble in raising
+the canoe.
+
+"I won't charge you anything, unless upsetting your craft becomes
+a troublesome habit," the boat builder declared. "Remember, I'm
+a big winner on our birch bark trade."
+
+Within the next four days all of the girls invited had been able
+to take a trip up the river and back.
+
+By this time Dick & Co. had fully acquired the mastery of their
+canoe. They had had no more upsets, for "Big Chief Prescott,"
+of this new Gridley tribe of young Indians, had succeeded in putting
+through some rules governing their conduct when the chums were
+out in their canoe. One of these rules was that no one should
+change his position in the craft except the steersman at the stern.
+Others would not look about at a hail unless informed by the
+steersman that they might do so.
+
+Not by any means did Dick do all the steering of the craft. Each
+of his chums had a frequent turn at it, and at the other positions
+in the canoe, until all were expert at any part of the work.
+
+"But there is one big drawback about having this canoe," Greg
+remarked one day.
+
+"What's that?" asked Dave.
+
+"There are no canoes to race with."
+
+"There are up at Lake Pleasant," Dick replied.
+
+"But we can't take the canoe up there," Tom Reade objected. "It's
+twenty-four miles from Gridley."
+
+"Couldn't we walk there and carry the canoe on our shoulders?"
+suggested Dave.
+
+While they were discussing this, the canoe lay on the float.,
+whence they were soon to take it into the boathouse.
+
+"We can try it now," suggested Dick.
+
+Getting a good hold, Dick & Co. raised the war canoe to their
+several shoulders. They found they could accomplish the feat,
+though it wasn't an easy one.
+
+"We'll have to give up that idea," Tom remarked rather mournfully.
+"Without a doubt we could carry the canoe to Lake Pleasant, if
+we had time enough. But I don't believe we could make five miles
+a day with it. So to get the canoe up to Lake Pleasant on our
+shoulders, and then back again would take over two weeks."
+
+Dick was unusually thoughtful as the boys strolled from Driggs'
+yard up to Main Street. Lake Pleasant was a fine place to visit
+in summer. He knew that, for he had been there on one occasion.
+
+On one side of the lake were two hotels, each with roomy recreation
+grounds, with piers and plenty of boats. On this same side there
+were four or five boarding houses for people of more moderate
+means.
+
+Boating was the one great pastime at Lake Pleasant. Indeed, a
+canoe club had been started there by young men of means, and the
+boathouse stood at the water's edge on the Hotel Pleasant grounds.
+
+Then, too, there may have been another reason for Dick's desire
+to go to Lake Pleasant. The following week Dr. and Mrs. Bentley
+were going to take charge of a party of Gridley high school girls,
+at Lake Pleasant, and Laura and Belle Meade would be of the number.
+
+"We'd cut a fine dash at Lake Pleasant," Dave Darrin laughed.
+"Which hotel would we honor with our patronage? Terms, from
+fourteen to twenty-five dollars a week. We've about enough money
+to stay at one of the hotels for about two hours, or at a boarding
+house for about nine hours. When shall we start---and how shall
+we get there with our canoe?"
+
+"We have about fifty dollars in our treasury, from the birch bark
+business," Dick mused aloud, "but that won't help us any, will it?"
+
+"Why, how much would it cost to have the canoe taken up there
+on a wagon Danny Grin asked.
+
+"Not less than fifteen dollars each way," Dick replied.
+
+"We'll give it up," said Tom. "There's nothing in the Lake Pleasant
+idea for us."
+
+"I hadn't any idea we could do anything else but give it up,"
+Dave observed, though he spoke rather gloomily.
+
+Dick was still thinking hard, though he could think of no plan
+that would enable them to make a trip to Lake Pleasant and remain
+there for some days.
+
+It was a Saturday afternoon. It had been a hot day, yet out on
+the water, busy with their sport, and acquiring a deep coating
+of sunburn, the boys had not noticed the heat especially. Now
+they mopped their faces as they strolled almost listlessly along
+the street.
+
+"I want to go to Lake Pleasant," grumbled Danny Grin.
+
+"Going to-night, or to-morrow morning?" teased Greg.
+
+"If I had an automobile I'd start after supper," Dalzell informed
+them.
+
+"But not having a car you'll wait till you're grown up and have
+begun to earn money of your own," laughed Harry Hazelton.
+
+"What do you say, Dick?" asked Dan Dalzell anxiously.
+
+"I say that I'm going to put in a few days or a fortnight at Lake
+Pleasant if I can possibly find the way," Dick retorted, with
+a sudden energy that was quite out of keeping with the heat of
+the afternoon.
+
+"Hurray!" from Danny Grin.
+
+"That's what I call the right talk," added Darrin.
+
+"How will the rest of us get along with the canoe while you're
+gone?" questioned Tom Reade.
+
+"You don't suppose I'd go to Lake Pleasant without the rest of
+the crowd?" Dick retorted rather scornfully.
+
+"Then you're going to take us all with you, and the canoe, too?"
+Tom demanded, betraying more interest.
+
+"If I can find the way to do it, or if any of you fellows can,"
+was young Prescott's answer.
+
+That started another eager volley of talk. Yet soon all of them
+save Dick looked quite hopeless.
+
+The railroad ran only within eight miles of the lake. From the
+railway station the rest of the journey was usually made by automobile
+stages, while baggage went up on automobile trucks. Charges were
+high on this automobile line up into the hills. To send the canoe
+by rail, and then transfer it to an automobile truck would cost
+more than to transport it direct from Gridley to the lake by wagon.
+
+"We can talk about it all we want," sighed Tom, "but I don't see
+the telephone poles on the golden road to Lake Pleasant."
+
+"We've got to find the way if we can," Dick retorted firmly.
+"Let's all set about it at once."
+
+"When do we start?" teased Tom.
+
+"Monday morning early," laughed Dave. "And this is late Saturday
+afternoon."
+
+Dan Dalzell was not in his usually jovial spirits. His heart
+was as much set on going as was Dick's, but Dan now felt that
+the pleasure jaunt was simply impossible.
+
+"Let's meet on Main Street after supper," Dick proposed. "Perhaps
+by that time we'll have found an idea or two."
+
+"If we can find a pocketbook or two lying in the Main Street gutter,
+that will be something more practical than finding ideas," Tom
+replied with a doleful shake of his head. "But perhaps we'll
+really find the pocketbooks. Such things are told of in story
+books, anyway, you know."
+
+"If we find any pocketbooks," smiled Dick, "our first concern
+after that will be to find the owners of them. So that stunt
+wouldn't do us much good, even if it happened."
+
+Then the boys separated and went to their respective homes for
+supper. But Dick Prescott did not eat as much as usual. He was
+too preoccupied. He knew to a penny the amount that was in the
+treasury of their little canoe club, for Mr. Prescott was holding
+the money subject to his son's call. Certainly the money in the
+treasury wouldn't bring about a vacation at Lake Pleasant.
+
+Just as soon as the meal was over Dick went out, strolling back
+to Main Street.
+
+"'Lo, Dick!"
+
+Prescott turned to recognize and nod to a barefooted boy, rather
+frayed as to attire. Mart Heckler had been two classes below
+him when Prescott had attended Central Grammar School. Now Mart
+was waiting for the fall to enter the last grade at Central, which
+was also to be his last year at school. Mart's parents were poor,
+and this lad, in another year, must join the army of toilers.
+
+"You must be having a lot of fun this vacation, Dick," remarked
+Mart rather wistfully. "Lot of fun in that war canoe, isn't there?"
+
+"Yes; there is, Mart. If we see you down at the float one of
+these days we'll ask you out for a little ride."
+
+"Will you?" asked Mart, his eyes snapping. "Fine! Now that you
+fellows have your canoe I don't suppose you'll be trying to go
+away anywhere this summer. Too much fun at home, eh?"
+
+"I don't know about that," said young Prescott wistfully. "Just
+now we're planning to try to take the canoe up to Lake Pleasant
+for a while."
+
+"Bully place, the lake," said Mart approvingly. "I'm going up
+there Monday. Going to be gone for a couple of days."
+
+"How are you going to get there?" Dick asked with interest.
+
+"You know my Uncle Billy, don't you?" asked Mart. "He's the teamster,
+you know. He's going to Lake Pleasant to get a load of furniture
+that the installment folks are taking back from a new boarding
+house up there. He said I could go up with him. We'll carry
+our food, and sleep over Monday night in the wagon."
+
+Dick halted suddenly, trembling with eagerness. He began to feel
+that he had scented a way of getting the canoe up to the lake
+in the hills!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+PUTTING UP A BIG SCHEME
+
+
+"Your uncle will be at his regular stand to-night, won't he?" queried
+Dick Prescott.
+
+"I expect so," Mart agreed. "What's the matter? Do you want
+to go along with us? I guess Uncle Billy would be willing."
+
+At this moment Dick heard a group of younger boys laughing as
+they strolled along the street.
+
+Following their glances, Dick saw in the street what is commonly
+known in small towns as the "hoss wagon"---a vehicle built for
+the purpose of removing dead horses.
+
+"There goes Fred Ripley's bargain!" chuckled one of the boys.
+
+At that moment Fred Ripley himself turned the corner into Main
+Street.
+
+"And there's Rip himself," laughed another boy. "Hey, Rip! How's
+horse flesh?"
+
+But Fred, flushing angrily, hurried along. "What's up?" asked
+young Prescott as the group of boys came along.
+
+"Haven't you heard about Fred's pony?" asked one of the crowd.
+
+"I know he bought a pony," Dick answered.
+
+"Yes; but Squire Ripley had a veterinary go down to the Ripley
+stable this afternoon, and look the pony over," volunteered the
+ready informant. "Vet said that the pony would be worth a dollar
+or two for his hide, but wouldn't be worth anything alive. So
+Squire Ripley ordered the pony shot, and that cart is taking the
+poor beast away."
+
+"Is your canoe going to be a winner?" asked another boy.
+
+"We expect so," Dick nodded.
+
+"Great joke on Rip, isn't it?" grinned another.
+
+"I can't say that his misfortune makes me especially happy," Prescott
+answered gravely.
+
+"Well, I'm glad he was 'stung' on his pony," continued the other
+boy. "Rip is no good!"
+
+"There is an old saying to the effect that, if we got our just
+deserts we'd all of us be more or less unhappy," smiled Dick.
+
+"Rip won't be so chesty with us smaller boys," predicted another
+grammar school boy. "If he tries it on, all we've got to do is
+to ask him, 'How's horse flesh, Rip?'"
+
+In spite of himself Dick could not help laughing at the thought
+of the mortification of the lawyer's son when he should be teased
+on so tender a point. Then Dick asked:
+
+"Mart, is your uncle at his stand now?"
+
+"I reckon he is," nodded Heckler.
+
+"Let's go over there and see him."
+
+"You're going to try to take the ride with us, then?" asked Mart.
+
+"I think so."
+
+"Bully!" glowed Mart, who, like most of the younger boys of Gridley,
+was a great admirer of the leader of Dick & Co.
+
+Billy Heckler, a man of thirty, was, indeed, to be found at his
+stand.
+
+"Dick wants to go up to Lake Pleasant with us on Monday," Mart
+began, but Dick quickly added:
+
+"I understand, Mr. Heckler, that you're going up to the lake without
+a load."
+
+"Yes," nodded the truckman.
+
+"Then it struck me that perhaps I could arrange with you to take
+up our canoe and some bedding, and also let the fellows ride on
+the wagon."
+
+"How many of you are there?" inquired Billy Heckler.
+
+"The usual six," Dick smiled. "If you can do it, how much would
+you charge us?"
+
+"Fifteen dollars," replied the driver, after a few moments' thought.
+
+Dick's face showed his disappointment at the answer.
+
+"I'm afraid that puts us out of it, then," he said quietly. "I
+had hoped that, as you are going up without a load, anyway, you
+might be willing to take our outfit up for a few dollars. It
+would be that much to the good for you, wouldn't it?"
+
+"Hardly," Billy replied. "Carrying a load takes more out of a
+team than an empty wagon does. You can see that, can't you?"
+
+"Ye-es," Dick nodded thoughtfully. "But, you see, we're only
+boys, and we can't talk money quite like men yet."
+
+"Some men can't do anything with money except talk about it,"
+Billy Heckler grinned. "Well, I'd like to oblige you boys. What's
+your offer, then?"
+
+"We don't feel that we could pay more than five dollars," Dick
+answered promptly.
+
+"No money in that," replied Billy Heckler, picking up a piece
+of wood and whittling.
+
+"No; I'm afraid there isn't," Dick admitted. "I guess our crowd
+will have to content itself with staying at home and using the
+canoe on the river."
+
+"The river is a good place," Heckler argued. "Why aren't you
+all content to stay at home and use your canoe on the river?"
+
+"Because," smiled young Prescott, "I suppose it's human nature
+to want to get away somewhere in the summer. Then we understand
+that there are other crew canoes on Lake Pleasant. Of course,
+now we've spent a few days in the canoe, we believe we're real
+canoe racers."
+
+"If you could call it ten dollars," Heckler proposed after a few
+minutes, "that might-----"
+
+"The crowd hasn't money enough," Dick replied. "You see, we've
+got to get the canoe back, too. Then we'll have to use money
+to feed ourselves up there. I don't see how we can go if we have
+to spend more than five dollars to get there."
+
+Billy Heckler started to shake his head, but Mart, getting behind
+Dick, made vigorous signals.
+
+"We-ell, I suppose I can do it," agreed Heckler at last. "There's
+nothing in the job, but I can remember that I used to be a boy
+myself. We'll call it a deal, then, shall we?"
+
+"I'll have to see the other fellows first," Prescott answered.
+"I'll hustle, though. The fellows will all have to get permission
+at home, too, you know."
+
+"Let me know any time before six to-morrow night," proposed Billy.
+"It must be understood, though, that if I get a paying freight
+order to haul to the lake between now and starting time, then
+my deal with you must be off."
+
+"Of course," Dick agreed. "And thank you, Mr. Heckler. Now,
+I'll hustle away and see the other fellows."
+
+Dick sped promptly away. When he reached Main Street he found
+the other fellows there. Dick gleefully detailed the semi-arrangement
+that he had made.
+
+"Great!" cried Dave.
+
+"Grand, if we can all square matters at home," Tom Reade nodded.
+"Well, fellows, you all know what we've got to do now. We'll
+meet again at this same place. All do your prettiest coaxing
+at home. It spoils the whole thing if anyone of us gets held
+up from the trip. Did you hear about Rip's pony, Dick?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Served him ri---" began Greg Holmes, but stopped suddenly.
+
+For Fred Ripley, turning the corner, saw Dick & Co., and carefully
+walked around them to avoid having to pass through the little
+crowd.
+
+"Speaking of angels-----!" said Dave Darrin dryly.
+
+"Don't tease him, Darry," urged Dick in a very low voice.
+
+But Fred heard all their remarks. His fists clenched as he walked
+on with heightened color.
+
+"It's just meat to them to see me so badly sold on the pony, and
+to know that my father ordered the animal shot and carted away!"
+muttered young Ripley fiercely. "Of course the whole town knows
+of it by this time. Prescott's muckers and a few others will
+be in high glee over my misfortune, but, anyway, I'll have the
+sympathy of all the decent people in Gridley!"
+
+Fred's ears must have burned that night, however, for the majority
+of the Gridley boys were laughing over his poor trade in horse
+flesh.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ALL READY TO RACE, BUT-----
+
+
+On the landing stage at the Hotel Pleasant a group of girls stood
+on the following Tuesday morning.
+
+"Wouldn't Dick and Dave and the rest of their crowd enjoy this
+lake if they were here with their canoe?" asked Laura Bentley.
+
+"Yes," agreed Belle Meade. "And very likely they'd win some more
+laurels for Gridley High School, too. Preston High School has
+a six-paddle canoe here now, and Trentville High School will send
+a canoe crew here in a few days. Oh, how I wish the boys could
+manage to get here with their war canoe!"
+
+"It seems too bad, doesn't it," remarked Clara Marshall, "that
+some of the nicest boys in our high school are so poor that they
+can't do the ordinary things they would like to do?"
+
+"Some of the boys in Dick & Co. won't be poor when they've been
+out of school ten years," Laura predicted, with a glowing face.
+
+"I don't believe any of them will be poor by that time," agreed
+Clara. "But it must hurt them a good deal, just now, not to have
+more money."
+
+"I wish they could be here now," sighed Laura.
+
+"You want to see Gridley High School win more laurels in sports
+and athletics?" asked another girl.
+
+"Yes," assented Miss Bentley, "and I'd like to see the boys here,
+anyway, whether they won a canoe race or not."
+
+"There's a crew canoe putting off from the other side now!" announced
+Belle Meade.
+
+"That's probably Preston High School," said Laura.
+
+"Have the Preston boys a war canoe, too?" asked one of the girls,
+shading her eyes with her hand, and staring hard at the canoe
+across the lake, some three quarters of a mile away.
+
+"Someone at the hotel said the Preston boys have a cedar and canvas
+canoe," Laura replied.
+
+"That's a birch-bark canoe over yonder," declared the girl who
+was studying the distant craft so intently. "I can tell by the
+way the sun shines on the wet places along the sides of the canoe."
+
+The other girls were now looking eagerly. "Wait a moment," begged
+Clara, and, turning, sped lightly to the boathouse near by. She
+returned with a telescope.
+
+"Hurry!" begged Laura Bentley as Clara started to focus the telescope.
+
+"You take it," proposed Clara generously, passing the glass to
+Laura.
+
+Laura soon had the telescope focused.
+
+"Hurrah, girls!" she cried. "That's the war canoe from Gridley,
+and Dick & Co. are in it."
+
+She passed the glass to Belle Meade, who took an eager peep through
+it.
+
+"Hurrah! Gridley High School! Hurrah!" chorused the other girls.
+
+Their voices must have traveled across the water, for Prescott,
+at the stern of the war canoe, suddenly gave a couple of strokes
+with his wet, flashing paddle, that swung the prow around, driving
+the canoe straight in the direction of the landing float.
+
+"Hurrah! Gridley High School! Hurrah!" called the girls again,
+giving the high school yell of the girls of that institution of
+learning.
+
+In answer a series of whoops came over the water.
+
+"They're coming at racing speed!" cried Laura.
+
+"Which shows how devoted the boys of our high school are to the
+young ladies," laughed Belle.
+
+Within a few minutes the canoe was quite close, and coming on
+swiftly. From the young paddlers went up the vocal volley:
+
+"T-E-R-R-O-R-S-! Wa-ar! Fam-ine! Pesti-i-lence! That's us!
+That's us! G-R-I-D-L-E-Y-----H.S.! Rah! rah! rah! Gri-dley!"
+
+"Hurrah! Gridley! Hurrah!" answered the girls.
+
+"Whoop! Wow! wow! _Whoo-oo-oo-oop_! Indians! Cut-throats!
+Lunch-robbers! Bad, bad, bad! Speed Club! Glee Club! Canoe
+Club---Gridley H.S.!" volleyed back Dick & Co.
+
+It was the first time that they had let out their canoe yell in
+public. They performed it lustily, with zest and pride.
+
+"Splendid!" cried some of the girls, clapping their hands. Though
+it was not quite plain whether they referred to the new yell,
+or to the skilful manner in which the boys now brought their craft
+in. At a single "Ugh!" from Prescott they ceased paddling. Dick,
+with two or three turns of his own paddle, brought the canoe in
+gently against the float. Now Dave and Dick held the canoe to
+the float with their paddles while the other young Indians, one
+at a time, stepped out. Those who had landed now bent over, holding
+the gunwale gently while Dave, first, and then Dick, stepped to
+the float.
