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+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
+ <title>
+ The Adventures of a Boy Reporter, by Harry Steele Morrison
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
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+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
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+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
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+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
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+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventures of a Boy Reporter, by
+Harry Steele Morrison
+
+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 Adventures of a Boy Reporter
+
+Author: Harry Steele Morrison
+
+Release Date: March 23, 2009 [EBook #4990]
+Last Updated: November 16, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ADVENTURES OF A BOY REPORTER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jim Weiler, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE ADVENTURES OF A BOY REPORTER
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ by Harry Steele Morrison
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ 1900
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2H_TOC"> (DETAILED)CONTENTS. </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>THE ADVENTURES OF A BOY REPORTER.</b> </a><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_TOC" id="link2H_TOC">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ (DETAILED) CONTENTS.
+ </h2>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER I. <br /> LIVING IN THE COUNTRY&mdash;LIFE AT SCHOOL&mdash;THE
+ HUT CLUB IS FORMED&mdash;THE <br /> COMING OF THE CIRCUS <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER II. <br /> ARCHIE LONGS FOR A CHANGE IN SURROUNDINGS&mdash;A TRIP
+ TO NEW YORK WITH UNCLE <br /> HENRY <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER III. <br /> ARCHIE DETERMINES TO GO TO THE CITY TO WORK&mdash;LEAVING
+ HOME AT NIGHT <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER IV. <br /> WORKING ON A FARM TO EARN SOME MONEY&mdash;CRUEL
+ TREATMENT <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER V. <br /> THE NIGHT AMONG THE RUINS&mdash;THE CAMP-FIRE OF THE
+ TRAMPS <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER VI. <br /> STEALING A RIDE&mdash;KICKED OUT BY THE BRAKEMAN <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER VII. <br /> ARRIVAL IN NEW YORK&mdash;A NIGHT IN A LODGING-HOUSE
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER VIII. <br /> LOOKING FOR WORK&mdash;WASHING DISHES IN A BOWERY
+ RESTAURANT <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER IX. <br /> IN THE STREET AGAIN&mdash;THE POLICE STATION&mdash;VISITS
+ THE NEWSPAPER OFFICE, <br /> AND IS KINDLY RECEIVED BY THE EDITOR <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER X. <br /> LIVING IN COMFORT AGAIN&mdash;FEATURED AS &ldquo;THE BOY
+ REPORTER&rdquo; <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XI. <br /> A DAY AND A NIGHT IN CONEY ISLAND&mdash;RAIDING A
+ GAMBLING DEN <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XII. <br /> A SUCCESSFUL REPORTER&mdash;THE EDITOR DECIDES TO
+ SEND HIM AS CORRESPONDENT <br /> TO THE PHILIPPINES&mdash;LEAVING NEW
+ YORK&mdash;IN CHICAGO <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XIII. <br /> SAN FRANCISCO&mdash;THE TRANSPORT GONE&mdash;WORKING
+ HIS WAY TO HONOLULU BY <br /> PEELING VEGETABLES ON A PACIFIC LINER&mdash;THE
+ CAPITAL OF HAWAII <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XIV. <br /> THE VOYAGE ON THE TRANSPORT&mdash;A STORM AT SEA&mdash;ARRIVAL
+ IN MANILA <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XV. <br /> ARCHIE STARTS OUT ON AN EXPLORING TOUR, AND HAS SOME
+ STRANGE ADVENTURES <br /> AMONG THE NATIVES&mdash;SEIZED BY THE REBELS
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XVI. <br /> A PLEASANT CAPTOR&mdash;BRAVE BILL HICKSON ALLOWS
+ ARCHIE TO ESCAPE&mdash;FIRST <br /> GLIMPSE OF AGUINALDO <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XVII. <br /> ARRIVAL OF THE AMERICAN TROOPS&mdash;ARCHIE THE HERO
+ OF THE REGIMENT <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. <br /> THE MARCH AFTER THE REBELS&mdash;THE FIRST BATTLE&mdash;ARCHIE
+ WOUNDED <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XIX. <br /> RETURN TO MANILA&mdash;IN THE HOSPITAL&mdash;CONGRATULATED
+ BY ALL&mdash;WRITING TO THE <br /> PAPER OF HIS EXPERIENCES <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XX. <br /> AROUND THE ISLAND ON A WAR-SHIP&mdash;BOMBARDING A
+ FILIPINO TOWN <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXI. <br /> CONTINUING THE CRUISE&mdash;ANOTHER VILLAGE CAPTURED&mdash;THE
+ ADMIRAL ARCHIE&rsquo;S <br /> FRIEND&mdash;A GREAT BATTLE AND AN UNEXPECTED
+ VICTORY&mdash;LONGING TO BE HOME <br /> AGAIN <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXII. <br /> RETURN TO HEADQUARTERS&mdash;A LETTER FROM THE
+ EDITOR, WITH PERMISSION TO <br /> RETURN TO NEW YORK&mdash;BILL HICKSON
+ GOES, TOO <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXIII. <br /> HONG KONG&mdash;A HAPPY TIME IN TOKIO&mdash;HONOLULU
+ AGAIN&mdash;ARRIVAL IN SAN <br /> FRANCISCO, AND A GREAT RECEPTION BY THE
+ PRESS&mdash;ARCHIE AND BILL ARRIVE IN <br /> NEW YORK, AND ARE THE HEROES
+ OF THE HOUR <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXIV. <br /> DOING &ldquo;SPECIAL&rdquo; WORK UPON THE EVENING PAPER&mdash;INTERVIEWS
+ WITH FAMOUS <br /> MEN&mdash;CALLS UPON OLD FRIENDS <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXV. <br /> PRIVATE SECRETARY TO A MILLIONAIRE&mdash;STUDYING AT
+ EVENING SCHOOL&mdash;LIVING <br /> AMID ELEGANT SURROUNDINGS <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DECIDES TO VISIT HOME&mdash;A GREAT RECEPTION IN THE TOWN&mdash;A PUBLIC
+ CHARACTER <br /> NOW&mdash;DINNER TO THE HUT CLUB&mdash;DEMONSTRATION AT
+ THE TOWN HALL&mdash;A TELEGRAM <br /> FROM HIS EMPLOYER LEAVING FOR
+ EUROPE <br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE ADVENTURES OF A BOY REPORTER.
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ LIVING IN THE COUNTRY&mdash;LIFE AT SCHOOL&mdash;THE HUT CLUB IS FORMED&mdash;THE
+ COMING OF THE CIRCUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;YES,&rdquo; said Mrs. Dunn to her neighbour, Mrs. Sullivan, &ldquo;we are expecting
+ great things of Archie, and yet we sometimes hardly know what to think of
+ the boy. He has the most remarkable ideas of things, and there seems to be
+ absolutely no limit to his ambition. He has long since determined that he
+ will some day be President, and he expects to enter politics the day he is
+ twenty-one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that so, indeed,&rdquo; said Mrs. Sullivan. &ldquo;Well, we can never tell what is
+ going to come of our boys. As I says to Dannie to-day, says I, &lsquo;Dannie,
+ you must do your best to be somebody and make something of yourself, for
+ you and Jack bees all that I has to depend upon now.&rsquo; But Dannie pays no
+ attention to my entreaties, and somehow it seems to me that since Mr.