+
+"Up with it, braves! Out with it!" cried Dick. The canoe, grasped
+by twelve hands, was drawn up on to the float, where its wet hull
+lay glistening in the bright July sunlight.
+
+"You never told us you were coming up here!" cried Laura Bentley,
+half reproachfully.
+
+"If you're bored at seeing us," proposed Dick, smilingly, "we'll
+launch our bark and speed away again."
+
+"Of course we're not bored," protested Belle Meade. "But why
+couldn't you tell us you were coming?"
+
+"We weren't sure of it until late Sunday afternoon," Dave assured
+her. "Some of us had to do some coaxing at home before we got
+permission."
+
+"How did you get that big canoe here?" Clara Marshall asked.
+
+"Don't you see the gasoline engine and the folded white wings
+inside the canoe?" asked Tom Reade gravely. "We can use it either
+as a canoe or as an airship."
+
+Three or four of the girls, Clara at their head, stepped forward
+to look for engine and "wings," then stepped back, laughing.
+
+"You're such a fibber, Tom Reade!" declared Susie Sharp.
+
+"A falsifier?" demanded Tom indignantly. "Nothing like it, Miss
+Susie! The worst you can say of me is that I have the imagination
+of an inventor."
+
+"Tweedledum and tweedledee!" laughed Clara.
+
+"It does seem good to see you boys up here," Belle went on with
+enthusiasm. "How long are you going to stay?"
+
+"In other words, how soon are you going to be rid of us?" asked
+Danny Grin.
+
+"Are you speaking for yourself, Mr. Dalzell?" Belle returned tartly.
+"I inquired more particularly about the others."
+
+Dan quite enjoyed the laugh on himself, though he replied quickly:
+
+"The others have to go home when I do. They had to promise that
+they would do so."
+
+"We have been camping at Lake Pleasant for two days," Dick explained.
+"We came up herewith our canoe and camping outfit on Billy Heckler's
+wagon. We brought along Harry's bull-dog to watch the camp.
+As to how long we'll stay, that depends."
+
+"Depends upon what?" Clara asked.
+
+"On how long our funds hold out," Prescott explained, with a frank
+smile. "You see, all our Wall Street investments have turned
+out badly."
+
+"I'm truly sorry to hear that young men of your tender age should
+have been drawn into the snares of Wall Street," retorted Clara
+dryly.
+
+"So, having had some disappointments in high finance," Prescott
+went on, "we can stay only as long as our _dog fund_ lasts."
+
+"Dog fund?" asked Susie Sharp, looking bewildered.
+
+"Dick is talking about the money we made in bark," Greg Holmes
+explained readily.
+
+"Then you really expect to be here a fortnight?" Laura asked.
+
+"Yes; if we don't develop too healthy appetites and eat up our
+funds before the fortnight is over," Dick assented.
+
+"Oh, you mustn't do that," urged Belle.
+
+"Mustn't do what?" Dave asked.
+
+"Don't eat up your funds too quickly," Belle explained.
+
+"Even if you do," suggested Susie Sharp, teasingly, "you won't
+need to hurry home. We girls know where there are several fine
+fields of farm truck that can be robbed late at night. Potatoes,
+corn, watermelons-----"
+
+"It's really very nice of you girls to offer to rob the farmers'
+fields to find provender for us," returned Greg. "But I am afraid
+that we boys have been too honestly brought up to allow ourselves
+to become receivers of stolen-----"
+
+"Greg Holmes!" Susie Sharp interrupted, her face turning very
+red.
+
+"No; it's nice of you, of course," Greg went on tantalizingly,
+"but we'd rather have a short vacation, that we can tell the whole
+truth about when we go home."
+
+"You boys may starve, if you like," retorted Susie, with a toss
+of her head. "I'm through with trying to help you out."
+
+"You know, Susie," Danny Grin went on maliciously, "farmers' fields
+are often guarded by dogs. Just think how you would feel, trying
+to climb a tree on a dark night, with a bulldog's teeth just two
+inches from the heels of your shoes."
+
+"Who are up here, in the way of canoe folks?" Dick asked Laura.
+
+She told him about the Preston High School boys and the coming
+crew from Trentville High School.
+
+"We ought to be able to get up some good races," remarked Dave.
+
+"You'll disgrace Gridley High School, though, unless you drop
+Danny Grin and Greg Holmes," retorted Susie.
+
+"Now, don't be too hard on us, Miss Sharp," tantalized Greg, "just
+because we tried to dissuade you from committing a crime with
+the otherwise laudable intention of feeding us when our money
+runs out."
+
+"If you will only leave Greg and Dan out," proposed Clara, "you
+may call on any two of us girls that you want to take their places
+in the canoe on race days."
+
+"Whew!" muttered Dick suddenly.
+
+"What's wrong?" demanded Belle.
+
+"Don't mind Prescott," urged Tom Reade. "Just as we left shore
+on the other side someone threw a stone into the lake and raised
+a succession of ripples, which rocked the canoe a bit. So---well,
+you've all heard of sea sickness, haven't you?"
+
+"We might feel worse than sea sick," Dick went on, "if we had
+raced, and then suddenly remembered that we have no authorization
+from Gridley High School to represent the school in sporting events."
+
+Tom's face fell instantly. Dave Darrin, too, looked suddenly
+very serious.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked Laura anxiously.
+
+"Why, you see," Dick went on, "although we are sure enough Gridley
+High School boys, we haven't gone through the simple little formality
+of getting our canoe club recognized by the High School Athletic
+Council."
+
+"You can race just the same, can't you?" asked Susie Sharp, looking
+much concerned.
+
+"We may race all we wish, and no one will stop us-----"
+
+"Then it's all right," said Susie, with an air of conviction.
+
+"But we simply cannot race in the name of Gridley High School."
+
+"Oh, but that's too bad!" cried Clara.
+
+"You can write to someone in the Council and secure the necessary
+authorization, can't you?" asked Laura.
+
+"Yes, we can write; but it's another matter to get action by the
+Council in time," Dick responded. "You see, it's the vacation
+season. There are seven members of the Athletic Council and I
+believe that all seven of the members are at present away from
+Gridley. Likely as not they are in seven different states, and
+the secretary may not even know where most of them are."
+
+Eight Gridley High School girls suddenly looked anxious. They
+had been rejoicing in the prospect of "rooting" for a victorious
+Gridley crew here at Lake Pleasant. Now the whole thing seemed
+to have fallen flat.
+
+"The thing to do---though it doesn't look very promising---is
+to-----" began Tom Reade, then came to dead stop.
+
+"How provoking you can be, when you want to, Tom," pouted Clara.
+"Why don't you go on?"
+
+"Because I found myself stuck fast in a new quagmire of thought,"
+Reade confessed humbly. "What I was about to say is that the
+first thing to do is to write to Mr. William Howgate, secretary
+of the Gridley High School Athletic Council of the Alumni Association.
+But that was where the thought came in and stabbed me with a
+question mark. Mr. Howgate is out of town. Does anyone here
+know his address?"
+
+Fourteen Gridley faces looked blank until Dick at last remarked:
+
+"I suppose a letter sent to his address in Gridley would reach
+him. It would be forwarded."
+
+"Thank goodness for one quick-witted boy in Gridley High School!"
+uttered Belle. "Of course a letter would be forwarded."
+
+"And there isn't any time to be lost, either," urged Susie. "Girls,
+we'll take Dick right up to the hotel now, and sit and watch him
+while he writes and mails that letter."
+
+"Right!" came a prompt chorus.
+
+"Come along, boys," added Susie, as the girls started away with
+their willing captive.
+
+"Let Dave go," spoke up Tom. "Some of us must stay behind and
+stand by our canoe. It's valuable---to us!"
+
+So Darrin was shoved forward. He and Prescott had walked a few
+yards when the latter stopped in sudden dismay.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked Clara.
+
+"We are dressed all right for our own camp," Dick replied, glancing
+down at his flannel shirt, old trousers and well-worn pair of
+canvas "sneakers" on his feet. "We didn't feel out of place in
+the canoe, either. But the hotel is a fashionable place, and
+we can't go up in this sort of rig, to discredit you girls. For
+that matter, just think how smart you all look yourselves, dressed
+in the daintiest of summer frocks. While we look like---well,
+I won't say the word."
+
+"If our Gridley boys are ashamed to be seen with us just because
+they're in rough camp attire," said Laura gently, "then we haven't
+as much reason to be proud of them as we thought we had."
+
+"I'm answered," Dick admitted humbly. "Lead on, then. We'll
+take comfort from our company, and hold our heads as high as we
+can."
+
+On to the wide hotel porch, where many well-dressed people sat,
+the girls conducted the two delegates from the canoe club. However,
+none of the guests on the porch paid any particular attention
+to Dick and Dave. Both campers and canoers were common enough
+at this summer resort.
+
+It was Clara who led the way into a parlor, in one corner of which
+there was a writing desk. Dick seated himself at the desk, and
+after a moment's thought began to write, then promptly became
+absorbed in his task. Dave and the girls seated themselves at
+a little distance, chatting in low tones.
+
+There were other guests of the Hotel Pleasant in the parlor, while
+still others passed in or out from time to time.
+
+One young man, quite fashionably dressed, stepped into the parlor,
+looked about him, then started as his glance fell on Dick and Dave.
+
+It was Fred Ripley.
+
+"Hello!" muttered Ripley in a voice just loud enough to carry,
+as he stood looking at Dick and Dave. "I thought I saw, out in
+the grounds, a sign that read: 'No tramps, beggars or peddlers
+allowed on these grounds or in the hotel.'"
+
+Dick's fingers trembled so that he dropped the pen, though he
+tried to conceal his feelings.
+
+Dave Darrin's fists clenched tightly, though he had the good sense
+to realize that to start a fight in the parlor was out of the
+question.
+
+Ripley's remark had been loud enough to attract the attention
+of nearly every person in the big room toward Dick and Dave.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+SUSIE DISCOMFITS A BOOR
+
+
+Laura Bentley bit her lips. She flushed, then started to rise,
+but Susie Sharp gently pushed her back into her seat, then crossed
+to an electric button in the frame of a window.
+
+A bell-boy promptly answered Susie's ring.
+
+"Will you kindly ask the manager to come here at once?" asked
+Susie.
+
+As it happened, the manager was no further away than the corridor.
+He came in quickly, bowing.
+
+"Mr. Wright," asked Susie coldly, nodding toward Fred Ripley,
+who stood leaning over a chair, smiling insolently, "will you
+kindly have this objectionable person removed? He is annoying
+our guests."
+
+In a twinkling Fred's insolent smile vanished. Susie's request
+had not been voiced in a loud tone, but it had been heard by perhaps
+twenty-five strangers in the parlor.
+
+Ripley's face paled, briefly, then became fiery red. He stood
+erect, stammered inarticulately, then looked as though he were
+furtively seeking some hiding place.
+
+"I think, Miss Sharp," replied the hotel manager, with another
+bow, "that the young man is on the point of leaving, and that
+the services of a porter will not be needed."
+
+Fred tried to look unconcerned; he fished mentally for something
+smart to say. For once, however, his self assurance had utterly
+deserted him.
+
+"Oh---well!" he muttered, then turned and left the parlor in the
+midst of a deep silence that completed his utter humiliation.
+
+"Mr. Wright," said Laura, "I want you to know Mr. Darrin, one
+of our most popular high school boys in Gridley. Dick, can't
+you come over here a moment? Mr. Wright, Mr. Prescott. Our two
+friends, Mr. Wright, have brought up a racing canoe. They are
+camping across the lake. We hope they will arrange for races
+with the Preston and Trentville High School Canoe Clubs."
+
+"I am most glad to meet your friends," said the manager, shaking
+hands with Dick and Dave. "Two of the Preston High School young
+men are stopping here in the house, and the others are over at
+the Lakeview House. I hope, Mr. Prescott, that we shall be able
+to have some fine high school races. It will increase the gayety
+of the season here."
+
+"Thank you," said Dick. "But I am afraid, sir, that we have been
+worse than neglectful---stupid.
+
+"How so?" asked Mr. Wright, his manner quickly putting both rather
+shabby-looking boys wholly at their ease.
+
+"Why, sir," Prescott explained, "we had never thought, until this
+morning, to secure authorization from the Athletic Council of
+our school to represent Gridley High School. I am now engaged
+in writing a letter asking for that authorization."
+
+"Let me take a hand in this," begged Mr. Wright. "Is your letter
+at all of a private nature?"
+
+"Not in the least, sir."
+
+"May I see it?"
+
+"Certainly, Mr. Wright."
+
+The hotel manager followed Dick to the writing desk, where he
+glanced over the letter.
+
+"I have only one suggestion to make," said the manager. "Why
+not ask the secretary, Mr. Howgate, to send his answer by telegraph
+to this hotel, collect?"
+
+"That would be all right," agreed Dick frankly, "if his answer
+isn't too long, or if he doesn't have to send more than one telegram.
+We are not exactly overburdened with funds, Mr. Wright."
+
+"That doesn't cut any figure at all," replied the hotel manager
+in a voice so low that none but Prescott heard him. "Any telegrams
+sent here for you will be paid for by the hotel. There will be
+no expense to you, Mr. Prescott."
+
+"I'm afraid I don't understand why you should do this, Mr. Wright,"
+said Dick, looking at the other attentively.
+
+"Purely a matter of business, my boy," the hotel manager beamed
+down at him. "Such racing as I hope to have here on Lake Pleasant
+constitutes a summer season attraction. Arrange a schedule of
+races, and you may be sure that both hotels will advertise the
+fact. It will be enough to draw a lot of young people here, and
+this hotel thrives by the number of guests that it entertains.
+So will you do me the favor of asking your Mr. Howgate to telegraph
+his answer---collect---addressing it here?"
+
+That began to look like something that Prescott could understand.
+He called Dave over to him and told his chum what was being discussed.
+
+"Fine!" glowed Darrin. "Thank you, Mr. Wright."
+
+So Dick made the suggested addition to the letter. After he addressed
+an envelope and had sealed it the manager took the letter away
+to mail. Then he returned to say, with a tactfulness that won
+the hearts of the eight Gridley High School girls:
+
+"Mr. Prescott, you and your friends will oblige me if you will
+make this hotel your headquarters when you are on this side of
+the lake. We shall always be delighted to see you here."
+
+Thanking the manager for his courtesy, Dick and Dave accompanied
+Laura to the porch; where they were introduced to some of the
+other guests. Then the two boys and the girls started down to
+the lakeside once more.
+
+"Mr. Wright was very kind," murmured Dick gratefully.
+
+"He never fails in courtesy toward anyone," replied Laura. "You
+boys will come over every day, won't you? We must have a picnic
+or two."
+
+"And you must all visit our camp." Dick urged. "It isn't much
+of a place, but the welcome will be of the real Gridley kind.
+If you dare take the risk, we'll even offer you a camp meal."
+
+"The farmers' gardens are in danger, after all, then," laughed
+Susie. "If you are going to deplete your larders to entertain
+us, we girls will surely rob the farmers to make up for what we
+eat."
+
+Susie's face had grown so grave that Prescott could not help regarding
+her quizzically.
+
+"I mean just what to say about robbing the farmers, don't I, girls?"
+Susie asked.
+
+"Yes," agreed Laura Bentley promptly. She had no idea what was
+passing in her friend's head, but she knew Susie well enough to
+feel sure that the latter was planning nothing very wicked.
+
+"Can't we take you out, two at a time?" proposed Dick, as the
+young people neared the float.
+
+"Now?" inquired Laura.
+
+"Yes; since 'now' is always the best time for doing things," Prescott
+replied.
+
+In no time at all the plan had been agreed to. Clara and Susie
+went out for the first ride in the canoe, Tom Reade taking command,
+while Dick and Dave remained on the float.
+
+Two at a time the girls were taken out on the water. This consumed
+nearly two hours of time altogether, but it was thoroughly enjoyed
+by every member of the party.
+
+But at last it came close, indeed, to the luncheon hour.
+
+"Now, when are you coming over to that picnic in our camp?" Dick
+asked in an outburst of hospitality.
+
+"At what time of the day?" Laura inquired.
+
+"If your mother and Mrs. Meade will come along as chaperons,"
+Dick answered, "night would be the best time."
+
+"Why at night?"
+
+"Because, then, you wouldn't be able to see the shabby aspect
+of our camp so plainly."
+
+"It would be very jolly to go over and have a picnic meal by the
+campfire," Belle agreed. "Yet, in that case, we would want to
+reach your place by half-past four or so in the afternoon."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"So that we girls may have the fun of helping prepare a famous
+feast," Miss Meade went on. "Boys, if we come, we shall pass
+luncheon by and bring keen appetites for that evening feast.
+What is the principal item on the bill of fare of your camp?"
+
+"Canned goods," replied Tom Reade.
+
+"Don't you believe him," Dick interjected quickly. "Lake trout,
+bass and perch. This lake is well stocked, and we have already
+found one splendid fishing hole. We got up at five this morning
+and caught so many fish in half an hour that we threw some of
+them back into the water because we had no ice."
+
+"Will your mothers come, if we have it in the evening?" asked
+Dick looking at Laura and Belle.
+
+"Surely," nodded Laura quickly.
+
+"And we'll greatly enjoy it," Dick went on, "if Dr. Bentley will
+also come. Is your father here, Miss Meade?"
+
+"I'm sorry to say that he isn't," Belle answered. "A real picnic,
+in real woods, beside real water, would appeal to him strongly."
+
+"But we haven't fixed upon the date," cried Susie impatiently.
+
+"How would to-morrow night do?" Dick suggested.
+
+"Famously," Laura replied. "Now, boys, you catch the fish to-morrow
+afternoon, and don't bother so much about the other things to
+eat. We won't have any canned stuff in our famous feast. We
+girls will bring all the garden stuff."
+
+"And will steal it from the farmers, at that," added Susie teasingly.
+
+"Yes, you will!" mocked Danny Grin good-humoredly.
+
+"I give you our word that we'll steal everything that we bring
+in the garden line," Susie declared vigorously.
+
+"Then you'll arrange it with the farmer in advance," Greg laughed.
+
+"I give you our word that we won't do that, either," laughed Laura,
+coming to her friend's support, though she had no idea what was
+passing in Susie's busy little head.
+
+"There goes the luncheon bell!" cried Dick reproachfully. "We're
+keeping you girls away from your meal. Come on, fellows. Into
+the canoe with you."
+
+"But you'll be back here to-morrow morning?" pressed Miss Bentley.
+
+"Yes; at what time?"
+
+"Ten o'clock."
+
+"You'll find us here punctually."
+
+Dick & Co. paddled back to their camp feeling that they were having
+a most jolly time, with all the real fun yet to come.
+
+Dick did not think it worth while to go over to the hotel again
+that day, to see if a telegram had come. He was certain that
+the letter would not find Mr. Howgate earlier than the next day,
+in any event.
+
+But at ten o'clock the next morning Dick & Co., having put the
+best possible aspect on their attire, paddled gently in alongside
+the float of the Hotel Pleasant.
+
+Even before they had landed, Fred Ripley, who was stopping with
+his father and mother at the Lakeview House, alighted from an
+automobile runabout in the woods some two hundred yards from the
+lakeside camp of Dick & Co.
+
+"Those muckers are away," Fred told himself, as he watched the
+war canoe go in at the hotel float. "Now, if I have half as much
+ingenuity as I sometimes think I have, I believe I can cut short
+their stay here by rendering that cheap crowd homeless---and foodless!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE RIPLEY HEIR TRIES COAXING
+
+
+Fred studied the now distant canoe, then glanced carefully about
+the camp.
+
+He knew that any sign of his presence, observed by Dick & Co.,
+would be sure to result in the swift return of the canoe, with
+its load of six indignant boys.
+
+Nor did young Ripley dare to risk discovery as the perpetrator
+of the outrage he was now planning. He feared his father's certain
+wrath.
+
+"There are screens of bushes behind which I can operate," Ripley
+decided. "I am glad of the bushes, for, if I use care, not a
+living soul can see me. Now, for some swift work."
+
+It did not take Ripley long to discover where the boys' food supply
+was stored.
+
+"These fellows act like boobs!" muttered Fred in disgust. "Here
+they go away and leave everything exposed. If they didn't have
+an enemy in the world, even then some tramp could come along and
+clean out the camp. Humph! Two tramps, if they wanted to work
+for a little while, could carry away all the food there is here.
+What a lot of poor, penniless muckers Prescott and his friends
+are!"
+
+Again Fred studied the lay of the land, then drew off his coat
+and flung it aside.
+
+"Now, to work!" he said to himself gleefully.
+
+First of all, he got the food supplies all together. Most of this
+stuff was in the form of canned goods. Ripley gathered it up in
+one big pile.
+
+Then he stepped over to the tent, from which, at several points
+and angles he looked carefully over to the hotel landing float
+on the other side of Lake Pleasant.
+
+"They can't see, from the hotel, whether the tent is down or up,"
+Fred determined. "So here goes!"
+
+Opening the largest blade of his pocketknife, Fred cut one of
+the guy-ropes. He passed around the tent, cutting each one in
+turn, until the canvas shelter fell over in a white mass.
+
+"Won't they be sore, though?" laughed Fred maliciously, as he
+started to carry off the camp supplies.
+
+Gr-r-r-r-r! Gr-r-r-r!
+
+Just as Fred was straightening up to start off with his load for
+a bush-screen near the lake front, Ripley heard that ominous growl.
+There was also the sound of something moving through the bushes.
+
+As Fred turned his face blanched.
+
+"Harry Hazelton's bull-dog!" he quivered, now utterly frightened
+as he caught sight of the gleaming teeth in that ugly muzzle.
+"I didn't know that they had brought that beast with them. It's
+the lake for mine! If I can only get into the water I can swim
+faster than the dog!"
+
+All this flashed through his mind in an Instant. Young Ripley
+started in full flight.
+
+Close behind him, bounding savagely, came the bull-dog, Towser!
+
+Trip! Fred's foot caught in a root. Crying out in craven fright,
+Fred Ripley plunged to the ground.
+
+There was no time to rise. Towser, growling angrily, was upon
+him with a bound.
+
+Gr-r-r-r-r!
+
+Fred, with a shriek, felt the dog's teeth in the back of his shirt.
+
+"Get out, you beast!" begged young Ripley in a faint voice.
+
+Gr-r-r-r! was all the answer. Plainly the dog liked the taste
+of that shirt, for he held to it tight.
+
+"Get away---please do!" faltered Fred in a broken voice. "Get
+away. Don't bite. Nice doggie! Nice, nice doggie! Please let
+go!"
+
+Gr-r-r-r-r!
+
+But Towser didn't attempt to bite as yet. For a bull-dog, and
+considering how fully he was master of the field at present, Towser
+displayed amazing good nature. Only when young Ripley moved did
+the four-footed policeman of the camp utter that warning growl.
+
+"Nice doggie!" coaxed Fred pleadingly. "Good old fellow!"
+
+To this bit of rank flattery Towser offered no reply. It began
+to look as though he would be quite satisfied if only his captive
+made no effort to get away.
+
+"Wouldn't I like to be on my feet, with a shotgun in my hands!"
+gritted Fred.
+
+"Gr-r-r-r," replied Towser, as though he were an excellent reader
+of human minds.
+
+For a few moments Fred lay utterly quiet, save for the trembling
+that he could not control.
+
+During those same moments Towser made himself more comfortable
+by shifting himself so that he lay with his paws across Fred's
+left shoulder-blade. His teeth remained firmly fastened in Ripley's
+shirt.
+
+"Now, how long are you going to stay here, you beast?" glared
+Fred Ripley, though he did not dare emphasize his displeasure
+by stirring. It was an instance in which his own displeasure
+amounted to infinitely less than that of the dog.
+
+Over at the hotel Dick Prescott was reading this telegram to his
+chums:
+
+"Letter received. Am communicating with other members of Council.
+Will let you know when I have word. Signed Howgate."
+
+"Oh, you'll get your authorization all right," Laura declared
+cheerily. "It's only a matter of form."
+
+Laura did not tell something she knew---to the effect that at
+her request Dr. Bentley had wired Mr. Howgate, urging that the
+permission be granted to the boys to race as a high school
+organization.
+
+"May we take you young ladies out in the canoe this morning?"
+Dick inquired.
+
+"Only a few of us, or for very short, trips," Laura replied.
+"The fact is, we girls are to play hostess to you this noon."
+
+"Hostess?" asked Dave, looking puzzled.
+
+"Yes; we are going to be your hostesses at luncheon," Laura smiled.
+
+"But I thought you girls were going to skip luncheon in favor
+of the picnic meal to-night."
+
+"Wait until you boys see the luncheon," laughed Susie Sharp, "and
+you'll be sure to think we might as well have skipped that meal.
+It will be light and shadowy, I promise you. Toast, lettuce
+salad, moonbeam soup, sprites' cake, feather pudding and ghost
+fruit."
+
+"Won't there be some dog biscuit?" asked Danny Grin hopefully.
+
+"You shall have a special plate," Susie promised.
+
+So the canoe was hauled up on the float and left there, and a
+general chat followed.
+
+At noon, Dr. Bentley joined the young people, talking with them
+pleasantly, after which he led the way to the hotel.
+
+There, in a little private dining room, the boys met Mrs. Bentley
+and Mrs. Meade. The luncheon was soon after served.
+
+It was a dainty meal, though far more elaborate than Susie had
+led the boys to expect.
+
+At the end of the meal a waiter, looking duly solemn, presented
+at Danny Grin's elbow a plate holding three dog biscuits.
+
+"Thank you," said Dan Dalzell politely. "But I shall keep them
+for future use."
+
+Very calmly, notwithstanding Dick's slight frown, Dan placed the
+biscuit in his coat pockets, though some of the girls found it
+hard indeed not to giggle.
+
+After the meal the party adjourned to the lawn under the shade
+of some fine old elms. A little later a farm wagon, drawn by
+a pair of horses, stopped near the group.
+
+"Now, you must excuse us, boys," announced Laura, rising with
+a mysterious air. "We girls have a little errand to perform.
+We shall be back before half-past four o'clock."
+
+"Wouldn't it be better to be back a good deal before that time?"
+urged Dick. "You see, we can't carry more than three passengers
+at once, and we are to have eleven guests to ferry across the
+lake."
+
+"Why, didn't I tell you?" asked Laura, looking astonished. "My
+father said it would be an imposition to ask you boys to make
+four round trips this afternoon, and as many more to-night, so
+he has engaged one of the hotel launches to take us over, and
+to call for us this evening. You don't mind, do you, boys? But
+we would like to have you here at half-past four o'clock to go
+across the lake with us."
+
+"We'll be here," Dick promised promptly.
+
+Six high school boys watched the girls drive off in the farm wagon,
+waving handkerchiefs and parasols back to the boys.
+
+"Two o'clock," remarked Dick, looking at his watch. "Suppose
+we take a spin up the lake?"
+
+"Or go back to camp, to make it more ship shape?" suggested Tom
+Reade.
+
+"What's the use?" inquired Prescott. "We fixed everything as
+well as we could before leaving there this morning. As to the
+safety of the camp, Harry's dog, Towser, can be depended upon
+to look after that."
+
+So Dick & Co. headed up the lake in their canoe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE LIAR HAS A LIE READY
+
+
+"That's an odd sight, over yonder," announced Dave, pointing shoreward
+with his paddle.
+
+They were now nearly three miles above the hotel landing. They
+had entered a section of the country given over to truck gardening.
+
+"Women gathering in the produce," said Dick, after a glance.
+
+"I don't like that," uttered Dave in disgust.
+
+"I thought we had progressed too far, and had become too civilized.
+Years ago I know that women used to work in the fields, but I
+thought we were above that sort of thing."
+
+"Perhaps the farmer's sons' were all girls," suggested Danny Grin.
+
+"I don't like it, anyway," retorted Dave.
+
+"Nor I," agreed Tom. "To have women at work in the fields makes
+it appear as though the men are too lazy."
+
+The sight on shore was not interesting enough to claim long attention,
+so the young canoeists proceeded on their way.
+
+At a little after four o'clock, however, they were back at the
+landing.
+
+Not long after, eight young women were sighted riding along in
+a farm wagon, while Dr. and Mrs. Bentley and Mrs. Meade strolled
+down one of the paths.
+
+The wagon reached the pier first, just as a launch in charge of
+one of the hotel employs came puffing out of a boathouse near
+by.
+
+"Come here, boys, and help us unload the wagon," called Susie
+Sharp.
+
+Dick & Co. sprang in answer to her summons.
+
+"Why, what on earth have you here?" demanded Dave, opening his
+eyes wide as he saw the contents of the wagon.
+
+There were dozens of ears of corn, a sack of new potatoes, cucumbers,
+tomatoes, a dozen big watermelons and a bushel of early summer
+apples.
+
+"Sh!" warned Laura mysteriously. "Didn't we promise you we'd
+rob some farmer for the feast? Did you think that boys are the
+only ones who can go foraging for a country picnic?"
+
+"You girls didn't go foraging---did you?" gasped Dick Prescott.
+
+"We surely did," retorted Susie Sharp.
+
+"Didn't we say we would do so? And doesn't all this stuff prove
+it?"
+
+"Then you paid the farmer for it," guessed Tom Reade wisely.
+
+"We didn't do any such thing," Miss Sharp insisted. "Did we,
+girls?"
+
+Seven other young feminine heads shook in vigorous denial.
+
+"We didn't pay the farmer, and we didn't make any arrangement
+with him," said Laura quietly, her eyes twinkling with mischief.
+"We simply drove out along the road until we came to the field,
+and-----"
+
+"-----Ravaged it," supplemented Belle Meade demurely. "We went
+through that field like war, famine and pestilence combined!"
+
+"Hurry!" called Susie peremptorily.
+
+So the boys made haste with the vegetables and fruit, transferring
+everything to the bow of the launch, where it was neatly stacked.
+
+"What do you think of that?" Tom demanded of Dick in a whisper
+at the first opportunity.
+
+"The girls are chaffing us," Dick answered knowingly. "Stole
+the stuff, did they? That is, stole it in earnest? Nonsense!
+They're too nice girls for that! But I guess even nice girls,
+like some decent fellows, find enjoyment, once in a while, in
+making believe they are doing something desperate. Of course
+they didn't really steal this stuff."
+
+"If they did," muttered Tom, "they'd be the kind of girls we wouldn't
+want to know."
+
+"It's all right," Dick assured him. "Sooner or later the truth
+of this joke of theirs will all come out. There are no finer
+girls in the country than they."
+
+By this time the older people had joined them. Dr. Bentley's
+party embarked in the launch, taking up all the room there was.
+
+"Pass us your bow-line, and we can just as well give you boys
+a tow," proposed the doctor. "There is no use in your paddling."
+
+"Thank you very much, sir," Dick answered, "but paddling is just
+the fun for which we bought this canoe. We do it because we like
+it. And we'll show you how fast we can get across the lake."
+
+With a toot of the whistle the launch started. Dick gave the
+word to his chums. At first the canoe, even under moderate paddling,
+went ahead of the launch, though gradually the launch drew up.
+
+"You boys look as if you were working," called Dr. Bentley.
+
+"We're doing very little work, sir," Dave answered. "We could
+make the canoe go faster than this, but it would hardly do to
+run ahead of our guests."
+
+In truth the canoe slipped rapidly through the water with the
+expenditure of only a moderate amount of energy on the part of
+Dick & Co.
+
+In a few minutes the lake had been crossed. A point was found
+at which the launch could be backed in. By this time the boys
+were on shore, their canoe hauled up, and they stood ready to
+help their guests ashore.
+
+"We've landed a little below the camp," said Dick, "but it won't
+take us more than a minute to walk there. After we've taken
+you into the camp we'll return for the garden truck."
+
+Gr-r-r-r-r! came a warning sound through the bushes.
+
+"Towser!" spoke Harry Hazelton sharply. "I'm ashamed of you!"
+
+"You ought to be!" came the answer in another voice, and a surly
+one, at that.
+
+"Fred Ripley?" muttered Dick. "What on earth can he be doing
+here?"
+
+Unconsciously all of the picnickers hastened their steps. Then
+they came upon a truly ludicrous sight.
+
+Fred lay where he had been lying ever since ten o'clock that morning.
+He was coatless, stretched out face downward, with Towser still
+camped across his shoulder, and the dog's teeth still fastened
+in his shirt.
+
+"Come and call this measly dog off!" ordered Fred, in a surly
+tone. "This is a fine reward that I get for trying to do you
+fellows a friendly turn!"
+
+Dick, Dave and Tom were the first to get within range and obtain
+a glimpse of the extraordinary scene. They halted, gasping, though
+their glances swiftly took in the whole affair. They comprehended
+what Ripley had been doing, and how the dog had come upon the
+marauder.
+
+By this time the other members of the party came in sight. Fred
+still lay on the ground, scowling and fuming over his undignified
+position, while Towser still kept an eye open for business.
+
+"Call this dog off!" Fred ordered again.
+
+"How did the dog happen to catch you here?" Dick asked quietly.
+
+"Call this dog off and I'll tell you," snapped Fred. "I was trying
+to do you fellows a good turn, but the dog had to interfere and
+get hold of the wrong party."
+
+"You were trying to do us a good turn?" gasped Dick wonderingly.
+
+"Yes---but it will be the last time, unless you call this dog
+off," snarled young Ripley.
+
+Perhaps it is hardly necessary to say that not one in the party
+believed Fred's extraordinary story.
+
+"Hazelton, get this dog of yours away, or I'll go to court and
+secure an order to have the beast shot!" snapped young Ripley.
+
+But at this moment another voice was heard calling from the roadway:
+
+"Fred! Fred! Are you there?"
+
+It was Squire Ripley's voice, though the lawyer himself could
+not be seen as yet.
+
+"Yes, sir; your son is here," Dick answered. "Come and see just
+how he is here!"
+
+"Get your dog off quickly, Hazelton!" urged Fred.
+
+But Harry, at a slight sign from Dick, didn't stir or open his
+mouth to call off his dog.
+
+Through the brush came the sound of hurried steps. Then Lawyer
+Ripley stepped into the group.
+
+"Fred, what on earth does this mean?" demanded the lawyer, staring
+hard.
+
+"That's just what we thought you might like to find out, sir,"
+Dick replied. "We've been away from camp all day, and just came
+back to this scene, Mr. Ripley. You are something of an expert
+in the matter of evidence, sir. Will you kindly tell us what
+you make out of this? There is our tent cut down. There are
+all of our food supplies in a pile, except what you see scattered
+about on the ground. Your son appears to have been headed for
+the lake when our dog overtook him and pinned him down. As a
+lawyer, Mr. Ripley, what would you conclude from the evidence
+thus presented?"
+
+"Call that dog away!" ordered Mr. Ripley.
+
+"Willingly, sir," Dick agreed, "now that you have had opportunity
+to look into all the evidence that we found. Harry, will you do
+the honors?"
+
+Smiling slightly, Hazelton stepped forward to speak to Towser.
+That four-footed guardian of the camp displayed some resentment
+at first over the idea of letting go of Fred's shirt. After a
+little, however, Hazelton succeeded in getting his dog away and
+tied to a tree.
+
+Fred rose to his feet, his face fiery red while he trembled visibly.
+
+"What is the meaning of this, young man?" demanded Lawyer Ripley.
+
+"The meaning," choked the lawyer's son wrathfully, "is just this:
+I was coming by this place this morning in the runabout, when
+I heard a good deal of coarse laughter down here. I knew the
+voices weren't those of boys, and so I knew that something must
+be up. I got out of the car and came over here. I saw two tramps
+in the camp. They had already cut down the tent, and when I arrived
+they were planning to cart the food away. Then they saw me as
+I stepped forward. I told them what I thought of them for thieving
+in such fashion. Then the tramps got ready to jump on me and
+thrash me. Just as I raised my hands to defend myself this dog
+came bounding out of the woods and the tramps ran away. Having
+no more sense than any other fool dog, the cur pinned me down
+and held me here."
+
+"All day?" asked his father.
+
+"Yes; I've been a prisoner here for hours," quavered Fred. "And
+now these fellows want to make out, before the high school friends
+of mine," nodding toward the girls, "that I was the thief and
+destroyer."
+
+"That story is straightforward enough," commented the lawyer,
+turning to the others rather stiffly. "Do any of you wish to
+challenge it?"
+
+No one spoke.
+
+"I'll tell you what I wish, father," broke in Fred angrily. "I
+want an order from the court to have that dog seized and shot.
+He's a vicious and dangerous brute!"
+
+"I think such a court order will be easily obtained," replied
+Mr. Ripley frigidly.
+
+Harry Hazelton turned pale, clenching his fists, though he had
+the good sense not to speak just then. The other boys all looked
+highly concerned.
+
+"Were you bitten by the dog?" asked Dr. Bentley quietly.
+
+"I---I don't know yet," replied Fred. "I can't tell."
+
+"Mr. Ripley," said Dr. Bentley very quietly, "if you contemplate
+seeking a court order for having the dog shot, then I suggest
+that you permit me to take the young man aside and examine him.
+I am a physician, with a good many years of practice behind me,
+and any court would pronounce me competent to testify as to whether
+your son has been bitten, and, if so, to what extent."
+
+"I don't choose to be examined here," Fred declared sulkily.
+"If I want anything of that sort done our own physician can do
+it."
+
+"Young man," replied Dr. Bentley, "your father is an eminent lawyer.
+He is therefore qualified to inform you that if you decline an
+examination now as to the presence or absence of injuries on your
+body, your refusal would have to be taken into account in contested
+court action for the death of the dog."
+
+"Dr. Bentley is quite right, and he has stated the matter accurately,"
+replied Mr. Ripley. "Fred, do you desire to be examined now?
+If so, we can go away to some secluded spot with the doctor,
+and with the dog's owner and any other witness desired."
+
+"I don't want to do anything now but to get away from here," replied
+Fred sulkily. "I want to be rid of Prescott and his friends as
+soon as possible."
+
+"Very good, then," nodded his father. "You may do as you like,
+but if you refuse Dr. Bentley's suggestion for an immediate examination
+you will stand no chance of securing an order dooming the dog."
+
+Fred's further answer was an angry snort as he turned away. His
+father lingered to say:
+
+"If your suspicions that my son was here improperly are anywhere
+near correct, then you are entitled to my most hearty apology.
+Fred is a peculiar and high-strung boy, but I believe his impulses
+are right in the main. I will add that I believe his account
+of how he came to be in this strange plight. He took the car
+early this morning. I am just returning from a spin in our larger
+automobile. I saw my runabout at the edge of the road and it
+occurred to me to stop and see if my son were here. Is there
+anything more to be said about my son's peculiar experience here?"