+ Sullivan died the boys are gettin&rsquo; worse and worse. It&rsquo;s beyond me to
+ control them, anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, take heart, Mrs. Sullivan,&rdquo; said Mrs. Dunn, &ldquo;our boys will all turn
+ out well in the end, and all we can do is to bring them up in the best way
+ we know, and trust to them to take care of themselves after they leave
+ home. Now Dannie is certainly an industrious lad. I hear him pounding
+ nails all day long in the back yard, and he made a good job of shingling
+ the woodshed the other day. He seems made to be a carpenter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I think so myself,&rdquo; said the Widow Sullivan. &ldquo;The whole lot of them
+ is out by the railroad now, building a hut. They&rsquo;ve organised a &lsquo;Hut Club&rsquo;
+ to-day, and never a lick of work have I had out of them boys since
+ mornin&rsquo;. They&rsquo;ve always got something going on, and when I want a bit of
+ water from the well, or a little wood from the shed, they&rsquo;re never
+ around.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but boys will be boys, Mrs. Sullivan, and we&rsquo;d better keep them
+ contented at home as long as we can. They&rsquo;ll be leaving us soon enough. It
+ seems that no boys are content to stay in town any longer; they&rsquo;re all
+ anxious to be off to the city.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s true, that&rsquo;s true, Mrs. Dunn,&rdquo; said Mrs. Sullivan. &ldquo;I must be
+ going now. I&rsquo;m much obliged for the rain-water, and whenever you want a
+ bit of milk call over the fence, and I&rsquo;ll bring it to you with pleasure.
+ It&rsquo;s a good neighbour you are, Mrs. Dunn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Mrs. Sullivan went slowly around the house and out at the front gate,
+ while good Mrs. Dunn returned to her ironing, a few clothes having to be
+ ready for Sunday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While these mothers were discussing their boys, the youngsters themselves
+ were busy behind the barn, building a hut down near the railway track.
+ There were six of them altogether, the three extra ones, besides Archie
+ Dunn and the Sullivan boys, having come from across the railway to play
+ for the day. Two hours before they had solemnly organised themselves into
+ the &ldquo;Hut Club,&rdquo; each boy walking three times around the block blindfolded,
+ and swearing upon his return to be true to all the rules and regulations
+ of the organisation, which had been written with chalk on the side of the
+ barn. The regulations were numerous, but the most important one was that
+ no East Side boys were to be allowed within the club-room when it was
+ built, and that the club&rsquo;s policy should be one of warfare against the
+ East Siders on every occasion when they met. This fight against the East
+ Side was, indeed, responsible for the organisation of the club. It was
+ felt necessary to have some head to their forces, and some means of
+ holding together. So the club was organised, and now the next thing on the
+ programme was the erection of a hut to serve as a club-house. Archie Dunn,
+ who had been elected president, volunteered to get three boards and a
+ hammer if the other boys would each get two boards and some nails. This
+ proposition was agreed to, and when the boys returned from their foraging
+ expeditions it was found that there were more than enough boards to build
+ the hut, so the work began at once. Holes were dug in the ground, and some
+ posts planted as supports for the structure, and then the boards were
+ hastily nailed together from post to post. In three hours the hut was
+ practically completed, and it remained only to lay a floor until they
+ could hold their first meeting in the new club-house. The floor itself was
+ down by noon, and the club then served a memorable dinner to mark the
+ completion of the structure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A hole was dug in the ground outside the door, and a furnace made. A
+ skillet was brought from Archie&rsquo;s house, together with some dishes and a
+ coffee-pot, and Dan Sullivan brought some more dishes, and six eggs from
+ his nests under the barn. The boys were obliged to make several trips to
+ and from the houses, but finally nearly everything was ready, and the eggs
+ were carefully cooked by Archie, who was really a good housekeeper, from
+ long experience in the kitchen with his mother. Some potatoes were fried
+ in the grease remaining in the skillet after the eggs were cooked, and
+ then the feast began. The eggs may have been rather black with grease, and
+ the potatoes were certainly not done, but the boys all pronounced it the
+ finest meal of their lives, notwithstanding the bitter coffee, and the
+ dirty bread, which had been allowed to fall into the gutter beside the
+ railway track. They were eating in their own house, and they had cooked in
+ the open air, &ldquo;just like tramps,&rdquo; Harry Rafe said, and it was little
+ wonder that they enjoyed the novel experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only trouble came when the meal was finished. No one wanted to wash
+ the dishes, and, finally, it was decided to return them to their
+ respective kitchens just as they were, and to let them be washed with the
+ rest of the dinner dishes at home. And this decision came near putting an
+ end to Hut Club dinners, for both Mrs. Dunn and the Widow Sullivan were
+ determined not to wash any more dirty dishes from the hut.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the meal was over, the boys lounged about the hut, and Dan Sullivan
+ brought a lot of things from his sister&rsquo;s playhouse with which to furnish
+ it more suitably. Archie Dunn brought a lot of hay from the loft in his
+ mother&rsquo;s barn, and when a piece of old carpet was spread upon it it made
+ an acceptable couch. A piece of old carpet was laid in front of the hut,
+ too, where the boys could sit and watch the trains switching back and
+ forth on the railway, and the tramps who were heating coffee in cans over
+ by the cattle-pen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, some cattle arrived in the pen to be loaded into cars for the
+ city, and the boys had just decided to go and watch the men loading them,
+ when an engine came up the side-track with the most beautiful car they had
+ ever seen, behind it. The car was painted in all colours of the rainbow,
+ and in giant letters was printed the magic name of &ldquo;The World&rsquo;s Greatest
+ Show.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boys lost no time in getting down from the cattle-pen fence, and the
+ car had barely stopped when they were aboard. &ldquo;Hooray,&rdquo; shouted Charlie
+ Huffman, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll all get jobs of passin&rsquo; bills.&rdquo; And it was with this end
+ in view that they sought the advertising manager in the car, who promised
+ to give them all jobs when the circus came in two weeks. The boys deluged
+ him with questions of every sort. &ldquo;Will there be any elephants?&rdquo; &ldquo;Is there
+ goin&rsquo; to be a parade?&rdquo; and &ldquo;Will there be any trapeze performances?&rdquo; The
+ poor man was finally obliged to lock the door to keep them out, and the
+ boys stood about the car until nearly six o&rsquo;clock, admiring the paintings,
+ and speculating as to whether they would be able to work their way into
+ the circus or not, when it finally came. Their speculations were
+ interrupted by the appearance on the scene of the Widow Sullivan with a
+ good-sized maple switch, which she used to good effect in getting the two
+ Sullivans and Archie Dunn home for supper. For Mrs. Dunn had given Mrs.