+
+"Nothing, thank you, Mr. Ripley," replied Dr. Bentley, after a
+sidelong glance at Dick.
+
+"Then I will bid you all good afternoon," replied Squire Ripley,
+raising his hat to the women.
+
+Dr. Bentley watched the lawyer out of sight, then turned to Hazelton
+with a smile.
+
+"Harry," remarked the physician, "your dog won't be shot by order
+of the court."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+AT THE GREATEST OF FEASTS
+
+
+It proved a glorious affair, that picnic by the edge of the lake.
+
+Tom and Dan took Clara and Susie out in the canoe to watch them
+as they fished.
+
+The other four boys fell to with a will, reweaving in new guy
+ropes and erecting the tent again.
+
+Then firewood was gathered in armfuls and several campfires started.
+
+Just before dark the canoe came in with a cargo of nearly four
+dozen fish.
+
+These Tom and Dan took to one side and quickly cleaned. Just
+as Dick and Dave were beginning to realize with some embarrassment
+that they had nowhere near enough dishes for such an affair, the
+man from the launch appeared with two baskets of dishes. He then
+brought up three folding tables and proceeded to set them up,
+next bringing on campstools. Dr. Bentley had overlooked nothing.
+Last of all paper lanterns were strung from the trees, and just
+at dark these were lighted.
+
+Potatoes were set to boil in a kettle. Embers were raked down
+and corn still in the husks was set in the embers and covered
+up to roast. Some of the girls sliced more tomatoes than the
+whole party could eat. Cucumbers, too, were prepared.
+
+Fish were broiled on grates over the fires. All was ready just
+before dark.
+
+Dick gave the launch man a hearty invitation to join them at supper,
+the latter shaking his head, expressed his thanks and hurried
+away.
+
+What an appetizing meal it was! Nothing seemed to have gone wrong.
+It was a merry party indeed that sat down around the tables.
+
+Suddenly there came an interruption. "Camp! Oh, I say---camp!"
+called a gruff voice from the road.
+
+"Here!" called Dick, rising from the table. "Who is it?"
+
+"Any girls there?" demanded the same voice.
+
+"Several," Dick acknowledged.
+
+"Having a picnic, are you?" demanded the strange voice.
+
+"The best ever!" Dick replied heartily.
+
+"Lots of fresh vegetables, too, eh?"
+
+"Ye-es," Dick assented slowly, and with a peculiar feeling. He
+recalled the laughing talk of the girls about "stealing," and
+now wondered what was about to happen.
+
+"I guess they're the girls I want, then," continued the voice
+of the unseen speaker.
+
+Dick & Co. felt a swift spasm of uneasiness, for that voice sounded
+as though it might belong to the law.
+
+A moment later a roughly dressed man moved down into the circle.
+
+"My name is Dobson," said the new comer, looking hard at the girls.
+"I reckon you were in my truck garden this afternoon, weren't
+you?"
+
+"Why---er----ye-es," admitted Laura, the first to find her voice.
+She rose and faced Mr. Dobson with a look of budding uneasiness.
+
+"Took lot of my vegetables, didn't you?" pressed the farmer.
+
+"Ye-es," faltered Laura, "but-----"
+
+"Excuse me, miss, but there aren't many kinds of 'buts' about a
+transaction of that kind," insisted the farmer.
+
+Here, Dr. Bentley, who had looked less concerned than anyone else
+present, broke in:
+
+"Your name is Dobson?" he asked.
+
+"Not Gibson, then?" pressed the doctor.
+
+"Course my name isn't Gibson, if it's Dobson," retorted the farmer.
+"There is a man named Gibson who lives 'bout a quarter of a mile
+from my place."
+
+"Then I imagine I shall have to take you one side and have a little
+conversation with you," smiled the doctor, rising. "Will you
+follow me?"
+
+The farmer nodded without speaking and the two men walked away.
+
+Ten minutes later Dr. Bentley returned to the young people.
+
+"I appeased the farmer's wrath," he announced, with a laugh.
+"And now, young ladies, if my judgment is worth anything, I think
+it is about time to let the cat out of the bag."
+
+Eight high school girls flushed and looked rather confused.
+
+"Why, has anything wrong been going on?" inquired Mrs. Bentley
+anxiously, while Mrs. Meade waited breathlessly for the reply.
+
+"Nothing extremely wrong," replied Dr. Bentley. "I will explain
+what happened. Some of these young ladies, having heard that
+boys occasionally rob orchards or gardens for a feast, laughingly
+promised the young hosts of this evening that they would steal
+the necessary vegetables for to-night's supper. Now, while some
+boys may sometimes do such things, it is needless to add that
+no boy with a good home and a mother's training is likely to become
+engaged in such petty pilfering. I don't believe the boys for
+a moment credited the girls with any real stealing."
+
+"We didn't," spoke up Dick promptly. "We knew there was a string
+to the joke somewhere."
+
+"These young ladies consulted me," went on Dr. Bentley. "Of course
+they wanted the whole matter kept very quiet, and they made me
+promise secrecy. I told them that I didn't like their plan at
+all, but they coaxed, and I will admit that I yielded to their
+coaxing very much against my best judgment. They wanted to be
+able to say that they hadn't paid the farmer, or made any arrangement
+whatever with him. That much is true. They didn't approach the
+farmer---they sent me. I went to Farmer Gibson and made the
+arrangement with him for the supplies, paying him in advance a fair
+price for whatever the young ladies would take out of his garden.
+Yet, in spite of my care in the matter, and my very explicit
+directions to them, it seems that they went astray, and descended
+upon the truck garden of Mr. Dobson, instead of that of Mr. Gibson.
+Mr. Dobson, not having received any pay, very naturally objected to
+being looted of his vegetables while Mr. Gibson received the money.
+But I have been able to explain matters in a satisfactory manner
+to Mr. Dobson, and have sent him on his ways"
+
+Eight very crestfallen high school girls listened to this recital.
+
+The boys, had they not felt a manly sympathy for their discomfited
+friends, would have laughed outright.
+
+"I am glad that it is no worse," said Mrs. Bentley in a relieved
+voice. "At the same time, it was a very silly performance."
+
+"It was," nodded the doctor, who turned to the girls to add:
+
+"My dears, as you succeeded this time in making me your very reluctant
+accomplice, I am in no position to say very much to you. But
+I trust you all realize the situation and its outcome, and that
+you will never allow yourselves to be made ridiculous again in
+any such way."
+
+"I don't believe we shall," Laura replied. "We felt ashamed of
+ourselves afterwards, but we were silly enough to feel because
+we had pledged ourselves to forage for fruit and vegetables that
+the joke must be carried out."
+
+"Tom Reade," snapped Susie Sharp, "you are just bursting with
+laughter that you can hardly hold back."
+
+"Not I!" Tom denied promptly. "I am congratulating myself that
+we boys had sense enough not to take seriously your claim that
+you had been robbing anyone's garden. As it happened, you did
+that very thing, but you didn't know it, and you didn't mean to."
+
+There was an embarrassed silence. Then Dick proposed:
+
+"Let's have a good-natured laugh all around and forget the whole
+thing."
+
+That relieved the awkwardness of the situation. After that a
+watermelon was cut and brought to the tables.
+
+"Gridley, ahoy!" called a voice across the dark waters.
+
+"Who's there?" called Dick.
+
+"Preston High School Canoe Club. May we visit your camp?"
+
+"Shall I invite them over?" asked Dick, looking at Mrs. Bentley
+and then at the girls.
+
+Receiving their consent, he called out:
+
+"Come in, Preston High School! Welcome!"
+
+A soft splashing of paddles showed where the visitors were coming
+in to shore. Dan Dalzell taking the camp lantern, ran to meet them.
+
+A moment later six Preston lads were stepping ashore, one after
+the other. Dick, having excused himself at table, came forward
+also to greet them.
+
+Two of the Preston High School boys were already acquainted with
+Laura Bentley and some of her friends. Introductions followed
+rapidly.
+
+"Drop into the Gridley seats and have some of the watermelon,"
+Dick pressed the visitors, he and his chums standing in order
+to do the honors of the occasion.
+
+"It looks as though we had been trying to invite ourselves to
+a banquet," laughed Hartwell, "big chief" of the Preston High
+School "Indians." "We didn't mean to seem as rude as that, Prescott."
+
+"All I know," smiled Dick cordially, "is that you are all heartily
+welcome. Can we stir up a fire and broil some fish?"
+
+"Don't think of it, thank you," begged Hartwell. "We've had our
+suppers---dinners, the hotel folks insist on calling 'em. It's
+jolly enough for us to be allowed to join you and see the watermelon
+passing around."
+
+"Chug! chug! Puff! puff!" sounded the returning launch. Dick
+glanced apprehensively at Dr. Bentley and the ladies. Did the
+coming of the launch mean that it was about time for the pleasant
+evening to break up?
+
+"Might I ask where and how you find such delicious watermelons
+in this neck of the woods?" inquired Brown, of the Prestons.
+
+"Ask the young ladies," piped up Danny Grin, thereby getting himself
+much disliked for at least the next thirty seconds.
+
+"Dr. Bentley and the young ladies obtained the melons from a farmer,"
+explained Tom Reade, giving Dan an unseen poke in the small of
+the back.
+
+"These melons look good enough to steal," laughed Hartwell, and
+was unable to understand the total silence that greeted his assertion.
+
+"Help wanted from a couple of you boys!" called the voice of the
+launch man.
+
+Four of Dick & Co. raced down to the water's edge. They came
+back, staggering under a big bucket covered on the top with bagging.
+
+"What is this?" asked Dick.
+
+"Ice cream," explained the doctor. "Mrs. Bentley's suggestion."
+
+"We fellows of Preston High School feel ashamed of ourselves for
+having intruded," exclaimed Hartwell. "May we be permitted to
+withdraw?"
+
+"At any time after ten o'clock," smiled Mrs. Bentley graciously.
+"We shall be very much disappointed if you leave us at present."
+
+There was a clatter of dishes and spoons. Mrs. Bentley and Mrs.
+Meade presided over this part of the camp feast.
+
+"We needn't ask you Gridley fellows if you've been having a good
+time," declared Hartwell presently. "But we hadn't any idea that
+we should intrude on an affair of this sort. In fact, while business
+must be barred now, I will admit that business was the object
+of our call."
+
+"What sort of business?" inquired Dick Prescott.
+
+"We came to challenge you fellows to a race," explained Big Chief
+Hartwell.
+
+"A race?" chuckled Dave. "Queer how you've bit us where we live!"
+
+"Do you think you can beat us in a canoe race?" asked Hartwell.
+
+"Yes," Dick rejoined. "All we need to arrange is the date. We'll
+beat you on any date that you name! That isn't brag, please
+understand! It's merely the old, old Gridley High School way."
+
+The young ladies applauded this sentiment merrily.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A SCALP-HUNTING DISAPPOINTMENT
+
+
+"Want to try us out, Gridley?" hailed Big Chief Hartwell, from the
+Preston High School canoe.
+
+It was nearly ten o'clock the next morning, but Dick & Co. had
+just finished putting their camp to rights after breakfast, for
+they had slept late after the feast.
+
+"Do we want to try you out?" Dick answered laughingly. "Why,
+we don't have to do that. We shall be ready to hand you a beating,
+though, at any time you ask for it. We can't help beating you,
+you know. It's the Gridley way!"
+
+"Brag is a good dog," derided Brown from the bow seat of the Preston
+canoe.
+
+"We keep both dogs here," Dave shouted tantalizingly.
+
+"Are you coming out to wallop us?" Hartwell insisted.
+
+"Yes; if you insist upon it," Dick agreed. "But we don't like
+to do it."
+
+"Get into your canoe and come out and see how much of your brag
+you can make good," was Hartwell's calm reply.
+
+"What? Now?" Prescott inquired.
+
+"'Now' is always the best time to do a thing," declared Mason,
+of Preston High School.
+
+"Oh, no," smiled Dick, with a shake of his head. "You fellows
+have been out for some time this morning. You'll have to give
+us time to warm up properly."
+
+"I didn't suppose Gridley needed a little thing like that," Hartwell
+taunted. "You Gridleyites are such sure winners, you know, that
+you ought not to need such a little thing as preparation."
+
+"One of the reasons why Gridley wins," Dick retorted, "is that
+we always use common sense when entering sporting events. So
+we'll ask you to oblige us with a gift of our rights in the matter.
+In fifteen minutes we'll be ready for you."
+
+Gently the canoe was launched in the water. Harry, with a remembrance
+of yesterday's events, called Towser, saying sternly:
+
+"Stay right here, boy, and watch. Maybe you'll get the rest of
+Rip's shirt to-day."
+
+"And maybe he won't," chuckled Dave. "That's what I call holding
+out false hopes to a dog. Rip won't venture within five miles
+of here to-day. Yet perhaps Towser will bag some other game for
+us."
+
+"Into the canoe with you, you loitering braves!" called Big Chief
+Prescott firmly.
+
+Away went the Gridley war canoe, gliding smoothly.
+
+"Our craft is the 'Pathfinder'," called Hartwell, across the water.
+"What do you call your boat?"
+
+"The 'Scalp-hunter'," smiled Dick. As a matter of fact he and
+his friends had forgotten to name the canoe, but he supplied the
+name on the spur of the moment. It made a prompt hit with his
+chums.
+
+"You don't believe you can win any race with such paddling as
+yours, do you?" Hartwell called derisively.
+
+"We don't show all our fine points to the enemy until the battle
+is on," was Prescott's amiable answer. "Even then you won't see
+all our best tricks; you'll be too busy paddling to keep in sight
+of us."
+
+Only very gradually did Dick allow his crew to warm up to their
+work. The Preston boys soon paddled over to the middle of the
+lake, and there lay resting.
+
+"Now, we'll go back and give them a brush," Dick murmured to his
+chums. "Don't exceed any orders that I give in the brush. Don't
+be at all uneasy if we find the Prestons going ahead of us."
+
+"Haven't we got to win?" queried Dave.
+
+"Especially after all the brag we've been throwing in their
+direction?" Tom supplemented.
+
+"We'll win if we can do it easily," Dick answered. "Otherwise
+we won't."
+
+"Then what becomes of our Gridley talk?" asked Greg.
+
+"The difference is that this isn't a real race to-day," Prescott
+explained. "This is only a brush, and we're in it only to see
+what the Preston boys can show us about canoe handling."
+
+At a rather slow, easy dip, the "Scalp-hunter" ranged up near
+the "Pathfinder."
+
+"All ready there, Gridley?" called Hartwell rather impatiently.
+
+"As ready as we're going to be," said Dick.
+
+"Flying start, or from a stop?"
+
+"Either," Dick nodded.
+
+"Then," proposed Hartwell, "move along until your prow is flush
+with ours. When I give the word both crews paddle for all they're
+worth. Steer for the two blasted pines at the lower end of the
+lake."
+
+"That's good," Dick agreed.
+
+Very gently the war canoe ranged alongside, her bark sides,
+well-oiled, glistening in the sunlight. The Preston canoe was not
+of bark, but of cedar frame, covered with canvas.
+
+Hartwell evidently wanted a wholly fair race, for he even allowed
+the "Scalp-hunter's" prow the lead of a couple of feet before
+he shouted:
+
+"Go it!"
+
+Amid a great flashing of paddles the two canoes started. The
+Preston High School craft soon obtained a lead of a foot or so,
+and held it. Now the contest was a stubborn one. Gridley gained
+two feet more.
+
+"You see," called Dick in a low voice, "this is the Gridley way."
+
+"Is it?" Hartwell inquired. "Hanky-pank!"
+
+Plainly enough the last two words were a signal. Though the Preston
+High School boys did not make much visible change in their style
+or speed of dip, the "Pathfinder" now gained perceptibly. Within
+a minute she had a lead of a clean ten feet, and seemed likely
+to increase the interval.
+
+"Why don't you come along, Gridley?" called back the big chief
+in the leading canoe.
+
+"Too early," smiled Dick. Nor did he allow the Gridley boys to
+increase their speed. Presently the "Pathfinder" led by two lengths.
+
+"Why didn't you tell us," Hartwell demanded over his shoulder,
+"that the much vaunted Gridley way is 'way to the rear?"
+
+"We haven't reached the pines yet, have we?" Dick asked.
+
+"No; and you won't, to-day, unless you push that clumsy tub of
+yours along faster."
+
+"Don't wait for us," Dick answered goodnaturedly. "We'll be here
+after a little while."
+
+"We'll wait for you when we land," laughed Hartwell. "Mumble
+bumble!"
+
+Another secret signal, surely, for again the "Pathfinder" began
+to increase the distance from the Gridley rival.
+
+"We'd better stop, and pretend we're only fishing," muttered Tom
+Reade, but Dick kept grimly silent. He was watching every move
+of the Preston paddlers.
+
+"Why, they're leading us four lengths," muttered Darrin, in an
+undertone. But Prescott appeared unworried.
+
+"We'll try to brace our speed, by and by," Dick answered.
+
+"And so will the other fellows," Tom surmised. "They're not going
+at anything like their pace as yet."
+
+For a quarter of a mile the canoes held the same relative position.
+
+"Now, liven up," Dick called softly. "One, two, three, four!
+One, two, three, four!"
+
+Catching the rhythm, Dick & Co. put in some good strokes, their
+paddling becoming faster and stronger. A length and a half of
+the interval was closed up.
+
+"Porky-poo!" ordered Hartwell.
+
+Answering, the Preston High School boys paddled as though fury
+now possessed them. They held the pace, too.
+
+"Hit it up hard, now," Dick commanded. "One, two, three, four!"
+
+Never had Gridley responded more nobly on any field of sport or
+other contest than now. The paddles flew, their wet blades gleaming
+in the air, only to disappear under the water again. Each recovery
+was swift, prompt rhythmic!
+
+But Hartwell's crew was also showing the stuff of which it was
+made.
+
+"Stop paddling---back water!" shouted Hartwell finally.
+
+The "Pathfinder" lay on the water, motionless, only two yards
+from the shore on which stood the blasted pines.
+
+At that same instant the Gridley High School "Scalp-hunter" was
+a trifle more than seven lengths astern.
+
+"That was good and warming," smiled Big Chief Dick, as the second
+canoe came up.
+
+"Yah, yah, yah!" retorted the Preston High School boys, betraying
+their delight in derisive grins.
+
+"Where is that wonderful, all-conquering way you were telling
+us about?" chaffed Hartwell.
+
+"You'll find out when we race," smiled Prescott calmly.
+
+"When we race?" repeated Preston's big chief. "Didn't we race
+just now? Or do you consider that it wasn't a race just because
+you weren't in it?"
+
+"It wasn't a race," Dick answered. "Merely a brush."
+
+"Brush?" repeated Hartwell indignantly. "Didn't we challenge
+you fellows, and didn't you accept? Also, didn't you lose?"
+
+"We lost the brush," Dick admitted.
+
+"You lost the race to us," Hartwell declared stoutly. "Preston
+High School beat Gridley High School by several lengths!"
+
+"Hardly that," Dick retorted coolly. "Preston High School merely
+distanced some boys from Gridley High School. You didn't defeat
+a Gridley High School canoe crew."
+
+"Why didn't we?" the Preston High School big chief questioned.
+
+"Because, if you recall all the chat we had last night, the
+'Scalp-hunter's' crew isn't yet official. We haven't been
+authorized by the Athletic Council of Gridley High School."
+
+"Is that the way you get out of it?" blurted Hartwell.
+
+"No," Dick smiled. "That's the way we get Gridley High School
+out of the charge of defeat. As soon as we're authorized to represent
+Gridley High School as an official canoe crew, then you may claim
+any victory you can obtain over us. But you haven't beaten our
+high school yet for the reason that we don't officially represent
+Gridley High School. Isn't that all clear?"
+
+"I suppose so," Hartwell assented disappointedly. "But we took
+it that we were racing the Gridley High School Canoe Club."
+
+"Then after this you want to do more thinking," Dick laughed.
+"But don't feel too disappointed, Preston. Just as soon as we
+receive sanction from our Athletic Council we'll give you a race
+in earnest, and a chance for all the glory you are able to take
+away from us."
+
+There was some further good-natured talk, after which the two
+canoe clubs separated.
+
+Dick guided the "Scalp-hunter" back to camp. There, as soon as
+the canoe had been hauled ashore, Dave Darrin threw himself on
+the grass, remarking:
+
+"This morning teaches us something! We're in no class with those
+Preston High School boys. We've no business racing, in the name
+of our school, before next summer!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE GOOD WORD BY WIRE
+
+
+"We'll race within a few days," Dick declared serenely. "We've
+got to race soon, for our funds won't hold out long and we can't
+stay here all summer."
+
+"The Athletic Council will thank us for losing the race," murmured
+Greg Holmes, ironically.
+
+"We won't lose," Dick maintained, "unless you fellows throw the
+race against Gridley."
+
+"Throw the race?" echoed Tom Reade indignantly. "Dick Prescott,
+do you think we'd do a thing like that?"
+
+"I'm sure you wouldn't," their big chief admitted coolly.
+
+"Do you mean to say that we didn't do our best this morning?"
+questioned Danny Grin.
+
+"Our very best?" added Hazelton.
+
+"We all did the best that was in us---this morning," Dick went
+on. "But we'll be a lot better prepared when we get into a real
+race."
+
+"I don't believe I can paddle any harder than I did at the finish
+this morning," Reade argued. "In fact, I know I can't. My back
+aches yet with the work that I did."
+
+"I don't doubt it," Dick smiled. "I know that my back aches."
+
+"Then how are we going to win in any other race against Preston
+High School?" Darrin asked curiously.
+
+"Did you fellows study the paddling work of the Prestons this
+morning?" Prescott asked.
+
+"I saw their paddles ahead of us all the time," Greg murmured.
+
+"That was a good place to have their paddles, for study," Dick
+laughed. "Couldn't you see, from their paddling, why they beat
+us with ease?"
+
+"No! Could you?" challenged Tom.
+
+"Yes. The Preston fellows dip their paddles better than we do.
+They dip so that the blade always cuts the breeze, instead of
+meeting it. When they recover they turn their paddles so as to
+slip them out of the water without throwing any back strain on
+the canoe's progress. I was studying their paddling work all
+the time, and I hoped that you fellows were doing the same."
+
+"The Prestons have a lighter, swifter canoe, anyway," contended
+Dave.
+
+"I think they have some advantage over us, that way," Dick nodded.
+"At the same time I am certain that we ought to beat Preston
+by beating their style of paddling."
+
+"Beating their style of paddling?" echoed Reade. "Why, according
+to what you've told us we can't even equal their paddling."
+
+"We're going to equal it," Dick answered, "and we ought to beat
+it. At two o'clock, fellows, we're going out for two hours of
+drill. Then I'll try to explain what I think I saw of the Preston
+superiority in dipping and recovery. If I really observed correctly,
+then we ought to be able to do much better, for I also think I
+see how to improve on the Preston High School paddle work enough
+to make their performance look almost clumsy."
+
+"If you can do that," proclaimed Hazelton ungrudgingly, "then
+you're a wonder, Dick."
+
+"We shall see," smiled the big chief.
+
+"And if we don't see straight," mumbled Reade, "then Preston will
+hand us such a wallop that we won't even have the nerve to take
+up a challenge from Trentville High School."
+
+For the rest of the morning Dick & Co. were much more thoughtful
+than usual. They had met defeat---a thing they didn't relish.
+Yet they knew, in advance, how much worse they would feel if
+they met a defeat when officially entered as a Gridley High School
+crew---for the honor of their school was dear to them all.
+
+The noonday meal was over before one o'clock. Dick would not
+allow the "Scalp-hunter" to be put in the water a minute before
+two. He wanted to be sure that digestion had proceeded far enough
+so that they might do their best.
+
+At the time appointed, however, he took the crew out on the water,
+and there carefully explained what he thought he had learned of
+the better paddling style of the Preston High School boys.
+
+"You certainly did see a whole lot that I didn't see," Reade admitted,
+"and I believe that you saw it straight, too, Dick."
+
+"We can certainly shoot the old canoe ahead faster, already,"
+Dave murmured delightedly.
+
+"Now, Dick, what are the improvements you thought you might have
+on the Preston style?" Danny Grin asked eagerly.
+
+"To-morrow will be time enough to try out improvements, or any
+kind of frills," Prescott answered patiently. "For this afternoon
+let us confine ourselves to paddling as well as the Preston High
+School fellows do it. To-morrow we'll see if we can't do better
+than they do."
+
+After a little more practice it was surprising how much more easily
+they took to the new style of paddling.
+
+"Rest on your paddles for a few minutes," Dick ordered. "Get
+in some deep breaths. Then I'm going to pump up your speed to
+the best that you can do with the new stroke. We'll try to go
+to the hotel landing flying."
+
+When all was ready Prescott gave the word.
+
+"Now, your best speed, and all the strength you can properly put
+into the work. Go! One, two, three, four! One, two, three, four!"
+
+Across the lake sped the canoe, Dick & Co. fully aware that they
+were now traveling at a speed that had been impossible to them
+that same morning.
+
+"Stop paddling! Back water! Stop backing!"
+
+With deft movements of his own paddle, Dick swung the canoe in
+gently against the float.
+
+Out of the boathouse near by came Bob Hartwell.
+
+"I've been watching you fellows," he called.
+
+"That's fair enough," Dick answered.
+
+"You're doing some better than you did this morning," Hartwell
+went on. "You've almost got our stroke."
+
+"Almost?" repeated young Prescott, raising his eyebrows. "Haven't
+we improved a good deal on your Preston High School action?"
+
+Bob Hartwell began to laugh.
+
+"You fellows from Gridley are always world beaters, aren't you?"
+he demanded good-humoredly. "At first, I thought it was all brag
+on your part, and that you fellows were suffering from enlarged
+craniums complicated with bragitis. But now I begin to see that
+you talk confidently just in order to convince yourselves that
+you can't be beaten at anything. And I don't know that it's such
+bad 'dope,' either, as the sporting writers put it."
+
+"Let's hear you try some," urged Dick.
+
+"Brag?" asked Hartwell. "No; I don't believe I have mastered
+the idea well enough to do any really sincere bragging as yet.
+However, if you ever beat us at anything except brag, then I'm
+going to try to copy your form in the boasting line."
+
+By this time Dick & Co. were dragging their canoe up onto the
+float.
+
+"I hope Rip isn't sneaking anywhere about these grounds," muttered
+Danny Grin.
+
+"Who's Rip?" Bob Hartwell asked curiously. Then: "Oh, I beg your
+pardon for being too inquisitive," as he saw Dick frown at Dalzell.
+
+"I'm going to remain on the float, while you fellows go up into
+the hotel grounds," said Tom.
+
+"All of you go, and I'll stay and watch your canoe," suggested
+Bob Hartwell. "That is, if you're willing to trust me as sentry."
+
+"Of course we're willing," Dick responded. "But it's only right
+that one of our own crowd should do such work. Are you coming
+up with us, Hartwell?"
+
+"Why, yes," Bob answered, "if I can't be of any service to you
+here."
+
+Slowly the boys sauntered up through the walks. Then out on the
+porch came Manager Wright, waving a yellow envelope.
+
+"That's probably the answer from the Athletic Council of Gridley
+High School," Dick explained, turning to Hartwell. "You don't
+mind if I run on ahead and leave you, do you?"
+
+"You may run on ahead and leave me if you're as handy at running
+as you are at bragging," chuckled Bob. All of the boys in the
+group were soon at the porch. Mr. Wright descended the steps
+to hand Dick the envelope.
+
+Dick tore open the envelope hurriedly.
+
+"It's all right!" he called gleefully. "Mr. Howgate sends this
+word:"
+
+_"'Athletic Council approves and sanctions your representing Gridley
+High School on the water with your Canoe Club. Wish you success!
+Be careful not to risk lowering Gridley's standard in sports
+through recklessness.'"_
+
+"When do Gridley and Preston race in a regular event?" demanded
+Bob Hartwell promptly.
+
+"Mr. Wright has been most kind to us about several matters," Dick
+answered. "I'd like to ask him what date will be most satisfactory."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+"WON'T WIN AGAINST A MUDSCOW"
+
+
+"How can we help Mr. Wright by racing?" queried Hartwell.
+
+"By enabling me to advertise a canoe race between high school
+boys as an attraction to bring added guests to this hotel," the
+manager explained for himself. "Let me see. This is Thursday.
+If the race were to be held day after to-morrow---saturday---would
+that give both crews time enough to get ready?"
+
+"Saturday will suit Gridley," Dick answered promptly.
+
+"And Preston also," guaranteed Bob Hartwell.
+
+"At three in the afternoon on Saturday?" asked Mr. Wright.
+
+"Yes, sir," Prescott nodded. "But will you have sufficient time
+to advertise, Mr. Wright?"
+
+"Plenty of time," replied the manager, "if I send my letters away
+by tonight's mail. I will advertise in a Gridley paper, and also
+in Preston and Trentville. I will send copy to papers in a few
+other towns as well, and I will see to it that the railway folks
+know about it. Fortunately the railway people will attend to
+their own advertising, as it will give them some chance to bring
+extra passengers. Now, boys, does either crew wish to draw any
+expense money to help in preparing for the race?"
+
+"Preston High School doesn't want any expense money, thank you,
+sir," Bob declared quickly. "Our fellows all have abundant funds."
+
+"The Gridley High School crew is a lot of near paupers," Dick
+admitted with smiling candor.
+
+"Then you may have-----"
+
+"Thank you, Mr. Wright," Prescott went on. "I don't know that
+we could use money if we had it, but in any case I am certain
+that we couldn't accept it from the hotel management without risk
+of sacrificing our standing as amateurs. We might be ruled out
+as 'professionals' for accepting money for the race."
+
+"Pardon me," broke in Mr. Wright, as a bellboy handed him a telegram.
+As he read the message a smile appeared on his face.
+
+"Perhaps this will put a different aspect on the matter," beamed
+the hotel manager. "This telegram is from Mr. Howgate, and says:"
+
+_"'Am mailing you check for forty dollars. Please allow Prescott,
+Captain Gridley High School Canoe Club, to draw on you for that
+amount, for boat uniforms and other expenses. Money voted by
+Council from High School Athletic fund.'"_
+
+"That's thoughtful," murmured young Prescott, wholly taken aback.
+"However, I don't believe we shall need the money."
+
+"You ought to have some sort of uniform," suggested Hartwell. "We
+Preston chaps have canoe uniforms."
+
+"We can paddle just as well without special uniforms," smiled
+Dick,
+
+"But how would it look for good old Gridley High School?" hinted
+Bob generously. "Remember, in appearance, as well as in performance,
+you have the prestige and honor of your school to consider."
+
+"I think you will do well to accept the money and get uniforms,"
+Mr. Wright declared thoughtfully. "You will have to telegraph
+for them in order to have them here by Saturday."
+
+"I have the A.B. Lollard catalogue up in my room," suggested Hartwell
+"I'll run up and get it, and you fellows can look it through and
+make a quick decision."
+
+"When you have the choice of uniforms made," said Mr. Wright,
+"write your telegram and bring it to me to sign. The Lollard
+people know me, and will honor my order."
+
+Now that matters had been arranged so as to be strictly within
+amateur usages, Dick, Dave and the others found that they had
+a new cause for interest as they glanced through the bewildering
+display of uniforms offered in the catalogue.
+
+When the choice had been made Dick turned to young Holmes to say:
+
+"Greg, run down to the landing to relieve Tom, and ask him to
+hurry up here. We want him, too, to approve our selection or
+to state his disapproval."
+
+Reade arrived with a breathlessness that testified to his having
+run all the way. Needless to say, he heartily agreed with his
+chums as to the uniform selected by them.
+
+The uniform chosen was not expensive. It consisted of sleeveless
+cotton shirts, white cotton trousers, knee-length, and with a
+red stripe down the sides, and thin, light boating shoes.
+
+The total cost, per boy, was three dollars and eighty-three cents.
+Certainly not an expensive canoeing uniform! There would be
+some express charges to pay in addition.
+
+"You'll have about fifteen dollars left for anything else that
+you may need," suggested Mr. Wright.
+
+"Yes; but we don't wish to spend it," Dick replied. "It is only
+the thought of the Gridley High School that makes us decide on
+any uniform at all."
+
+"You couldn't have been more modest," smiled Bob Hartwell, as
+he thought of the more expensive uniforms of his own crew.
+
+The telegram was prepared. Mr. Wright signed it and sent it away.
+Then he hastened to his office to prepare his own advertising
+matter.
+
+As the Gridley girls were nowhere to be seen about the grounds,
+Dick did not inquire for them. Instead he and his chums hurried
+back to the lake, where they put in another hour in hard practice.
+Prescott kept his crew out on the lake, in about the middle,
+where his low---spoken directions could not be heard from the
+shore.
+
+"Are we going to win, now?" asked Dan Dalzell.
+
+"How can we help it, when we are to wear such dazzling uniforms?"
+queried Reade.
+
+"We've got to do a lot of hard work tomorrow, and on Saturday
+morning," Dave added. "I doubt if we yet paddle anywhere near
+the Preston High School performance."
+
+"We'll work hard to-morrow," Dick agreed, "but after that we will
+have to be satisfied with what we've done. Saturday morning we
+don't want to do any hard work. Just enough exercise to keep
+our muscles supple for the real fray of the afternoon."
+
+"We ought to stay out longer now," urged Hazelton.
+
+"Do you fellows think so?" asked Dick thoughtfully. "It seems
+to me that we've done enough hard canoe work for to-day. We don't
+want to go stale from too much training."
+
+"But we can't---we mustn't lose the race on Saturday," almost
+groaned Dave Darrin.
+
+"Then we'll do better not to overtrain," said Dick quietly. "Unless
+I hear a big kick I'm going to turn the canoe toward our camp."
+
+There was no objection, though some of the members of Dick & Co.
+frowned slightly. They had great confidence in Dick's judgment,
+yet he seemed to them over cautious in training.
+
+"I wish it were Saturday night," murmured Tom Reade, lying on
+the grass full length, after they had landed.
+
+"So that you'd know how it feels to be licked and to have your
+school licked, too?" inquired Danny Grin.
+
+"Stop that talk!" ordered Tom gruffly. "We're not going to be
+beaten. We'd hardly dare show our faces again in Gridley if Preston
+High School took us into camp."
+
+"Then how will the Preston fellows feel if we distance 'em?" Greg
+inquired.
+
+"Oh, it won't matter as much over at Preston," Tom replied coolly.
+"Preston hasn't such a big reputation for winning athletic events
+as Gridley has."
+
+"The more I think of it," muttered Dave, "the more I marvel at
+our cheek. We are barely more than freshmen. As yet we've entered
+the sophomore class only by promotion. Yet we get away from home
+and immediately start in to fight under the Gridley colors, just
+as though we were real juniors or seniors! My, but I'll hate
+myself if we get walloped Saturday afternoon!"
+
+"We'd all dislike ourselves," smiled Dick Prescott calmly. "That
+is why we haven't any thought of allowing ourselves to be beaten,
+either by Preston or Trentville."
+
+"I wonder if Trentville is as good as Preston?" asked Tom curiously.
+
+"We can't tell until we see them work," suggested Greg.
+
+"Who's going to eat, and when?" asked Dan. That started the crowd
+to making preparations for the camp supper. It was prepared in
+good time, and six healthy boys sat down to enjoy it. After that
+came a period of blissful idleness. Then, more or less reluctantly,
+the youngsters set about washing the dishes and setting the camp
+straight in general.
+
+"Better throw some wood on the fire; it's getting pretty dark,"
+suggested Dick. "I'll get the lantern and light it."
+
+Gr-r-r-r-r! came the voice of Towser, in the near distance.
+It was followed by barks and yelps, all in the voice of Hazelton's
+bull-dog.
+
+"What trouble has the pup gotten into?" demanded Harry, throwing
+an armful of wood on the campfire, then wheeling sharply.
+
+Gr-r-r-r! Wow-wow! Woof! sounded closer at hand, accompanied
+by considerable noise in the underbrush.
+
+"That pup's in trouble," declared Tom sagely. "Come along, fellows!
+Bring the lantern, Dick!"
+
+Six boys, headed by Dick with the lantern, went to meet the bull-dog.
+They came upon Towser, growling in a most excited manner, threshing
+something about him in the bushes as he came toward them.
+
+"Hold still, boy!" commanded Harry. "What is it, old chap?"
+
+Then he came upon the dog. In the darkness it was not easy to
+make out what ailed Towser. But Prescott came closer to the dog
+with the lantern.
+
+"Towser has his foot caught in a steel trap. I'm afraid his leg
+is broken," quivered Hazelton, as he threw himself on the ground
+beside his pet. "Hold still, boy! Let me take it off of you."
+
+The dog permitted himself to be held while Tom Reade pried open
+the jaws of the steel fox trap, the chain to which the pup had
+dragged over the ground.
+
+"That's a queer accident," commented Greg Holmes.
+
+"Accident?" flamed Harry. "This thing is no accident. It was
+done on purpose, and I wouldn't need but one guess to name the
+two-legged cur that did this!"
+
+All of the boys understood at once that Hazelton was accusing
+Fred Ripley of setting the trap.
+
+Towser, as soon as released, limped a little, but proved that
+his leg was not broken, though it had been cut in the trap.
+
+"Woof!" he exploded angrily, as soon as he found that he could
+run about on his injured leg. Then, showing his teeth, he growled
+menacingly and bounded through the woods, Dick & Co. following
+pell-mell.
+
+"Towser knows that his enemy is still near!" called Harry exultantly.
+"Come on, fellows! We'll catch that sneak!"
+
+A bull-dog's strong point is not his scent. He led the boys to
+the roadway, then halted, growling, plainly at fault.
+
+Perched up in a tree not fifty yards away, well hidden by the
+foliage, were Fred Ripley and another youth. For a few moments
+they listened breathlessly to the pursuit, then appeared to feel
+more at their ease.
+
+"You didn't work the trap trick quite right," whispered Fred to
+the youth in overalls beside him.
+
+"Better luck next time," whispered back the stranger. "But no
+matter. I see how we can fix the canoe so that it couldn't win
+a race against a mudscow!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+WHAT AILED GRIDLEY?
+
+
+"There's an automobile full of Gridley folks coming up to the lake
+to-day!" cried Susie Sharp excitedly as she ran to meet her girl
+friends at the landing stage.
+
+"How do you know?" asked Laura eagerly.
+
+"Mr. Wright has just received a telephone message, asking that
+arrangements be made to give them supper here. They're going
+back in the evening."
+
+"Dick will be so pleased!" cried Laura. "All of our boys will
+be delighted, I imagine," replied Susie dryly.
+
+"Of course; that is what I meant," explained Laura, flushing slightly.