+ Sullivan instructions before she started, so that when Archie complained
+ that he had been whipped by &ldquo;that woman next door,&rdquo; he received no
+ sympathy whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when he went to bed at nine o&rsquo;clock, he could hardly sleep for
+ thinking of the wonderful things which had happened this day. The coming
+ circus and the great Hut Club kept him awake until far after ten, so that
+ he got up too late for Sunday school the next morning, and was punished
+ accordingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next week was a hard one at school, and the boys had but little time
+ to devote to the club. But after four o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon they
+ sometimes got together and did various things which improved their
+ club-house. Some very fair chairs were constructed from empty soap boxes,
+ and various contrivances were put together to guard against the intrusion
+ of any East Siders or tramps while they were away at school. There was no
+ padlock used, and any one coming up to the hut would imagine it a simple
+ thing to enter&mdash;until he tried. But the boys had fixed a secret cord
+ which, when pulled, shifted the bar inside, and every boy was sworn not to
+ betray the existence of the cord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day set for the circus came nearer and nearer, and the boys began to
+ be anxious for fear the schools would not close, so that they could
+ attend. But the superintendent finally announced that they would; so early
+ on the eventful day the entire club was on the grounds, waiting to get
+ some work to do. Archie Dunn got the first job, being selected to carry
+ water for the elephant because he was stronger than any of the others. But
+ the rest were given something to do, and when the day was over they had
+ all seen the circus, and went to bed happy, to dream of the great trip to
+ be taken by the Hut Club on the next Saturday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ARCHIE LONGS FOR A CHANGE IN SURROUNDINGS&mdash;A TRIP TO NEW YORK WITH UNCLE
+ HENRY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ THE Hut Club went out on a picnic the next Saturday, and had a jolly time.
+ They camped upon an island in the middle of a shallow stream, and while
+ there made coffee and cooked their dinner, having brought most of the
+ necessary apparatus from the Hut. They fished a little, and hunted for
+ turtles in the water, and altogether had a good time, if nothing exciting
+ did occur. It was after nine o&rsquo;clock at night when they reached town
+ again, footsore and weary, and Archie Dunn had hardly entered the house
+ before he was on the dining-room lounge, half-asleep. His mother seemed to
+ be out, and as he lay there he wondered how long it would be before she
+ came back. Archie truly loved his mother, but of late he had often thought
+ that he would like to leave home and go to the famous city, where he felt
+ sure he could get something to do. But he disliked the idea of leaving his
+ mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m getting to be a big boy, now,&rdquo; he often said to himself, &ldquo;and it&rsquo;s
+ time that I began to look out for myself. I&rsquo;m nearly seventeen, and I
+ think I ought to be earning some money. This thing of belonging to Hut
+ Clubs and spending my time in going to picnics and to circuses ought to
+ stop. It&rsquo;s all right for boys, but I&rsquo;m getting to be a man, now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these thoughts were flying through his mind when his mother came in.
+ &ldquo;Oh, Archie,&rdquo; she exclaimed, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been so worried about you. I&rsquo;ve just
+ been over to Mrs. Sullivan&rsquo;s to see if Dannie had come home, and whether
+ he had seen you. Wherever have you been?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We didn&rsquo;t think it would take so long to walk home,&rdquo; said Archie, jumping
+ up from the sofa, &ldquo;but we were awfully tired, and we didn&rsquo;t come very
+ fast. I&rsquo;m so sorry you were worried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I&rsquo;m as hungry as a bear, mother. Can&rsquo;t you find me something to eat?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, dear,&rdquo; said Mrs. Dunn, softly, &ldquo;and when you&rsquo;ve finished your supper
+ I have something for you. I won&rsquo;t give it to you now for fear you won&rsquo;t be
+ able to eat, but as soon as you have finished your meal, you shall have
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Archie was obliged to eat his baked beans and brown bread and drink his
+ milk without knowing what was in store for him, and he hurried as fast as
+ he could, so that he could learn. When he had finished he went into the
+ sitting-room, and found his mother sitting with a letter spread open upon
+ her lap. &ldquo;Uncle Henry has written me asking if you cannot go with him to
+ New York on Monday, for a couple of days. He is obliged to go down there
+ on business, and says he will be glad to take you along and show you
+ something of the wonderful city, for he knows you won&rsquo;t be any trouble to
+ him. Now I hardly know what to say, Archie. If I can feel that you are
+ behaving yourself properly, and are doing your best to be as little
+ trouble as possible, I am willing that you shall go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, mother,&rdquo; cried Archie, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll promise anything. Only let me go this
+ once, and I&rsquo;ll promise to stay at home all the rest of the summer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right, then,&rdquo; said Mrs. Dunn. &ldquo;You shall go on the first train Monday
+ morning, and Uncle Henry will join you at Heddens Corner. Run along to bed
+ now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie went up-stairs almost dumb with delight Was it really true that he
+ was to see the great city at last? He had heard some of the boys at school
+ telling what their fathers saw there, but he had never even hoped that he
+ would see it for himself so soon. Of course he had determined to see it
+ all some day, but that was to be far in the future. The lad could hardly
+ sleep for the joy of it all, and when he did finally lose consciousness,
+ it was only to dream of streets of gold, and great buildings reaching to
+ the skies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sunday passed slowly by. At Sunday school, Archie told the boys that he
+ was going to New York on the morrow, and from that moment he was the hero
+ of the class. The boys looked at him with wondering admiration, and seemed
+ scarcely able to realise that one of their number was to go so far from
+ home. The city was in reality little more than a hundred miles, but to
+ their boyish minds this distance seemed wonderfully great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early on Monday morning Archie was at the depot waiting for the train. His
+ mother was there to see him off, and there were tears in her eyes at the
+ thought of parting with her only child, if only for a day or two. And
+ Archie was radiant with delight at the glorious prospect ahead of him. He
+ walked nervously up and down the platform, and wished frequently that it
+ were not so early in the morning, so that some of the boys might be there
+ to see him off. Finally, the great hissing locomotive drew up, with its
+ long train of coaches, and Archie was soon aboard, hurrying off to Heddens
+ Corner and the city. In a few minutes Uncle Henry was with him, a tall,
+ fine-looking man, with an air of business. Uncle Henry kept the general
+ store at the Corner, and was an important person in the neighbourhood. He
+ was of some importance in the city, too, for his name was known in
+ politics, and his custom was always desired at the wholesale stores. So
+ Archie was going to see the city under good auspices, if his uncle would
+ only have time to take him about with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a couple of hours, during which Archie kept his face glued to the
+ window-pane, watching the flying landscape, the great train pulled through
+ a long, dark tunnel, and finally entered an immense shed, covered with
+ glass where it came to a final stop. Crowds left the coaches, and passed
+ out of the station, where they were swallowed up in the great rush of
+ traffic. Some drove away in cabs and carriages. Some entered the
+ street-cars, and some went up a stairway and entered what seemed to Archie
+ a railway train in the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Henry told Archie to follow him carefully, and they, too, were soon
+ flying away from the neighbourhood of the terminal, past hotels, stores,
+ and dwellings, until they finally left the trolley-car, and passed through
+ a cross street into a long, quiet thoroughfare which looked old enough to
+ have been there for a hundred years. The houses were built far back from
+ the street, with pillars in front, and into one of these quaint old
+ dwellings went Archie and his uncle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I always stop down-town,&rdquo; explained Uncle Henry, &ldquo;because I am near to
+ the great wholesale establishments. It is central to the retail stores,
+ too, and to many of the places of interest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they were settled in their room, Uncle Henry explained that he would
+ have to be away most of this first day, but that to-morrow he would take
+ Archie out and show him the sights. So Archie expected to remain indoors
+ all day; but when his uncle had left the house he decided that he couldn&rsquo;t
+ possibly remain in this close room when so many wonderful things were
+ taking place outside. So he decided to walk up and down the street,
+ anyhow, and when he went out he felt like a prisoner just escaped from a
+ cell. But the noise was terrible, and there were a great many wagons and
+ trucks passing through the street. The greatest crowd seemed to be on that
+ cross street about two blocks away, so Archie decided to go there, and see
+ if there was anything new on that street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He saw many wonderful things. There were cars running along without any
+ apparent motive power, there were thousands and thousands of people in the
+ streets, and the stores looked so handsome and interesting that he simply
+ couldn&rsquo;t resist going into one or two of them, just to see what they were
+ like. And when he had finished with one or two he could think of no reason
+ why he shouldn&rsquo;t go on up the street, where he was sure he would find a
+ great many more interesting things to see. So on and on he went, until at
+ last he was tired and hungry, and then, for the first time, he was a
+ little frightened, because he thought of all he had read about people
+ losing their way in the city, and not being able to find their relatives
+ again. But he was a brave boy, so he determined to make an effort to find
+ his way back without appealing to a policeman. And after a time he was
+ successful, and entered the queer old house in the ancient street at just
+ three o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon. His uncle was there waiting for him, and
+ was nearly beside himself with apprehension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was about to send out a general alarm for you, at the police station,&rdquo;
+ he said. &ldquo;How did you happen to go away?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I was so very tired of staying in the house,&rdquo; said Archie, &ldquo;and I
+ felt sure that I could find my way back without getting lost at all. And
+ to-morrow I&rsquo;m sure I can get along all right, Uncle Henry, so you needn&rsquo;t
+ bother with me at all, unless you want to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it so happened that Mr. Kirk was very busy the next day, and would
+ have found it quite impossible to show Archie about. So it was fortunate
+ that he was able to go everywhere alone, or he would have had to return
+ home without seeing anything at all of the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it was, he went here, there, and everywhere, and saw a great deal of
+ the city, the people, and the way in which they lived. The entire place
+ had a strange fascination for him, and all the time he was thinking how
+ glad he would be to live where he could see all this rush of business,
+ this varied life, every day. And he fully determined to return some day
+ and get something to do, so that he might work himself up, and come to own
+ one of the handsome houses on the avenues, or drive one of the elegant
+ carriages on the boulevard. And he observed every boy who passed him, and
+ talked with several of them, trying to find out whether positions were
+ easy to secure, and whether they paid much when they were secured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So when they took the four o&rsquo;clock train for home, and arrived at Archie&rsquo;s
+ house in time for supper, he told more about the city boys and their work
+ than about the tall buildings, the Brooklyn Bridge, or the Central Park.
+ He talked so much, in fact, about the delights of the city boy, and the
+ money he earned, that after he had gone to bed Mrs. Dunn took her brother
+ aside and talked with him concerning Archie&rsquo;s future. And between them
+ they definitely decided that Archie must not go to the city to work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ARCHIE DETERMINES TO GO TO THE CITY TO WORK&mdash;LEAVING HOME AT NIGHT.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ARCHIE DUNN was not more ambitious than many other boys of his age, but he
+ possessed one quality which is not developed in every boy, determination.
+ Once Archie decided upon doing a thing, once he had made up his mind that
+ it was truly a good thing to do, nothing could keep him from putting his
+ plans into action, and making an effort, at least, to accomplish his ends.
+ Most boys of seventeen have not decided what they want to become when they
+ are men, and, until his visit to the city, Archie was equally at sea
+ concerning his future. He knew, of course, that he wanted to be rich and
+ famous, but when he tried to think up some suitable profession which would
+ bring him these possessions, he was never able to decide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two days in the city with Uncle Henry had opened to his boyish mind a
+ new world, and when he returned to the humble home surrounded by gardens,
+ he felt that he would never be satisfied to live and work in this small
+ town. There was now no question in his mind but what the city was the
+ place for any one who wished to become either rich or famous. It would
+ certainly be impossible for him to make a name for himself in this
+ village, while in the city he would have every opportunity for improving
+ himself, and advancing himself in every way. He wondered, indeed, that he
+ had never thought of going to New York before, and was disgusted with
+ himself when he thought of the time he had wasted here at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was no use in thinking of the past. The thing to do now was to
+ get to the city as quickly as possible, for to Archie every day seemed
+ precious, and each delay kept him further from the consummation of his
+ hopes. It never occurred to the boy that his mother might have objections
+ to his leaving home. She had always been very ambitious for his future,
+ and he supposed that she would be delighted at the idea of having her boy
+ in the great city, where he would have innumerable chances for improving
+ himself. So when they sat on the front porch, one evening, and he told her
+ of his plan, he was surprised to hear his mother pleading with him to
+ remain at home. &ldquo;Archie,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I am almost sure you will come to
+ some bad end in the city. You really must not go, for my sake, if for no
+ other reason.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, mother, I can&rsquo;t remain here in town always. I must go out into the
+ world some time to earn a living and make a place for myself, and I think
+ the sooner I go the better, don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Archie, but you&rsquo;re so young, and you&rsquo;ve had no experience. You have
+ no idea of the things there are in great cities to drag young men down. I
+ don&rsquo;t think I could stand it to have you so far away from home and in such
+ danger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, mother,&rdquo; said Archie, &ldquo;there isn&rsquo;t much use in arguing about it. I
+ have reached a point where I don&rsquo;t think I can be any longer satisfied at
+ home. I have been here seventeen years, and I think I can remain here that
+ much longer without improving myself. In the city I am sure I can make
+ rapid progress, and in a year or two you can come there and live with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie got up from the porch and went down the street, while poor Mrs.
+ Dunn ran over next door to see her neighbour, Mrs. Sullivan. When she had
+ entered the disorderly kitchen, and seated herself on one of the home-made
+ chairs, the anxious mother burst into tears. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what to think
+ of Archie, Mrs. Sullivan,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He is determined, now, to go to New
+ York, and I know that if he goes I will never be able to see him again. I
+ am nigh distracted with worrying over it. I have talked with him, but he
+ seems determined, and I know I can never hold out against his entreaties
+ and arguments.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure, now, Mrs. Dunn,&rdquo; said the Widow Sullivan, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t yez be a worryin&rsquo;
+ about &lsquo;im at all. That Archie is a smart boy, he is, and if he goes to New
+ York he&rsquo;ll come out all right, never fear, I only wish my Dannie had as
+ much get-up about him as your boy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, yes, Archie is very ambitious for his age,&rdquo; said Mrs. Dunn, &ldquo;but I
+ sometimes wish he were less so. I know I could keep him at home longer if
+ he wasn&rsquo;t so anxious to be at work. I don&rsquo;t believe I can let him go, Mrs.