+
+"I know. You think that Dick Prescott is the only boy at Lake
+Pleasant," teased Miss Sharp.
+
+"Stop that!" begged Clara Marshall. "Don't talk nonsense."
+
+At one end of the float lay the "Pathfinder." At the other end
+lay the "Scalp-hunter," as shining as a thorough overhauling and
+a coating of oil could make her.
+
+Over the latter canoe the Gridley High School girls had posted
+themselves as a sort of guard of honor.
+
+Not that there was any suspicion that either of the canoes would
+be tampered with. High school and college sports are "clean."
+No underhanded tricks are resorted to by competitors for the sake
+of winning.
+
+In the boathouse near by sat the members of both crews, mingling
+on the most friendly terms. With them were some of the officials
+of the race.
+
+Dotted along the water front of the hotel grounds were many little
+groups of waiting spectators in chairs, on campstools or sitting
+on the grass.
+
+In the morning buoys had been set on the lake at each end of a
+measured course. The course was to be a mile, around the upper
+buoy and returning to the starting line. The usual rules of boat
+and canoe racing were to apply as to clear water, fouling and
+the like, as well as the right of way at the upper buoy in case
+the rival canoes were close together.
+
+"It's half-past two o'clock now," announced the starter, glancing
+at his watch.
+
+"At two-forty," stated the referee, "I shall order both canoes
+into the water. As soon after that as each crew captain chooses
+he may put his men aboard and take such warming-up work as he
+may wish. At two-fifty-six the first gun will be fired, and both
+crews must come promptly to the judges' boat for alignment. At
+exactly three the second shot will be fired---the starting signal.
+Has either captain any questions to ask?"
+
+Neither captain had any questions.
+
+"Let me know, time-keeper, when it is two-forty," said the referee,
+going toward the door. "Both captains will be on the alert to
+avoid delays."
+
+As the referee glanced out he saw that at least four hundred spectators
+were on hand. Two stage loads of men, woman, boys and girls had
+already arrived from Preston. Trentville also had sent a delegation.
+
+"What's all that yelling with 'Gridley' in it?" cried Dick, jumping
+up and moving toward the door.
+
+He was followed by his chums. They reached the float in time
+to see the automobile bus from Gridley coming down to the water
+front. In it were some thirty people of all ages.
+
+"Oh, you Prescott!" yelled one irrepressible young man, through
+a megaphone. "Don't you dare make fools of us this afternoon!
+Gridley must win!"
+
+"Don't worry!" Dick shouted back, waving his hand. "Gridley is
+going to win!"
+
+"Yes, sirree!" called Bob Hartwell, laughingly. "Preston High
+School guarantees Gridley to be a winner---for second place!"
+
+People now came crowding down upon the float to such an extent
+that Mr. Wright had to use the services of four hotel employs
+in coaxing them to keep back out of the way of the crews.
+
+"No further admittance to the float, ladies and gentlemen!" called
+the hotel manager. "Keep it clear for the use of the crews!"
+
+"Remember, Prescott," shouted a voice, "nothing but a win!"
+
+"That's the Gridley way," Dick called back.
+
+"Crew captains!" shouted the referee. "Ready to launch your craft!
+Time for a bit of preliminary practice."
+
+"Take hold and launch!" cried Bob Hartwell, running forward.
+
+Over into the water went the Preston High School canoe with a
+splash. The Preston boys began to fill their places.
+
+"Gridley, stand by to launch!" called Prescott, "Slide her in,
+easily!"
+
+As graceful as a thing of life the big war canoe slipped into
+the water, then lay there like a swan. Dave Darrin took hold
+of the bow-line, the pretty craft resting lightly against the
+float.
+
+"Aren't you going to take your men out and warm them up, Prescott?"
+asked Referee Tyndall.
+
+"No, sir; only for the last five minutes. We want only work enough
+to start the blood to moving well."
+
+So only Dave stood by the canoe. Hatless, the Gridley High School
+boys paced up and down the float, awaiting word from Big Chief
+Prescott before embarking.
+
+"I wish Dick would put our boys to work at once," murmured Belle
+uneasily. "Look what a fine showing Bob Hartwell's Preston fellows
+are making out there."
+
+In truth the Preston boys were making a splendid showing with
+their brisk, steady, sturdy paddling. Many a cheer went up from
+shore for them.
+
+"Time for us, Gridley," announced Prescott, when some minutes
+had passed.
+
+Alertly his chums sprang to their posts. In a twinkling they
+were seated, each with his paddle in hand, holding lightly to
+the float.
+
+"Shove off," said Dick, in a very low voice. As the "Scalp-hunter"
+started for the middle of the lake a wild Gridley yell broke loose.
+
+But none of the boys paid heed. Each had his ears alert only
+for the orders of the captain.
+
+Somehow, as the canoe moved out, each one had the same feeling.
+The "Scalp-hunter" was not moving quite as it should do.
+
+"There is at least one of you fellows who isn't doing all he should,
+or just as he should," Dick murmured quietly. "Which one is it?"
+
+There was no immediate response, though all five of the boys gave
+renewed attention to their work. Still, all of them had the same
+uneasy impression that there "was a screw loose somewhere."
+
+"It's just as though we had a drag holding us back," Dick muttered
+disappointedly.
+
+"Perhaps it's only because we're not quite warmed up yet," Tom
+hinted.
+
+"No; it isn't that," Prescott responded. "I wish I knew just
+what does ail us. Take the second speed, fellows, and each of
+you watch his dip and recovery. Remember, it's the disciplined
+paddling that wins a canoe race."
+
+At the next speed they went forward a little faster, to be sure.
+Yet there was a decided lack of speed or a pull-back somewhere.
+
+"Don't lose your nerve, Gridley!" floated Hartwell's voice over
+the water as the Preston canoe shot by at a wind-jamming speed.
+
+"Want a tow, Gridley?" hailed someone from shore.
+
+"Next speed, fellows! Hit it up hard," called Dick Prescott.
+Perspiration from extreme nervousness broke out on his forehead.
+
+Strive as he would, the crew captain of the Gridleys could not
+shake off the gloomy depression that assailed him. Something
+was wrong---radically wrong! The "Scalp-hunter" was not showing
+a winning gait!
+
+"Best speed---and work, fellows!" called Dick, as quietly as ever,
+though in his voice there was a note almost of despair.
+
+Now, indeed, the Gridley craft sped through the water. Yet all
+of her crew, and many people on shore, realized that the war canoe
+was not showing a prize-taking gait.
+
+How Dick, Dave, Tom and the others worked, bending all their energies
+to the task! Yet all felt the same awful doubts.
+
+Bang! The first gun had sounded.
+
+"Down to the line, fellows!" Dick called. "Put in all the steam
+you can. I was wrong not to have warmed you up before. Get your
+blood to moving. One, two, three, four! Hump it! Hump it!"
+
+Their bodies streaming with perspiration, breath coming fast,
+their faces deeply flushed, Dick & Co. bent to their paddling.
+They were moving fast, yet not as fast as they should be moving
+and back.
+
+"What on earth can ail our boys?" cried Laura Bentley anxiously
+as she watched.
+
+"They're moving fast," replied Clara Marshall.
+
+"Yet not the way they should move," Laura insisted. "There's
+nothing about them of the easy, brisk form that Preston High School
+shows to-day."
+
+"Don't hint at defeat!" shuddered Belle Meade. "We might be able
+to stand a Gridley defeat, but the boys couldn't."
+
+Preston's canoe now rested on the water, ready to be aligned at
+the referee's order. Gridley's craft seemed to be straining as
+she neared the line.
+
+Suddenly three sharp, short, shrill blasts sounded from the whistle
+of the judges' launch.
+
+"Prescott!" roared the referee.
+
+"Now, what's up, I wonder?" Dick asked himself, with another
+sinking feeling at heart.
+
+The judges' boat was making fast time toward the Gridley High
+School entry.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"DINKY-BAT! HOT SAIL!"
+
+
+"Captain Prescott, what is wrong with your boat?" demanded Referee
+Tyndall, as the judges' launch stole up close.
+
+"Something seems to be wrong with us, I'll admit, sir," Dick made
+answer. "I'll be greatly obliged to you, sir, if you'll tell me
+what it is.
+
+"What are you towing?" asked the referee bluntly.
+
+"Towing?" repeated Dick in bewilderment.
+
+"That's what I asked," repeated the referee. "When you came down
+on this last spurt I'm sure that at one moment I saw a length
+of line rise above the water astern of you. Then, further back,
+I saw something else jerked to the surface."
+
+"Why, we can't be towing anything," Dick insisted. "You saw our
+canoe launched."
+
+"Late start, if you don't line the canoes up at once, referee,"
+warned the time-keeper.
+
+But Mr. Tyndall had his own views.
+
+"The starting time will be delayed," he announced sharply. "Captain
+Prescott, take your canoe to the landing stage."
+
+"All right, sir."
+
+"Captain Hartwell you will follow."
+
+"Very good, sir."
+
+Going in to the landing stage Dick gave his crew an easy pace,
+yet they were soon alongside the float.
+
+"Now, take your canoe out of water, Gridley," commanded the referee,
+stepping ashore from the launch. "I want a look at the craft."
+
+Dick & Co. lifted the war canoe to the float bow first. Just
+as the stern cleared the water a cry went up from scores of throats.
+
+For the referee had grasped a line made fast to the bottom of
+the canoe near the stern.
+
+Hauling on that line he brought in several yards of it---then,
+at the outer end of the line came a light blanket, dripping.
+Through the middle of the blanket the end of the line had been
+secured.
+
+Dick Prescott gasped. His chums rubbed their eyes. Bob Hartwell,
+who had landed, looked on in utter consternation.
+
+"For the love of decency!" gasped Referee Tyndall. "Who rigged
+on a drag like that."
+
+The blanket, towing below the surface, was a drag that could be
+depended upon, perhaps, to delay the canoe at least one length
+in every dozen that her crew could put her through the water.
+
+"None of our fellows did that trick," Dick declared hotly. "You
+saw us launch our canoe, Mr. Referee, and she was clear when
+we launched her."
+
+"I naturally wouldn't suspect the Gridley crew of rigging a drag
+on the Gridley canoe," remarked the referee dryly, as he followed
+the line back to the canoe. "See! Some scoundrel managed to
+twist a screw-eye into one of your frame timbers underneath.
+The line is made fast to the screw-eye. Captain Prescott, that
+could have been done by someone hidden under this float while
+your craft lay alongside. He could bring his mouth above water,
+under the timbers of this float. Then, with his hand and arm
+hidden under water the same rascal could easily reach out and
+fasten in the screw-eye."
+
+"Prescott," gasped Bob Hartwell, in a disgusted voice, "I hope
+you don't believe that any of our fellows, or their friends, could
+be guilty of such contemptible work!"
+
+"Hartwell," Dick answered promptly, resting a hand on the arm
+of the Preston High School boy, "I am offended that you should
+believe us capable of suspecting Preston High School of anything
+as mean as this. Of course we don't suspect Preston High School!"
+
+The referee himself now twisted the screw-eye out of its bed in
+the canoe frame. Then he gathered up the wet cord and blanket
+and hurled the whole mass shoreward.
+
+"I'd pay twenty-five dollars out of my own pocket," the race official
+declared hotly, "for proof against the scoundrel who tried to
+spoil clean sport in this manner!"
+
+Nearly all of the crowd of spectators had now surged down close
+to the float.
+
+"I think we could make a pretty good guess at who is behind this
+contemptible business," snarled Danny Grin, his face, for once,
+darkened by a threatening frown.
+
+"Who did it?" challenged Referee Tyndall. Dalzell opened his
+mouth, but Prescott broke in sharply with the command:
+
+"Be silent, Dan! Don't mention a name when you haven't proof."
+
+"Can it possibly be anyone from Preston?" asked Hartwell anxiously.
+"If it is, I beg you, Dalzell, to let me have the name---privately,
+if need be. I'd spend the summer running down this thing."
+
+"I know whom Dalzell has in mind, Hartwell," Dick rejoined. "It's
+no one from within a good many miles of Preston, either. But
+we have no right to make accusation without an iota of proof."
+
+"Then you decline to allow the name to be furnished?" blurted
+the referee.
+
+"I refuse, sir, for the same reason that you would," Dick answered
+coolly. "Only a coward, a knave or a fool will accuse another
+person without some reasonable proof to offer. No great harm
+has been done, anyway. The drag was found in time."
+
+"Get your canoe out, Hartwell," ordered Mr. Tyndall. "This time,
+when we launch them, we'll make sure that both craft are in good
+order."
+
+When the "Pathfinder" was hauled up on the float she was found
+to be free from any evidences of trickery.
+
+"Now, launch, and we'll watch each canoe until it puts off," announced
+Mr. Tyndall. "Captain Prescott, will ten minutes be enough for
+you before the sounding of the first gun?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"I'd rather you gave Gridley plenty of time, sir," urged Bob Hartwell.
+"If we can't win from Gridley High School fairly, we don't want
+to win at all."
+
+"First gun, then, at three-twenty-eight," called Mr. Tyndall.
+"Second gun at three-thirty."
+
+Slowly the "Pathfinder" followed the "Scalp-hunter" out into midlake.
+
+"How does your craft go now, Gridley?" hailed the big chief from
+Preston.
+
+"She goes like a canoe now," Dick called back joyously.
+
+Then he set his chums to easy paddling. All six of Dick & Co.
+felt a thrill of joy at realizing the difference in the canoe's
+behavior.
+
+"We'll win, all right," predicted Prescott joyously.
+
+"If we don't, we'll make motions that look like putting up a hard
+fight, anyway," Tom answered him.
+
+"I wish I had my foot on the neck of the cur that rigged the drag!"
+muttered Darrin vindictively.
+
+"I don't," Dick answered quietly. "The fellow who rigged the
+drag probably wasn't the same fellow who planned the scheme."
+
+"I'm going to provoke a fight with a certain party, one of these
+days, anyway," threatened Dave, his brow dark with anger.
+
+"Forget it now," Dick urged. "The fellow whose mind is ruled
+by an angry passion isn't in the best form for athletic work.
+Banish all unpleasant thoughts, all of you fellows."
+
+By degrees the big chief from Gridley warmed up his braves in
+the war canoe. He had them going in earnest, at nearly their
+best speed, just as the first gun was fired---a pistol in the
+hand of the starter on board the judges' boat.
+
+"We'll go over there in our best style," Prescott called. "Try
+to give the people on shore something worth looking at---they've
+waited long enough to see something! One, two, three, four!
+One, two, three, four!"
+
+In absolute precision the Gridley High School boys moved at their
+work, their swift, deft, strong strokes sending the birch bark
+craft darting over the water in a fashion that brought a cheer
+from shore.
+
+"Deep breathing just as soon as we're at rest at the line," Dick
+warned his chums. "At the start try to make the first breath
+carry you for four strokes!"
+
+In a short time the referee had the canoes with their noses at
+the line, and at an interval from each other satisfactory to him.
+
+"Thirty seconds to the start!" called the time-keeper. "Twenty
+seconds!"
+
+In the Gridley canoe each boy sat bent slightly forward, his paddle
+raised at the proper position.
+
+"Ten seconds!" called the starter. Then-----
+
+Bang! Away shot the canoes. Over all other sounds could be heard
+Dick's low-toned:
+
+"One, two, three, four! One, two, three, four!"
+
+The Preston boys heard him, and Dick noted, with amusement, that
+they unconsciously adapted their own stroke to his count.
+
+"Cut that numeral business," grunted Bob Hartwell, across the
+water. "You're queering our fellows."
+
+"They mustn't listen to our signals," Dick laughed back. "One,
+two, three, four!"
+
+"Come on, fellows; get ahead of that Gridley crowd, where we can't
+hear 'em," urged Hartwell. "Hanky pank!"
+
+At that the Preston canoe managed to get a slight lead. Dick
+did not vary his count, however. He had no objection to being
+led slightly to the upper buoy.
+
+Soon, however, Preston High School made the distance two lengths.
+Dick began to count a bit faster.
+
+"Put a little more steam on, fellows," he urged.
+
+So the gap was closed up somewhat. But Hartwell, glancing back,
+called:
+
+"Mumbleby hoptop!"
+
+Whatever that signal meant the Preston boys were now paddling
+a stronger and slightly swifter stroke. Dick, too, increased
+the stroke.
+
+Despite it all, however, Preston was now securing more and more
+of a lead by almost imperceptible gains. Dave Darrin, in the
+bow seat of the war canoe, eyed the water interval between the
+two canoes with a frowning glance.
+
+"More steam!" Dick urged. As the Gridley canoe went creeping
+up on the rival craft, Hartwell muttered another of his ridiculous
+code signals.
+
+"Preston hasn't let itself out yet, and we're next door to panting
+already," Tom Reade told himself, with a sinking heart. "We were
+fools to enter as a school crew without more practice!"
+
+At this time Dick Prescott was the only one in the war canoe who
+serenely ignored all doubts. Of course he couldn't be sure that
+he would win. In fact, all the chances appeared against him.
+ But the absurd habit, as it seemed to others, of feeling that
+Gridley could not be beaten, was strong upon him.
+
+More than half way to the upper buoy Preston High School led by
+more than two lengths.
+
+"Get on, Gridley! Get on! Do something!" came the distant yet
+distinct yells from shore. Many spectators, in carriages, or
+on bicycles, were following the rival crews.
+
+"Prescott, what ails you?" came a wailing cry from shore.
+
+There were other discouraging calls, too. Had Dick been less
+strong in his faith in Dick & Co. he might have gone to pieces
+under the nagging.
+
+Bob Hartwell, glancing smilingly back over one shoulder, saw the
+Gridley boys working.
+
+"We've got 'em stung, fellows," called the Preston High School
+big chief to his crew. "Take it easy, but don't let 'em gain
+anything. We won't try to increase the lead until we're on the
+last half of the home stretch."
+
+A hundred and fifty yards from the upper buoy Dick passed the
+word:
+
+"Now, hump a bit. We want to worry 'em as we get to the buoy.
+Make it hot for Preston! One, two, three, four!"
+
+Some of that distance was covered. As Preston rounded the buoy
+Hartwell and his crew came face to face with Gridley, about to
+round it.
+
+"One, two, three, four!" almost drawled Dick. He had already
+passed the signal to his own men, not one of whom obeyed his slow
+count, but on the other hand, Preston High School for the space
+of about fifteen seconds, slowed to that crawling count.
+
+"Brace up, you dubs! Paddle!" roared Hartwell. "Never mind that
+funeral march. Dipperty-dip!"
+
+Preston recovered from its brief trance and shot ahead. But Gridley
+was already around the buoy and coming fast.
+
+Half way home from the upper buoy found Preston going strongly,
+two and a half lengths ahead of Gridley High School.
+
+"Oh, you, Prescott, get up and run!" came the dismal, desperate
+advice from shore.
+
+As he mentally measured the distance, now, to the finishing line,
+Dick Prescott's eyes flashed.
+
+"Now, your reserve power, fellows!" he called in a low, tense
+voice. "Make every stroke count! Full muscle! Never mind your
+backs! One, two, three, four!"
+
+A splendid showing Gridley made. Soon the lead of the rivals
+was less than two lengths.
+
+"Steam-ho!" called Hartwell. "Hot sail!"
+
+Preston's paddles flashed in the sunlight in unison, in the best,
+swiftest stroke they had yet shown. Over on shore the Preston
+boosters let their lungs loose in cheering yells.
+
+"Wait for a tugboat, Prescott!"