+ Sullivan, not yet. I want him to stay in school another year, and then
+ I&rsquo;ll think about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, ye&rsquo;re wise, Mrs. Dunn, ye&rsquo;re a wise woman,&rdquo; said the Widow
+ Sullivan. &ldquo;Since yer husband died ye&rsquo;ve been a good mother to the lad, and
+ have brought &lsquo;im up well. And now, how is yer chickens, Mrs. Dunn? Have ye
+ got that cochin hen a &lsquo;settin&rsquo;&rsquo; yit?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the two women began to discuss their various fowls, and the
+ conversation was so interesting that Mrs. Dunn remained late, and found
+ Archie in bed when she went home. &ldquo;Ah, well, poor boy, I&rsquo;ll have to tell
+ him of my decision in the morning. He&rsquo;ll be terribly disappointed, and I
+ hate to do it I&rsquo;m afraid it&rsquo;s selfishness that makes me want to keep him
+ with me. I almost wish he would take things into his own hands, and start
+ for the city himself. I would be rid then of the responsibility of sending
+ him, and the question would be settled for me. Boys sometimes know best
+ how to settle their own difficulties, anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Dunn kneaded the bread before retiring, for to-morrow was Saturday,
+ and, therefore, baking-day, and then she went into her little room off the
+ kitchen, and prayed earnestly for her boy before sleeping. She prayed that
+ she might be helped in advising him, and that he might always do what was
+ best for himself and for his mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day was Saturday, and in the morning the Hut Club met, as usual,
+ and prepared to have an open-air dinner for this day. The furnace, which
+ had been knocked down during the week by the East Siders, was rebuilt, and
+ the skillet and other utensils were brought from the nearest kitchens.
+ Archie went to the grocery around the corner and bought five cents&rsquo; worth
+ of cakes, and then the six boys sat down in a circle and prepared to
+ devour their home-made feast. But before they began Archie stood up. &ldquo;I
+ want to say that this will probably be my farewell dinner with the club,&rdquo;
+ he said, in a low tone, &ldquo;and I hope that you will appoint another
+ president in my place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boys were horror-struck, but Archie refused to explain where and when
+ he was going. Finally, they refused to appoint another president, all
+ agreeing that Archie should hold that office for ever, wherever he was.
+ And the meal was eaten in silence, for the announcement had thrown a sort
+ of chill over the proceedings. When they had finished, Archie silently
+ shook hands with each of the boys, who were dumb with amazement, gathered
+ up his skillet and coffee-pot, and went home through the gate to the
+ chicken-lot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder what he&rsquo;s goin&rsquo; to do,&rdquo; they all said, as in one breath, and as
+ there was seldom much fun in the club when Archie was absent, they all
+ went home in a few minutes, or down-town to watch the farmers, who were in
+ town to do their weekly buying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Archie reached home he went up-stairs to his little room, and began
+ to lay out a few things which he wanted to take with him, for he had
+ determined to start for New York this very night. Then he tied the things
+ up in a small bundle, and sat down to write a note to his mother. When he
+ had finished it, he pinned it up at the head of his cot, and this is what
+ it said:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;MY DARLING MOTHER:&mdash;Please don&rsquo;t worry about me, I&rsquo;m bound to
+ come through all right, and if anything happens to me, I promise
+ that I will write to you immediately and let you know. I have the
+ ten dollars which I have saved, and if I don&rsquo;t get work at once I
+ will write to you for some more. Now, I am not doing this thing for
+ the sake of adventure, but because I am sure it is the best thing
+ for me, and I don&rsquo;t want you to worry at all. I shall write to you
+ often and let you know just what I&rsquo;m doing, so don&rsquo;t worry, but be
+ a brave mother. I&rsquo;m not going off this way as a sneak, but because
+ I want to avoid a &lsquo;scene.&rsquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Your loving
+
+ &ldquo;ARCHIE.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ And at three o&rsquo;clock the next morning Archie Dunn got out of bed,
+ shouldered his bundle, and started off for the great city, which seemed to
+ be drawing him like a magnet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ WORKING ON A FARM TO EARN SOME MONEY&mdash;CRUEL TREATMENT.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ WHEN daylight came, Archie was far out of the town walking quickly along
+ the southern road. He figured that he had walked nearly six miles in the
+ two hours since he had let himself out of the back door at home, and, as
+ he looked ahead, he planned that he would walk at least thirty miles every
+ day. Of course, he had never done much walking before, or he would have
+ known better than to have expected to accomplish so much in twelve hours,
+ but he felt fresh and full of strength this morning, and nothing seemed
+ too hard to accomplish. As yet he had not regretted his departure from
+ home. The excitement of it all, and the adventurous side of his exploit,
+ had kept him interested, and made him feel that he was a real hero. But he
+ was not so foolish as to imagine that there would not be times when he
+ would regret having set out for New York. He was too old and too sensible
+ for his age to allow his ambition to run away with him entirely, and he
+ fully expected to meet with many great discouragements. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;m sure of
+ one thing,&rdquo; he said to himself, as he walked along, &ldquo;I never will return
+ home until I have something to show for the trip. I won&rsquo;t have the club
+ boys and the neighbours saying that Archie Dunn had to come home
+ discouraged. If I return without accomplishing anything, I will be held up
+ to the whole town as a boy who made a fool of himself by not taking his
+ friends&rsquo; advice, and I never will be made an example of if I can help it.&rdquo;
+ And Archie walked faster as he thought of the possibility of failure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When seven o&rsquo;clock came he was passing through the county-seat, but though
+ there were many interesting things to look at in the town, Archie
+ determined not to stop. He was afraid he might meet some one he knew, who
+ would be sure to ask him where he was going with his bundle, and what he
+ was doing out so early. And anyhow he was very hungry, and decided to get
+ out of the town and to the farmhouses as soon as possible. &ldquo;I can work for
+ my meal at a farmhouse,&rdquo; he said to himself, &ldquo;but in the town they&rsquo;ll take
+ me for a regular tramp.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So poor Archie walked quickly through the town, still keeping to the
+ southern road, and saying to himself, as he passed every milestone, &ldquo;So
+ much nearer New York.&rdquo; About a mile out in the country he came to a large
+ farmhouse, and he determined to enter and ask for a meal. He had hard work
+ to muster up enough courage to go in and ask for anything, but finally he
+ knocked timidly at the kitchen door, and was frightened by a large dog
+ which came barking around the corner. It seemed to him that the animal
+ would surely bite, but a large fat woman opened the door just in time to
+ let him in. &ldquo;Hurry in, boy,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;fer there&rsquo;s no tellin&rsquo; what Tige
+ might do ef he once gets a hold of ye.&rdquo; So Archie stepped into the large
+ kitchen, with its rafters overhead, and its dining-table in the corner.
+ &ldquo;Sit down, boy,&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;I reckon you&rsquo;s thet new lad thet&rsquo;s come
+ ter work over at Mullins&rsquo;s, ain&rsquo;t ye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No&rsquo;m,&rdquo; said Archie, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t work anywhere. I&rsquo;m on my way to New York,
+ where I expect to find a position, and I thought perhaps you&rsquo;d allow me to
+ do a little work here this morning to earn my breakfast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good Mrs. Lane, for that was the woman&rsquo;s name, was horrified to think that
+ any one was alive and without breakfast at eight o&rsquo;clock in the morning.
+ &ldquo;Goodness me!&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;Why, you must be half-famished fer want of food,
+ ain&rsquo;t ye?&rdquo; And she bustled about the kitchen, putting the kettle on to
+ boil, and stirring up the fire. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have some nice ham and eggs, my
+ boy, and then I have somethin&rsquo; in mind fer you. I reckon yer ain&rsquo;t in no
+ hurry ter get ter the city, be ye? Well, even if ye do be in a hurry, I
+ reckon you&rsquo;ll be glad of the chance to earn four dollars. I ain&rsquo;t goin&rsquo; to
+ ask ye no questions about how ye come to be walkin&rsquo; to New York, because I
+ never wuz no hand ter meddle in other folkses affairs, but ye look to be a
+ likely lad, and a strong un, and ez my sister&rsquo;s husband, what lives two
+ miles down the pike, needs a boy to drive a plough fer a week, I b&rsquo;lieve
+ ye&rsquo;ll suit &lsquo;im first-rate. So ez soon ez ye have finished yer vittles,
+ I&rsquo;ll walk down there with ye, and we&rsquo;ll see the old man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie hardly knew whether to be delighted with the prospect or not. Of
+ course four dollars would be nice to have, but he was anxious to get to
+ the city as soon as possible, and every day counted. But perhaps it would
+ be wrong, he thought, to throw away such a good chance to earn some money,
+ and he had decided to accept any offer the farmer made him, long before he
+ finished his breakfast. When he got up from the straight-backed chair, he
+ felt that he had never eaten a better meal in his life, and when Mrs. Lane
+ started off down the road, he gladly followed her. A week on such a farm
+ as this would be no unpleasant experience. Such food was not to be had
+ every day, he knew, and he of course would have precious little that was
+ good to eat when he reached the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They soon covered the two miles, Mrs. Lane getting along very fast for
+ such a large woman, and at last they stood before Hiram Tinch, who owned
+ the farm. Archie was made to describe his intentions, and was thoroughly
+ examined by Mr. Tinch. He told the farmer that he knew nothing about farm
+ work, but Mr. Tinch said he would soon teach him, and it was settled that
+ Archie was to remain on the farm a week. Mrs. Lane went inside the house
+ to see her sister, who looked sick with too much work, and the farmer told
+ Archie that he might as well start in, as there was no object in waiting.
+ So the boy donned a pair of &ldquo;blue jean&rdquo; trousers, and was taken into a
+ field, where a one-horse plough was standing. Archie knew how to hitch a
+ horse, so he went to the stable and secured his steed, and then harnessed
+ him to the plough. The farmer didn&rsquo;t see fit to give him any instructions
+ about ploughing, and the poor boy hardly knew what to do, but rather than
+ ask he started off, and tried to guide the animal in the right direction,
+ as far as he knew it. Of course the horse went wrong, and the plough
+ refused to stay in the earth, and altogether the attempt was a miserable
+ failure. The farmer leaned against the fence, picking his teeth with a
+ pin, but when he saw the horse going crooked, and the plough bounding
+ along over the earth, his face grew livid with anger. For a minute he
+ seemed unable to speak, but strode toward Archie with a fierce look in his
+ eyes. Then he found his tongue, and opened such a tirade of vile words
+ that the poor boy shrank from him in terror. He was in mortal fear lest
+ the man should lay hands on him and commit some crime, so intense was his
+ rage, but Hiram Tinch seemed to know how far to go, and after five minutes
+ of cursing and swearing he took the plough in his own hands, and guided it
+ through the earth. &ldquo;Now take it,&rdquo; he growled at Archie, when he had gone a
+ furrow&rsquo;s length, &ldquo;and see ef ye can do better this time. Remember, not a
+ bite of dinner do ye get until this field is ploughed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Archie was weak from fright, but there was nothing to do but to obey.
+ He looked at the vast field before him, and made up his mind that he would
+ get nothing to eat until night, anyhow, for it was already nearly noon. He
+ felt very much like bursting into tears, but he was too proud to give way
+ to his feelings. But he couldn&rsquo;t help wishing that he were at home,
+ playing with the members of the Hut Club. &ldquo;Those boys are much better off
+ than I am,&rdquo; he said, over and over, &ldquo;though they have made no effort to
+ improve themselves.&rdquo; After a time, however, his ambition returned, and as
+ he looked ahead into the future, and remembered the wonderful things he
+ was going to accomplish, he felt more like working.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He finished the field at five o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon, and was almost
+ fainting from hunger and from the hard work. The ploughing was fairly well
+ done, but Hiram Tinch could see no merit in the work. He swore at Archie
+ again, and gave him a supper of mush and milk. Mrs. Tinch sat by, and
+ Archie could see that she did not approve of his treatment. The poor woman
+ seemed afraid to speak, almost, but it was plain that she had a good
+ heart. So when Archie heard a noise in his garret room that night, he was
+ not surprised to see Mrs. Tinch at the window, placing some doughnuts and
+ sandwiches there for him to eat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE NIGHT AMONG THE RUINS&mdash;THE CAMP-FIRE OF THE TRAMPS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ IT seemed to Archie that he had just fallen asleep when old Hiram Tinch
+ was shaking him awake. &ldquo;Git up out o&rsquo; here now, ye lazy beggar, and git to
+ the field and finish that there ploughin&rsquo;,&rdquo; he growled, and the frightened
+ lad awakened from a horrible nightmare, only to find a worse experience
+ awaiting him in the light of day. He hastily drew on his trousers, and
+ didn&rsquo;t wait to don either shoes or stockings, for if he was to spend the
+ day ploughing in a field, he knew he would be more comfortable in his bare
+ feet. When he reached the kitchen, he found that Farmer Tinch had already
+ eaten his breakfast, though it was not daylight. Archie was glad that he
+ was out of the way, and good Mrs. Tinch was glad of it, too, for she was
+ able to give the boy a good breakfast, and some good advice with it.
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you pay no attention to what my man says, laddie. He&rsquo;s a powerful
+ man to swear and carry on, but I don&rsquo;t think he&rsquo;ll have the meanness to
+ strike you. Ef he does, ye must come to me, and I&rsquo;ll see thet he doesn&rsquo;t
+ do it no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie was grateful for this spirit of friendliness, but in his heart he
+ thought that cruel words were often more painful than lashes, and he
+ heartily wished that his week was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this day he spent on the farm, without once going into the road.