+
+"You're up against the real thing, Gridley!"
+
+"Come on in, Hartwell! The other canoe is tied to the shore!"
+
+"More steam!" ordered Dick. "More steam! Your best, prize winning
+stroke now."
+
+Again Hartwell glanced backward. Now the prow of the war canoe
+was less than half a length from the stern of the Preston craft.
+
+Up and up it came. Hartwell, in a burst of energy, shouted his
+prize signal:
+
+"Dinky-bat! Hot sail!"
+
+The new spurt carried Preston High School ahead once more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+NATURE HAS A DISMAL STREAK
+
+
+"Come on, Prescott!"
+
+"Or else sink!"
+
+"Don't come back to Gridley!"
+
+The cries from shore, as the Gridley boosters noted the effects
+of the fine Preston work, were not encouraging.
+
+"Preston High School wins!"
+
+Indeed, it looked as though Hartwell's craft must be the winner.
+Shorter and shorter became the distance to the finish line.
+
+True, Big Chief Dick was bringing his prow close up to the stern
+of the "Pathfinder" once more, but Preston evidently had a little
+reserve steam left as yet.
+
+"Go it, Hartwell! Go it! You win! Hurrah!"
+
+Suddenly over the water traveled Dick Prescott's command:
+
+"Now, then, Gridley! Break your backs!"
+
+This time there was no counting, nor was there any need of any.
+From Dave back to Dick all six bent their full strength and wind
+to the task of making the "Scalp-hunter" dart over the water.
+It was a grueling, killing pace that Dick had set for his crew,
+but it did not need to last long. The finish line was close at
+hand.
+
+Hartwell saw the "Scalp-hunter's prow steal up on a level with
+the centre of his own canoe.
+
+"Go it, fellows---one last, big spurt!" he yelled.
+
+A sudden yell from shore told another story. The war canoe's
+nose was now six feet further along than the bow of the Preston
+canoe.
+
+"Come on, Dick! Come on! Come on!"
+
+"Speed! The last swift dash!" yelled Dick Prescott. "Bend to
+it!"
+
+Hartwell tried to call to his crew, but could not make himself
+heard. The yelling from the shore, and from the boats nearby
+drowned out all other sounds.
+
+The two canoes seemed to be rivaling express trains in their speed.
+Then the cheers of one faction drowned the groans of the other.
+
+Gridley High School had shot across the finish line by a length
+and a half lead over Preston High School.
+
+Just as the "Pathfinder" left the line astern there came from
+the Preston craft a sound like the report of a pistol.
+
+One of the Preston braves had snapped his paddle off just above
+the blade.
+
+As the "Scalp-hunter" swung about, Dick saw that broken-off blade
+floating on the water.
+
+"I'm glad that paddle didn't snap until you had crossed the line,"
+Dick panted. "If it had, the real result would have been in doubt."
+
+"Your crew won, Prescott!" called Bob Hart well in a husky voice.
+"Congratulations!"
+
+"Thank you," returned Dick. "You're surely a generous enemy."
+
+"Rivals, this afternoon, but enemies never!" protested young Hartwell.
+
+Now a blast from the whistle of the launch recalled the two canoes.
+Standing in the bow of the launch, Referee Tyndall announced
+so that those on shore might hear plainly:
+
+"Gridley wins by a length and a half!" From the shore came a
+wild cheer. There was also a frenzied waving of handkerchiefs
+and of parasols. Though the Gridley boosters might be few in
+number, they were great in enthusiasm.
+
+As the "Pathfinder" started in for the landing float a crowd made
+a rush to meet the canoes. It was not, however, the Preston craft,
+that the crowd wanted, for this was a Gridley crowd.
+
+Noting the fact with his keen eyes, Dick gave the word for easy
+paddling. Then he swung the war canoe about, heading toward camp.
+
+That proved not at all to the crowd's liking.
+
+"Come back, Prescott! This way, Gridley! We want you!"
+
+"Why don't you land, Dick?" queried Tom Reade.
+
+"What! Land at the mercy of that crowd!" exclaimed Prescott.
+"That is a Gridley crowd. They're so pleased over our winning
+that what they'd do to us might be worse than what they'd have
+done if we had lost."
+
+"Where are you going?" asked Dave, somewhat disappointed.
+
+"Camp is good enough for us, I guess. It's a safe place, anyway,"
+Prescott replied.
+
+A few minutes later the "Scalp-hunter" touched lightly on the
+beach in front of camp.
+
+Towser greeted them with a joyous bark.
+
+"So you've been watching the race instead of the camp, have you?"
+demanded Tom, eyeing the dog in mock reproach.
+
+"Oh, but I'm tired!" muttered Darrin, after they had beached the
+canoe. "This green grass looks inviting."
+
+He threw himself down at full length on the grass.
+
+"Up, for yours," commanded Dick, grasping him by one arm and pulling
+Dave to his feet. "Don't you know that your blood is almost at
+fever heat after the strain of the race? Do you want to get a
+chill that will keep the whole camp up to-night?"
+
+"I want to lie down," muttered Darrin. "And I want to sleep."
+
+"Then get off your racing clothes, put on your other clothes,
+then roll yourself well in your blankets and lie down in the
+tent," Dick ordered. "That's what I'm going to do."
+
+Now that the strain was over every member of Dick & Co. found
+himself so weary that the putting on of ordinary clothes was a
+process which proceeded slowly. After a while, however, all six
+had rolled themselves in their blankets and lay on the leaf-piled
+floor of the tent.
+
+All but Dick and Harry were asleep, presently, when an automobile
+stopped near the camp.
+
+"Anyone at home?" called Referee Tyndall, poking his head in past
+the flap of the tent and viewing the recumbent lads. "All here?
+That's good. I'm a committee of one, sent over here by the Gridley
+folks at the hotel. They're ordering a supper and they want you
+boys to come over promptly. You're to be the guests of honor."
+
+"Will you be good enough to present the Gridley people with our
+best thanks," returned Dick promptly, rising to greet the referee,
+"and ask them very kindly to excuse us? Assure them, please,
+that we're in strict training, with more races to come, and that
+banquets would perhaps spoil us for the next race."
+
+"I'm afraid I'll have difficulty in getting that message through,"
+protested Mr. Tyndall. "Your Gridley friends are bound to have
+you over at the hotel."
+
+"They can't get us there with anything less than the state militia,"
+declared Dave, who had awakened. "We can fight and whip any smaller
+body of armed men that tries to drag us away from our rest.
+Our friends are good to us but can't they understand that we ache?"
+
+"You _do_ look rather played out," assented Mr. Tyndall, after surveying
+the various wrapped bundles of high school boy humanity. "But
+can't you raise enough energy to come over in an hour?"
+
+"If the Gridley people are really our friends," protested Tom
+Reade, opening his eyes, "they'll let us sleep through until to-morrow
+morning. We nearly killed our tender young selves in that last
+big spurt, and now we must rest our bones and aching muscles."
+
+"But what can I tell the folks at the hotel?" begged Mr. Tyndall.
+
+"Tell 'em that we appreciate their kindness," laughed Dick.
+
+"All right. I'll tell them---something," murmured Mr. Tyndall,
+as he turned away.
+
+"Up, all of you fellows!" commanded Dick Prescott. "This doesn't
+look very gracious on our part, when an entertainment has been
+arranged for us. We'll go, and attend to our aches to-morrow."
+But when the referee of the afternoon noted how stiffly they
+all moved he found himself filled with compassion.
+
+"Don't you try to come over, boys," he urged. "You're too stiff
+and sore to-night. Some people, myself included, don't realize
+that fifteen-year-old boys haven't the bodily stamina of men of
+twenty-five. You did a splendid bit of work this afternoon,
+and now you're entitled to your rest."
+
+"We'll get over there, somehow," Dick promised.
+
+"No; you won't. Don't you try it. The Gridley visitors would
+be brutes to try to drag you out to-night. I shan't let you go,
+and I shall tell the home folks that you're enjoying a well-won
+rest."
+
+"But don't you let any of the Preston High School fellows know
+how crippled you found us," begged Dave Darrin.
+
+"What would you care, if I did?" laughed Mr. Tyndall. "You fellows
+won the race, didn't you? And I'll wager that the Preston boys
+are feeling a whole lot worse than you are. Don't come! Good
+night."
+
+"Tyndall is a brick to let us off," sighed Tom gratefully, as
+he sank down once more.
+
+Later on Dick & Co. emerged from the tent, started a fire, and
+had supper, though they did not pay great attention to the meal.
+
+"I wouldn't want to race every day," grunted Reade, as he squatted
+near the fire after supper.
+
+"If we did," Dick retorted, "we'd speedily get over these aches
+and this stiffness."
+
+For an hour or so the boys remained about the fire. Dan Dalzell
+was the first to slip away to his blankets. Hazelton followed.
+Then the movement became general. Soon all were sound asleep.
+
+Nor did any sounds reach or disturb them for hours. Not one of
+the sleepers stirred enough to know that the sky gradually became
+overcast and that there was a distant rumbling of thunder.
+
+Hardly had the campfire burned down into the general blackness
+of the night when an automobile runabout, moving slowly and silently,
+stole along the roadway.
+
+In it sat the son of Squire Ripley. Fred, having brooded for
+hours over the failure of his scheme to make Dick & Co. lose the
+canoe race, had at last decided to pay a stealthy, nocturnal visit
+to the camp of the boys he disliked, with the express purpose
+of doing whatever mischief his hands might find to do.
+
+His father's family car and automobile runabout were both at the
+hotel garage, and at his disposal. Soon Fred Ripley was speeding
+away over the country road in the automobile runabout.
+
+As he neared the camp he extinguished the running lights, then
+went on slowly so as to make no noise. At last he stopped the
+car.
+
+Gr-r-r-r! came out of the darkness. Faithful Towser was still
+at his post. He came forward slowly, suspiciously out of the
+darkness. He may have recognized his enemy, for Towser came close
+to the car, showing his teeth in an ugly fashion.
+
+Fred lost no time in starting his car forward. "I wish that pup
+would have the nerve to get in front of the car," he muttered
+as he drove slowly away from the camp. "What fun it would be
+to run over the brute! I don't dare to get out of the car while
+he's on guard. I forgot about him for the time being, though
+goodness knows I've cause to remember him."
+
+Towser uttered one or two farewell growls. Two hundred yards
+further on Fred let out the speed in earnest, at the same time
+switching on the electric running lights.
+
+"I'll come back late to-night," Fred reflected. "I'll leave the
+machine a little way down the road, and come up here on foot.
+In the meantime I'll think of some scheme to get square with
+Dick Prescott and his crowd. I'll hunt up a good stout club,
+too, and then if that confounded dog is troublesome I'll settle
+him."
+
+For an hour or more Fred ran the car at random over one country
+road after another.
+
+"I wonder if that pup ever goes to sleep," he muttered. "I'd
+really like to know. If I'm going back that way to-night I'd
+better be turning about, for there is a bad storm coming."
+
+Turning the car, he drove swiftly back again. In about twenty
+minutes he reached a part of the road directly above the camp.
+
+Overhead the lightning was flashing brightly. Heavy thunder followed
+each flash. Large drops of rain were falling, but Fred, bent
+on his evil errand, did not mind. At any rate he was not afraid
+of lightning. Aided by the flashes he searched along the side
+of the road until he found a branch of a tree that he shaped into
+a club with his knife.
+
+"I won't wake Prescott's muckers," he reflected, "and I want to
+be sure to attract the dog's notice if he is on guard."
+
+A broad, white streak of lightning showed the tent from the road
+as Ripley, armed with the club, drew nearer to it.
+
+Fred halted. "They're all asleep, the muckers!" he muttered.
+"I'm glad of that. Where is that dog? Why doesn't he come around?
+I'm ready for him now."
+
+Fred stole stealthily along, keeping a sharp lookout for the bull-dog.
+
+Suddenly the sky was rent by a vivid flash of lightning so glaring
+that the lawyer's son covered his eyes with his hands.
+
+Bang! Crash! Almost instantly the thunder followed the flash.
+
+"It's time to be getting out of here if I don't want to get drowned
+on the way back to the hotel," Ripley decided. "I'll have to
+postpone getting square with Prescott. Besides, the storm will
+waken those fellows and I don't want to be caught here."
+
+There came another flash, that descended near the water. The
+crashing noise of the thunder came at the same instant.
+
+Fred, facing the tent, saw the bolt strike the ridge pole. Evidently
+the current ran down one of the poles, for he saw the bluish white
+electric fluid running over the ground, coming from inside the
+tent. The tent sagged, then fell.
+
+"Gracious!" shivered this evil traveler of the night. "It will
+be a wonder if that bolt didn't stretch them all out. I wonder
+if it killed Dick Prescott and his crowd?"
+
+Uncontrollable curiosity seized upon Fred. Turning about he ran
+toward the tent. Violently he tugged at the canvas. As he lifted
+it another sharp flash showed him the six Gridley High School
+boys lying motionless in a row.
+
+"The lightning did finish them!" gasped young Ripley, overcome
+with fright and awe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+FRED IS GRATEFUL---ONE SECOND!
+
+
+For some moments Fred Ripley stood there, spellbound, regarding
+the still figures of Dick & Co. with fascinated fear.
+
+Most of the time he stood in darkness, but as the flashes of lightning
+came he again saw the six motionless figures. Even the fearful
+crashes of thunder failed to arouse the sleepers.
+
+"Oh, this is grewsome!" gasped Ripley at last, the coward in him
+coming to the surface strongly. "I can't stand this any longer!"
+
+Unconsciously he spoke aloud, his voice rising to a wail. Then
+as he let the folds of canvas fall, a voice inside called angrily:
+
+"Quit that! I want to get out."
+
+It was Dave Darrin's voice, and Dave was the quickest-tempered
+one of the six boys.
+
+Fred knew that it behooved him to get away from the spot at once.
+There was a wriggling under the canvas. Ripley turned to flee.
+
+Gr-r-r-r! Towser stood barring his path.
+
+"Hurry up, Darrin!" appealed Fred, as Towser moved closer, showing
+his teeth. "Hurry! Or this dog will chew me up."
+
+"Who's there?" called Darrin, thrusting his head out of the collapsed
+tent, then drawing the rest of his body after.
+
+Another flash of lightning showed Ripley's frightened face.
+
+"Oh, you, is it?" uttered Dave in a tone full of scorn.
+
+"Hurry and quiet this bull-dog!" the lawyer's son insisted.
+
+"Don't worry," retorted Darrin calmly. "Towser wouldn't sink
+his teeth very deep in you! He's a self-respecting dog."
+
+Now that one of the members of the canoe club was on the spot,
+the bull pup displayed less ferocity. He contented himself with
+eyeing Fred, ready to spring at a second's notice.
+
+"What has happened?" demanded Dave, looking rather bewilderedly
+at the tent.
+
+"Your shack was struck by lightning," Fred answered glibly, and
+then, ever ready to lie, he added, "I was passing by in the car,
+in a hurry to get back to the hotel, and I saw the thing happen.
+The lightning ran along the ridge-pole, then down into the tent
+and out at the sides along the ground. I'm afraid same of your
+fellows have been struck. At first I thought all of you had been
+killed, so I ran down here to investigate."
+
+But Dave paid little heed to the last part of this statement.
+He had seized hold of one side of the canvas, holding it up.
+
+"Dick!" he called lustily. "Tom, Greg, Dan, Harry!"
+
+There was no response. The thunder continued to boom louder than
+ever.
+
+"Hold this canvas up," Dave Darrin ordered sharply, and Ripley,
+knowing that Towser was eyeing him, obeyed. Inside crawled Darrin,
+shaking each of his friends in turn and calling to them.
+
+"I can't wake 'em! I can't get 'em to speak," reported Darrin,
+crawling out again, his face white with anguish. "I'm afraid
+they've been-----"
+
+"Yes," nodded Ripley, in a hoarse voice. "They're dead!"
+
+"How did you say you got here?" demanded Dave suddenly. "In a
+car?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then we'll prop the canvas up to let air inside the tent, and
+then you'll drive me to the Hotel Pleasant as fast as you can go!"
+
+"Maybe I won't," jeered Fred.
+
+"Maybe you will," retorted Dave Darrin indignantly. His voice
+rang with righteous contempt. "Either you'll stand by at a time
+like this, or I'll fall upon you tooth and nail---with the very
+able help of the dog!"
+
+Gr-r-r-r! approved Towser, again showing his teeth.
+
+"I---I'll take you!" quavered Ripley.
+
+"Of course you will," nodded Darrin. "Wait till I see if the
+lantern is all right."
+
+He crawled into the tent, found the lantern and struck a match.
+Curiously enough the lantern had not been injured. Placing the
+lantern outside, Darrin sharply commanded his chance companion
+to aid in propping the canvas so that those underneath could get
+air.
+
+"Now, come along," ordered Darrin, when this had been done. "Towser,
+watch the---the gentleman!"
+
+Thus they started up the slope, when they heard a growl just ahead
+of them. In the same instant Towser, uttering a yelp, turned
+and darted away as fast as he could go.
+
+"Now, we'll see whether you'll boss me," grunted Fred Ripley,
+brandishing the club that he held in his left hand. "Your dog
+is no good any more."
+
+"Neither will you or I be any good any more if we don't keep our
+nerve," uttered Darrin quietly, as he turned the lantern's rays
+against the object in their path. "There's only one thing in
+the world Towser would run away from, and that's just what is
+ahead of us---a mad dog!"
+
+At this instant Fred, too, caught sight of the object in their
+path. A large dog, of doubtful breed, stood before them, its
+head down, but its bloodshot eyes watching them cunningly. It's
+dripping jaws carried conviction that the animal was rabid.
+
+Fred did not cry out or stir. He was too frightened to do either.
+But Dave very stealthily put down the lantern. Then, his muscles
+wholly steady, he snatched up an eight-foot pole that lay on the
+ground.
+
+"Now, come on, you beast!" challenged Darrin, making a slight
+thrust with the pole.
+
+Enraged at the challenge, the rabid dog sprang forward, its mouth
+wide open. Without faltering, Dave made a thrust that jammed
+the pole hard into the animal's mouth.
+
+Staggered by the blow, the dog fell back on its side. It never
+rose again, for now Darrin used the pole as a club, raining down
+blows upon the dangerous animal until he was sure that there was
+no life left in it.
+
+"Darrin, that was wonderful nerve of yours!" gasped Fred with
+admiration wrung from him in spite of himself. "And you saved
+my life!"
+
+"I wasn't thinking of that," said Dave grimly, as he picked up
+the lantern. "Don't you believe I'll ever brag about having saved
+your life. Now to the car, and be quick."
+
+Fred, stung by the contemptuous answer, felt his resentment raging.
+He darted forward so swiftly that he might have been able to
+leap into the car and get away with it, had not something else
+happened.
+
+For Towser, though he had run away from a rabid specimen of his
+own species, had circled about. Now he leaped into the automobile,
+growling, just as Fred would have sprung in.
+
+"That's right, Towser. Hold the sneak!" called Dave, arriving
+on a run and leaping into the car. "Now, Ripley, hang you, do
+some quick and honest work!"
+
+"Kick that dog out of the car first," pleaded Fred.
+
+"I won't," Darrin retorted. "The dog is my guarantee for your
+good behavior to-night."
+
+As soon as might be they ran around the lower end of the lake,
+then raced for the hotel.
+
+There Dr. Bentley was aroused. While he was dressing he sent
+a bell-boy to order his own big car.
+
+Just when Ripley vanished from the scene no one about the grounds
+or the hotel seemed to know or care.
+
+Dr. Bentley, dressed in record time, came down.
+
+"Now, we'll drive fast, Darrin," the doctor announced, as he dropped
+his bag into the car and seated himself at the wheel. "Struck
+by lightning, did you say? It was a fearful storm, but it is
+stopping now."
+
+Ere they reached the camp the stars were out. There was no sign
+of nature's dangerous mood.
+
+Dr. Bentley first of all ordered that the canvas be lifted and
+cast aside. The tent was badly wrecked and burned, though the
+rain had prevented the rising of flames that might have burned
+the bodies of the five unconscious boys.
+
+"Throw your coat off, Darrin, and do the work of four men for
+a few minutes," said Dr. Bentley tersely.
+
+"I'll do the work of a hundred," replied Dave, "if I can find
+the way."
+
+After some minutes of hard work Tom Reade opened his eyes. Shortly
+after this the puffing of one of the hotel launches was heard.
+For the doctor, while hurrying into his clothes, had left word
+with Mrs. Bentley what to do. The launch brought another and
+much larger tent, with cots, bedding and other things, as well
+as four capable workmen.
+
+Greg came to next. Neither he nor Reade, however, were good for
+much at the time. By the time that the new tent was up, and the
+cots arranged those who were still unconscious were carried in
+there. Then Greg and Tom were helped into the drier quarters.
+
+It was Dick who longest resisted the efforts to bring him to
+consciousness. At last, however, he opened his eyes.
+
+"It was a mercy that none of you were killed," uttered Dr. Bentley
+devoutly. "A little bit more of the current and you might have
+been done for."
+
+But now that he had attended to his young friends, Dr. Bentley
+did not think of returning to the hotel. He remained through
+the night, despite the fact that his charges became steadily stronger
+and at last went sound asleep.
+
+In the morning, before eight o'clock, the launch was over again
+on that side of the lake. This time it brought Mrs. Bentley,
+Mrs. Meade and the girls, as well as a lot of daintily prepared
+food fresh from the hotel kitchen.
+
+"This is a mighty pleasant world!" sighed Dick Prescott, full
+of luxurious content.
+
+"Yes when you have some good friends in the same world with you,"
+Tom added.
+
+Dave and Dan slipped away to remove the body of the rabid dog
+killed during the night.
+
+The tent they had brought with them from Gridley would never be
+of service again, so Dick & Co. were highly delighted when informed
+that Manager Wright begged them to accept the use of this larger,
+finer tent, and also of the cots, during their stay at the lake.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+TRENTVILLE, THE AWESOME
+
+
+As the "Scalp-hunter" swung around the upper buoy and headed down
+the course she had a lead of a clean two lengths over the Trentville
+High School canoe.
+
+There was a larger crowd on the lake to-day and more steam and
+gasoline craft were out.
+
+As Dick & Co. shot down the line, still leading, steam and pneumatic
+whistles broke forth into a noisy din.
+
+Over on the western shore, on the grounds of the larger hotel,
+only one little knot of Gridley people stood to watch and cheer.
+These were the Bentleys, Mrs. Meade and the same group of girls
+that had watched the other race.
+
+No excursion had come up from the home town to-day, for no one
+in Gridley had believed that their high school youngsters could
+defeat the seasoned Trentville High School canoe crew.
+
+Only two days before Trentville had won from Preston High School
+by nearly five lengths.
+
+What show was there for Dick & Co. or for Gridley High School?
+
+Hence the smallness of the Gridley crowd present.
+
+However, some hundreds of people who looked on were eager only
+to see the best crew win, as they had no ties binding them either
+to Gridley or to Trentville.
+
+But the unexpected had happened.
+
+In the first place, when the Trentville canoe and crew arrived
+at the lake Dick Prescott had insisted that Preston High School
+and Trentville High School race together first.
+
+Thus he had opportunity to watch the Trentville work. Moreover,
+by delaying his own race against Trentville, Dick had had more
+time to train and drill his crew into form, both as to paddling
+and endurance.
+
+He had profited well by these opportunities. To-day, from the
+outset, he had handled his crew so that a slight lead over Trentville
+had been maintained. This had been gradually increased, and now
+that the buoy had been turned with such a handsome lead, none
+on shore or in the other boats believed that Trentville High School
+had any further chance.
+
+Pascal, however, who captained the Trentville canoe, had another
+view of the matter. It was Ted Pascal's third summer in a canoe.
+He had drilled more than one crew, and knew all the ins and outs
+of the sport.
+
+"I guess Prescott thinks he has the whole thing, by this time,"
+smiled Pascal to himself. "Poor chap. He's a nice young freshman,
+and I hate to fool him. But we'll soon begin our work. The Gridley
+crew must be well tired by now."
+
+Presently Ted Pascal passed the word quietly over the heads of
+his perspiring but confident crew.
+
+"Tighten up a little bit, now---a little bit at a time," was the
+message Pascal gave his followers.
+
+By the time that the home course had been half covered it was
+noted that the "Slip-over," as the Trentville craft was named,
+was creeping up fast on its rival.
+
+Dick, too, quickly became aware of this.
+
+"Trentville is showing a lot of new form, fellows, and coming
+right up on us," Dick called quietly. "This race isn't won!
+The fact, we're near to losing it. Form! form! muscle! Don't
+fumble again, Hazelton! One, two, three, four!"
+
+But still the Trentville High School craft continued to creep
+up on them. The Gridley High School girls on shore became so
+anxious that they forgot to wave their handkerchiefs and cheer.
+
+"More push! Power, as well as speed," Dick panted, for now the
+grueling speed was beginning to tell on even the leader of Dick
+& Co.
+
+The prow of the "Slip-over" now passed the stern of the
+"Scalp-hunter." Reade saw this, too, and uttered a groan.
+
+From the shore and the boats holding spectators came new volleys
+of cheers, for most of these spectators were wholly impartial,
+and wanted only to see an exciting race.
+
+"Let yourself out, Gridley!" boomed a voice over the water.
+
+Dick and Co. were doing their best---or what amounted to much
+the same thing---believed that they were, at any rate.
+
+Yet the Trentville canoe crept steadily up, then led by a quarter
+length, a half length. It looked as though the Trentville crew
+would soon be a length ahead of the Gridley boys.
+
+Everyone of Dick's chums was desperate. So was Dick himself,
+but he kept as cool as possible.
+
+"Bring our prow up!" he called steadily. "No matter what happens,
+bring our prow up flush with Trentville!"
+
+By some miracle the Gridley boys found strength enough left in
+their arms and backs to accomplish this feat.
+
+Then the "Scalp-hunter" dropped behind again, an inch at a time.
+
+"We caught 'em once!" called Dick in an even voice. "We must
+do it again. One, two, three, four! Hump! hump! Put in the
+power!"
+
+By inches the "Scalp-hunter" crawled up, but Dick & Co. felt
+completely exhausted.
+
+"You've been doing well, kid," called the even voice of Ted Pascal
+over the water, "but you can't do any more. We take this race!"
+
+"Do you?" dared Dick.
+
+"Yes; you're all in, and we have reserve steam left."
+
+"Have you?" snapped young Prescott. "Then now is the time to
+prove it."
+
+Taking a deep breath, Dick Prescott shouted:
+
+"Remember what Gridley demands! No defeats. Dash ahead, Gridleys!
+Now---go in and kill yourselves for the honor of your school!"
+
+Dick was far from meaning that literally, but his quick eye had
+measured the remaining distance of the course.
+
+He was captain enough to know just what each of his men could
+endure, and for how long they could stand up under it.
+
+"Life is of little use to the vanquished!" Dick shouted on. "Go
+in to win---kill yourselves!"
+
+At an earlier point on the course it would have been fearfully
+bad leadership. It would have resulted in disaster had any of
+Dick & Co. had any form of serious physical weakness.
+
+But Dick Prescott knew his boys!
+
+"Kill yourselves!" he shouted out again, as he saw the two canoes
+running neck and neck. "For the honor of Gridley High School!"
+
+Right noble was the response, though flesh and blood could not
+stand this new and savage grilling for long.
+
+"Wake up, Trentville!" shouted Ted Pascal, when he saw the
+"Scalp-hunter" gaining. "Wake up! Let out all of your steam!
+Push!"
+
+Dick Prescott said no more. His straining gaze was now fixed
+on the finish line. Not one of his chums even glanced at the
+imaginary line. All their thoughts, like all their glances, were
+on their paddles.
+
+"A final dash, now!" called Dick. "Slam up the pace for Gridley!"
+
+But Trentville was showing its boasted reserve steam.
+
+Close as they now were to the finish, Pascal had no thought of
+permitting defeat to come to his crew.
+
+No dinning of whistles was there now. Every spectator waited
+breathlessly for the outcome that would be reached in the next
+few seconds.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+Then the end came.
+
+Pascal sank back on his seat with a groan when he had put in the
+last dip of his paddle that could do any good.
+
+Frantic indeed was the cheering, and now once more came the deafening
+screech of whistles.
+
+From the judges' launch, as soon as the din had died down a bit,
+came the announcement through a megaphone:
+
+"Gridley High School wins by three quarters of a length."
+
+Dick heard the news, then ordered quietly:
+
+"Paddle---easily."
+
+A turn of his own blade swung the prow around so that the "Scalp-hunter"
+glided in toward the hotel landing float.
+
+To-day he had no jubilant mob of Gridleyites to fear in the excess
+of their joy. Only some very gentle friends of their own town
+came hurrying forward to congratulate them.
+
+But Dr. Bentley gripped Dick's arm as soon as that young man stepped
+from the canoe.
+
+"Bring your crew along and follow me, Prescott," whispered the
+physician. "You are a limp-looking lot. That was a wild, splendid
+finish, but I fear you may have put it too hard to your crew.
+I want to examine you all, to make sure that not too much harm
+has been done by your desperate 'kill yourself' order."
+
+Dr. Bentley led the way to the boathouse, while a hotel employ
+took charge of the "Scalp-hunter."
+
+He listened briefly at each boy's heart, then made them all sit
+still for ten minutes. At the end of that time he examined them
+again as to heart beat. Half an hour later he made a third examination.
+
+"I don't believe anyone of you has sustained any lasting injury,"
+said Dr. Bentley at last. "But, Prescott, don't you ever dare
+give a 'kill yourself' order again. That is my order, and an
+emphatic one. You may recall that I happen to be medical director
+of the Gridley High School Athletic Association. If you youngsters
+ever try a pace like that again, then undoubtedly you will all
+be disqualified from future athletic events. Don't forget."
+
+After that lecture Dick & Co. were allowed to sponge with hot
+water, rub down and put on ordinary clothing. Then they went
+forth to meet their friends.
+
+Ted Pascal, however, was the first to rush forward. He had been
+waiting for their appearance.
+
+"Prescott, you're a great fellow as a crew captain!" the big
+chief of the Trentvilles declared. "I was sure we had you beaten,
+and even now I can't imagine how you left us to the rear. But
+it was a great race, and I congratulate you!"
+
+"And we all thank you for your good will," Dick answered promptly.
+"Truth to tell, Pascal, I thought, too, that you almost had us
+beaten."
+
+"Almost?" echoed Ted. "Why not wholly?"
+
+"Because Gridley is never quite beaten. It's our way, you know---one
+that was adopted by a past generation of Gridley boys and has
+been lived up to ever since."
+
+"I've heard a lot about that 'Gridley way,'" laughed Ted Pascal,
+"but to-day was the first time that I've ever had it played on me."
+
+"Do you play football?" asked Dick.
+
+"No."
+
+"Baseball?"
+
+"I tried, but couldn't make the nine," Pascal confessed.
+
+"Then I don't know that you're likely to have the 'Gridley' way
+played upon you again not unless you meet some of our girls in
+a tennis game."
+
+The two crews mingled, passing some ten minutes in talk and in
+good-humored chaff. But at last Dick broke away and drew out
+from the canoe talk as he saw Laura, Belle, Susie and the other
+girls awaiting them at a point farther up in the hotel grounds.
+
+"I know the girls have been waiting to speak to us," Dick told
+his chums, "and they've been mighty kind to us. Come along."
+
+"We thought you would never get around to talking with poor mortals
+like us," Laura admitted, as the boys joined the high school
+girls.
+
+"It was mainly your father's fault," Dick laughingly, protested.
+
+"How was that?"
+
+"You'll have to ask him. Perhaps we're not at liberty to reveal
+what the Athletic Association's medical director had to say to us."
+
+"Especially when it's in the nature of a 'roast,'" added Danny
+Grin.
+
+"If my father was severe with any of you I am certain that he
+had good reason," replied Laura gravely, though her eyes twinkled.
+"But what a splendid race you made against Trentville and at
+one time we felt sure that you were beaten."
+
+"We all felt the same way at one time," Tom Reade interjected.
+
+"All except Dick," added Darry. "Why, if anyone were to kill
+Dick Prescott, Dick would insist on the fellow coming around the
+next day and proving his death."
+
+"It was a splendid race, anyway," Belle glowed. "Do you notice
+anything, boys?"
+
+"Where?" asked Tom, looking blankly around.
+
+"Anything about us?" Susie put in.
+
+"Nothing," drawled Tom, "except that you're the finest, daintiest
+and sweetest-looking lot of girls we know. But that's true every
+other day in the week."
+
+"We didn't ask you anything like that," Susie pouted, "though
+doubtless it's all true enough. But don't you notice what we're
+all wearing?"
+
+"I think I see what you mean," Greg suggested hopefully. "Each
+one of you is wearing the Gridley High School pin."
+
+"Correct!" assented Susie warmly. "But can't you guess why we're
+wearing the pins? It's because when Gridley boys can win such
+a race as you won to-day it's a real honor to wear the pin."
+
+"And a bigger honor to have it worn on our account," Dick laughed.
+
+"I was waiting to see who would be the first boy to say something
+really nice!" cried Clara Marshall.
+
+"Have you heard of any more canoe clubs coming this way---high
+school clubs with which you could arrange races?" asked Laura.
+
+"No," said Dick, with a shake of his head. "Even if there were
+a dozen coming here I'm afraid we'd have to lose the chance."
+
+"Why?" asked Belle quickly.
+
+"Because we can remain here only two or three days longer."
+
+"Oh, that's a shame," broke in Susie. "Do you really have to
+go back to Gridley?"
+
+"Yes," said Dick solemnly.
+
+"Is the reason one that you may properly tell us?" Laura inquired.
+
+"It's one that we're not ashamed of, because we can't help it,"
+Prescott rejoined. "Our vacation up here is nearly at an end
+just because our funds are in the same plight---nearly at an end,
+you see."
+
+"Oh, what a shame!" cried Clara sympathetically.
+
+"To be short of money is more than a shame," blurted Tom Reade.
+"It is a crime, or ought to be. No one has any right to be
+poor---but what can we do?"
+
+"Oh, well, there are plenty of pleasant times to be had in good
+old Gridley in the summer time," Dick declared stoutly. "And
+we shall have our canoe there."
+
+While chatting the young people had been walking up through the
+hotel grounds until now they stood just behind the stone wall
+that separated the ground from the road.
+
+"Why---look what's coming!" urged Dave Darrin, in a voice expressive
+of mock interest.
+
+All looked, of course.
+
+Fred Ripley, his hat drawn down over his eyes, came trudging along.
+
+In one hand he carried a dress suit case, and from the way his
+shoulder sagged on that side, the ease appeared to be heavy.
+
+On young Ripley's face was a deep scowl.
+
+"Judging from his appearance," suggested Tom Reade, "Rip is walking
+all the way to the Land of Sweet Tempers. Probably he's doing
+it on a wager, and is just beginning to realize what a long road
+lies ahead of him. I wonder if he'll, arrive at his destination
+during his lifetime?"
+
+Fred's shoes, usually so highly polished, were already thick with
+dust. His collar, ordinarily stiff and immaculate, was sadly
+wilted and wrinkled. His whole air was one of mingled dejection
+and rage.
+
+"I wonder what can have happened to him?" asked Susie curiously.
+
+"I think his conscience may be chasing him," smiled Dick.
+
+What really had happened was that Squire Ripley had been present
+when his son had made a very disrespectful answer to a white-haired
+man, one of the guests at the Lakeview House where the Ripleys
+were stopping.
+
+In a great rage the lawyer had decided to send his son home for
+that act of gross disrespect to the aged.
+
+To make the punishment more complete, Mr. Ripley had ordered his
+son to make the long journey on foot over the hills to the railway
+station. Only enough money had been handed the young man to buy
+his railway ticket home. The dress suit case had been added
+in order to make his progress more difficult.
+
+"A young man who cannot treat the aged with proper respect must
+be dealt with severely," said Lawyer Ripley to his son. "You
+will reach home fagged out from your long tramp. For your fare,
+until your mother and I return, you will have to depend on such
+food as the servants at home can spare you from their larder.
+Don't you dare order anything from the stores to be charged against
+me. Now, go home, drowse out your summer in the hot town and
+reflect on what a mean cad you have shown yourself to be to-day."
+
+While Fred was thinking this all over he glanced up suddenly,
+to see fourteen pairs of Gridley eyes fixed upon him. The young
+people, as soon as they found themselves observed, immediately
+turned their glances away from the sullen looking young pedestrian
+from their school.
+
+"I wonder what has happened to Fred Ripley?" Susie repeated, when
+the object of their remark was some distance away. "Something
+has gone very wrong with him. A blind man could see that much."
+
+During this time Fred was thinking to himself:
+
+"If the guv'nor subjects me to this degradation just for one sharp
+answer to an old man, what would that same guv'nor do to me if
+he knew all the things that I've been engaged in up here at the
+lake? What if he knew that I hired that farmer's son to swim
+under the float and attach that drag to the canoe? What would
+the guv'nor do if he knew that I tried to wreck Prescott's outfit?"
+
+Fred shivered at the mental prospect of his father's stern, grim
+wrath.
+
+But young Ripley, as sometimes happens, wasn't caught just then.
+He would go on for the present planning mean tricks against those
+whom he had no just reason to dislike. Yet his time was sure
+to come.
+
+Soon after Dick & Co. were compelled to bid adieu to Lake Pleasant.
+They had had a splendid time, and had acquitted themselves with
+great credit in this entry into high school athletics. They had
+had pleasure enough to last them all the rest of the summer in
+memory.
+
+The cost of transporting their canoe, on the homeward trip, was
+borne out of the funds of the Gridley High School Athletic Council.
+
+Dick & Co. entered three more canoe races against high school
+teams that summer. All these were run off on the home river,
+and Dick & Co. had the great glory of winning them all "the Gridley
+way."
+
+After the summer, came the opening of the school year again.
+Our readers may learn what happened to Dick & Co. in their sophomore
+year in the second volume of the "_High School Boys Series_,"
+which is published under the title, "_The High School Pitcher;
+Or, Dick & Co. on the Gridley Diamond_."
+
+As to what befell our young friends in the summer vacation which
+followed their sophomore year, all that is told in the second
+volume of the "_High School Boys Vacation Series_." That
+interesting volume is published under the title, "_The High
+School Boys' Summer Camp; Or, The Dick Prescott Six Training for
+the Gridley Eleven_." It will be found to be a splendid story
+of real American boys who know how to get the most out of both
+work and play, and to make each year of life a preparation for
+a better year to come. In this volume the friends of Dick & Co.
+will find these six sturdy boys leading a life full of healthy
+excitement and adventure in the woods.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HIGH SCHOOL BOYS' CANOE CLUB***
+
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