+ Farmer Tinch had warned him that if he saw him making for the road at any
+ time, he could go and never come back, and he would forfeit what money he
+ had already earned. So Archie ploughed the field from daylight till dark,
+ with a half hour at noon for a hurried dinner. He was glad when darkness
+ came, and after another supper of mush and milk he was thankful to have a
+ corn-husk bed to sleep on, and was soon in a stupor which was so sound as
+ to be almost like death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the next morning he was awakened at daylight, and he was made to
+ work even harder than on the second day. He had by this time become
+ somewhat used to the labour, however, and stood it better. He was more
+ successful in his work, too, and Farmer Tinch had less opportunity for
+ cursing him. But at night he seemed more tired, even, than before, and he
+ longed for his home again. He thought of the cosy bed he would now be
+ enjoying if he had only taken his mother&rsquo;s advice, and he felt almost like
+ getting up in the night and stealing away on the road to the north. But,
+ always a sensible lad, Archie realised that this discouragement could not
+ last, and he lost himself in sleep, looking forward three days, when his
+ week should be up, and he would be on his way to the city, with four
+ dollars more to add to his slender store.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three days passed slowly, but at length the Saturday night came, and
+ he prepared to be off. But good Mrs. Tinch entreated him to remain with
+ them over Sunday, and, as Archie wasn&rsquo;t sure that it would be quite right
+ for him to travel on Sunday, he decided to do so. So the next day he
+ brushed his only suit of clothes, and drove with his late employer to
+ church, where Farmer Tinch sat in a front seat and passed the bread and
+ wine at communion. Archie&rsquo;s heart rose to his throat as he saw this
+ paragon so devout in church. He felt like rising in his seat and
+ denouncing him before all the people as a tyrant and a hard-hearted
+ wretch. But he kept quiet, though he found it impossible to partake of the
+ communion under such circumstances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Tinches had brought their dinner with them, and at noon they all sat
+ on one of the grassy mounds in the churchyard, to take some refreshment
+ before the afternoon service began. When they had finished, Archie
+ wandered off, and came to a crowd of boys who were romping behind the
+ church. When they saw him approach, they all stopped their noise, and
+ looked at him wonderingly. Evidently they were not used to seeing strange
+ boys. The silence was soon broken, however, by one of the boys calling
+ out, &ldquo;Why, fellers, thet&rsquo;s the chap what&rsquo;s been workin&rsquo; fer Hiram Tinch.&rdquo;
+ This announcement was enough to make Archie an even greater object of
+ interest than before, for the boys seemed to think that any person who
+ could work for Farmer Tinch, and come out of the ordeal none the worse for
+ wear, must be something wonderful. Archie was soon on good terms with them
+ all, however, and told them of his plan of going to New York. The boys
+ were all attention, and soon he was the hero of the occasion. When the
+ bell rung for the afternoon service he was still telling them of the
+ things he was going to do, and none of them wanted to go into the church.
+ Archie persuaded them to enter, however, but he was not surprised to meet
+ them all along the road when he left Tinch&rsquo;s early Monday morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was almost time to go to bed when they reached the farmhouse that
+ night, so Archie went at once to his attic, being anxious to start fresh
+ on his journey the next day. He was now determined to push on as rapidly
+ as possible, hoping to reach the city within three or four days. He was
+ somewhat afraid that he wouldn&rsquo;t be able to do this, but he was going to
+ try, anyhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At daylight Monday morning he was on the way, and when the various boys he
+ met the day before said good-bye to him and wished him good luck, he felt
+ that his stay at Tinch&rsquo;s had not been without benefits of some sort. He
+ had made some boy friends, and he was four dollars richer, Archie was
+ sensible enough, too, to realise that his experience would be a valuable
+ one to him in the future. He knew now what hard work was, at any rate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The morning walk was delightful. The September weather was perfect, and
+ all along the road were fruit-trees laden with every sort of good thing to
+ eat a boy could wish for. And as the trees were on the public
+ thoroughfare, Archie did net hesitate to help himself freely as he went
+ along, so that he didn&rsquo;t require any meal at noon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As night drew near, however, he began to wonder what he would do for a
+ bed, and the question became more important with every hour. He had come
+ to no towns since morning, and knew that he couldn&rsquo;t expect to reach one
+ of any size until the next day, anyhow. There were farmhouses, of course,
+ but after his experience of the past week the lad felt that he would
+ rather remain outdoors all night than risk being thrown in with another
+ Hiram Tinch. He didn&rsquo;t know enough of farmers to know that few of them
+ resemble Mr. Tinch in nature, and he did what he thought was best in
+ keeping away from farmhouses after this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was five o&rsquo;clock in the evening, and Archie was beginning to feel very
+ tired and hungry, when he came to the ruins of an old colonial mansion,
+ which lay far back from the road, surrounded by trees, and almost hid with
+ shrubbery. &ldquo;How interesting,&rdquo; he thought to himself. &ldquo;It looks just like
+ the pictures of old ruins we see in geographies. I think I must go up and
+ see what they look like at close range.&rdquo; And, fired with a spirit of
+ adventure, and making believe that he was an explorer in an ancient
+ country, the boy made his way through the trees and shrubbery. The ruins
+ looked more and more interesting as he advanced. This had evidently been a
+ magnificent estate at one time. There were massive pillars which had once
+ supported a stately portico at the front of the house, and above all there
+ rose a massive chimney, which seemed to be exceedingly well preserved. As
+ Archie came nearer, he was surprised to notice a thin column of smoke
+ rising from the top of the chimney, and for a moment he stood still with
+ fright. What could this mean? Who could be building a fire in the midst of
+ these ruins. It was almost like what one reads about in books, he thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some time he could not decide what to do, whether he had better keep
+ on, or whether the wisest policy would be to get back to the road as
+ quickly as possible. Finally, his curiosity and thirst for adventure
+ persuaded him to go on, and he continued to push his way through the
+ shrubbery until he stood before the ruins. He then climbed a flight of
+ steps, and stood in what had once been the main entrance to this massive
+ palace. Before him he saw a scene which was almost weird in its
+ unusualness. A fire of pine-knots was blazing in the ruins of the great
+ fireplace, and seated in a semicircle around the fire were several men of
+ picturesque appearance, whose faces looked up angrily when they were
+ disturbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ STEALING A RIDE&mdash;KICKED OUT BY THE BRAKEMAN.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ARCHIE was dumbfounded. Never before had he been among such a motley
+ crowd, and his first impulse was to turn and run. But on second thought he
+ decided that it would be best to put on a bold face and walk up to the
+ men. This he did, and when he reached the fire the men jumped up and asked
+ him who he was. In a few words he told them his simple story, and they all
+ laughed and sat down again about the fire, making a place for him. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re
+ one of us, then, laddie,&rdquo; said the leader of the gang. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re all soldiers
+ of fortune, all dependent upon the generous public for our livelihood. But
+ we&rsquo;re not goin&rsquo; to the city. There&rsquo;s nothin&rsquo; there for us, and our advice
+ to you is for you to steer clear of the place, too. Them police takes ye
+ and throws ye into jail as quick as a wink, and there&rsquo;s no chance of
+ gettin&rsquo; anythink to eat at basement doors, neither. They&rsquo;re all on to us,
+ there, laddie, and ye&rsquo;d better stick to the country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This bit of advice was endorsed by the entire company, and it was in vain
+ that Archie tried to make them understand that he was no ordinary tramp,
+ walking about the country in search of an easy time. He tried to tell them
+ that he was going to the city to work, not to beg; but the leader, a big,
+ dirty fellow, weighing two hundred pounds or over, said, &ldquo;Never mind,
+ laddie, we knows you&rsquo;ve run away from home to get away from the folks, and
+ we appreciates yer position. If yer a mind to stand by us, we&rsquo;ll stand by
+ you, and see thet ye comes to no harm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On thinking things over, Archie decided that it was perhaps the wisest
+ thing for him to appear to sympathise with the tramps, and make himself
+ agreeable while with them. He had undoubtedly run into a gang of the worst
+ sort of vagabonds, and there was no way of getting away from there without
+ arousing their suspicions. So he partook of their slender meal, and joined
+ in the general laughter when the leader, &ldquo;Fattie Foy,&rdquo; made some crude
+ attempt at punning. The meal was one to be remembered. The coffee had been
+ heated in an empty tomato can over the fire, and from its taste was
+ evidently a combination of various collections made from the farmhouses
+ round about. Besides the coffee there was a various collection of
+ sandwiches and bread and butter, and two pieces of cake. One man had
+ succeeded in striking a good house, and came back laden with pickles and
+ crackers and cheese, which were probably the remains of some picnic
+ basket. Another fellow had brought some pieces of cold bacon, and these
+ were warmed on sticks over the fire until they looked really appetising.
+ From some barn had come a half-dozen fresh eggs, and these were quickly
+ boiled in a can of hot water, and made a very fair showing on the slab of
+ granite which served as a table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When everything was ready the provisions were equally divided among the
+ crowd, and every one shared alike. It made no difference how much more one
+ man collected than another, it was always shared with the entire crowd.
+ Poor Archie found it almost impossible to eat, but the men insisted that
+ he take something, so he did manage to swallow a few sips of coffee and
+ eat a slice of bread and butter. But as he looked about him at the dirty
+ hands and faces, and the filthy garments of the tramps, he determined not
+ to eat again while with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the meal was over the two tin cans were washed at a spring of water,
+ and as it was now quite dark, they all sat close to the fire, in order to
+ see. Some one produced a pack of dirty cards, and they began a game of
+ some kind. Archie was asked to join, but he told them he didn&rsquo;t know
+ anything about card-playing. The poor lad was beginning to wish he had
+ never left home, and felt more miserable than at any other period of the
+ journey. He walked over to a corner of the ruins where the light from the
+ fire did not penetrate, and, once there, he sat down and sobbed bitterly
+ for a time. When he had finished crying it seemed impossible for him to
+ sleep. The scene about the fire fascinated him. The men were seated in
+ every sort of picturesque attitude, and as the flickering light fell upon
+ their dark faces it wasn&rsquo;t hard for the poor lad to imagine that he had
+ fallen among a crowd of brigands. He watched them as they played until he
+ could see no longer, and then he fell into a sound sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Archie woke it was still dark, but the moon was shining brightly
+ overhead, making everything as light as day. He rubbed his eyes and sat
+ up, and it was some time before he could realise where he was. Then, as he
+ saw the tramps lying about the ground, he remembered his adventures of the
+ night before, and, horrified that he had allowed himself to sleep, he
+ hastily jumped up, and determined to get away from the ruins as quickly as
+ possible. The tramps were all sleeping soundly, and the only noises to be
+ heard were the sound of their breathing and the blood-curdling hoot of
+ some owl perched on the pillars of the old portico. The boy picked his way
+ carefully between the bodies of the sleeping men, and in a minute stood
+ once more on the grand flight of steps outside. He was trembling for fear
+ some tramp would awake and prevent his going, and when a bat brushed him
+ in its flight he almost screamed with terror. Far out beyond the trees and
+ the shrubby he could see the road glistening in the moonlight, and he made
+ his way as rapidly as possible out of the grounds, and was once more on
+ his way to the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was lonesome work, walking along a country road at night, and Archie
+ remembered with longing his cosy bed at home. The feeling of homesickness
+ kept growing within him, despite his efforts to down it, and when at last
+ the glorious autumn sun rose over the eastern horizon he was miserable
+ with longing for mother and for home. But he was too proud to even think
+ of turning back. He must reach the city at all hazards, homesick or not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie did not think of breakfast this morning. His experience of the
+ night before seemed to have taken away his appetite entirely, and his only
+ thought was to walk as fast as possible, so that he could reach the city
+ soon. About nine o&rsquo;clock he entered the outskirts of a busy town, and
+ while there he observed that the railroad going to the city passed through
+ the place. All at once a new idea occurred to him. He had so often heard
+ men and boys tell of how they had stolen a ride from one town to another.
+ Why shouldn&rsquo;t he be able to get a ride on a freight train to the city.
+ Would it be wrong? Archie thought not, since so many men did it. And
+ anyhow it didn&rsquo;t seem a wicked thing to cheat the railroad. He had heard
+ people say that the company ought to be cheated whenever possible, since
+ it cheated so many others. So, from being so tired and so anxious to reach
+ New York, Archie decided to try and steal a ride. He entered the yards,
+ where a train was being made up for the south, and there he saw a
+ cattle-car with an open door. He immediately jumped inside and shut the
+ door, squeezing himself into the farthest corner, hoping that he wouldn&rsquo;t
+ be discovered. He soon found that he wasn&rsquo;t alone, for a couple of tramps
+ were in the opposite corner, and they whispered to him not to make any
+ noise. &ldquo;The brakie,&rdquo; they said, &ldquo;will soon be &lsquo;round, and if he finds ye
+ he&rsquo;ll put us all in jail.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Archie grew pale at the thought of being put in jail, and huddled
+ himself closer in the corner. After a time the train started, and the
+ tramps, he noticed, climbed up into some sort of compartment under the
+ roof of the car, where they wouldn&rsquo;t be observed, leaving Archie alone
+ down-stairs. Things went smoothly for a time. The train went flying along,
+ and Archie counted every mile which brought him nearer to the city.
+ Finally the train pulled up at a crossing, and a brakeman came along and
+ threw open the door of the car. He was not long in discovering the
+ cowering figure in the corner, and his wrath was dreadful to look upon.
+ &ldquo;So, ye cussed vagabond,&rdquo; he growled, &ldquo;ye thought ye&rsquo;d steal a ride, did
+ ye? Get out o&rsquo; this now. Quick, out with ye.&rdquo; Archie could have fainted,
+ and, as it was, he almost fell out of the car, propelled by the brakeman&rsquo;s
+ boot. For awhile he stood dazed beside the track, and finally moved on.
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll keep a &lsquo;stiff upper lip,&rsquo;&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;whatever happens.&rdquo; But this was
+ by far the most discouraging adventure yet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ARRIVAL IN NEW YORK&mdash;A NIGHT IN A LODGING-HOUSE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ON and on for the rest of the day walked Archie. His feet were sore, he
+ was weak from hunger, and he was made miserable with being homesick.
+ People who met him on the road turned around to look at the slender lad
+ with the pale face and the weary step, but he kept walking on, stopping
+ for nothing, and noticing no one. At noon he picked some apples in an
+ orchard, and these appeased his hunger. When evening drew near, however,
+ he felt that he could go without food no longer, so he didn&rsquo;t hesitate to
+ stop at a house and ask for food. &ldquo;I know mother would give a boy food if
+ one should come to our door,&rdquo; he said to himself, &ldquo;so I do not think it
+ wrong for me to ask for food here.&rdquo; He was fortunate enough to strike a
+ pleasant housewife, who took him in and made him sit down at the kitchen
+ table, which she covered with good things to eat. There was cold roast
+ beef, some fried potatoes and a glass of good fresh milk. And then she
+ gave him some apple pie, so that when he had finished Archie felt better
+ than for many a day. While he ate he told the good woman why he was going
+ to New York, and her sympathy was enlisted at once. &ldquo;Why, you poor lad,&rdquo;
+ she exclaimed, &ldquo;just to think of your being in the city all alone. And
+ what will your mother think?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie couldn&rsquo;t imagine what his mother did think. He had remembered her
+ every minute during the last few days, and was anxious to write her, so he
+ decided to ask the woman for some paper and a pencil. These were gladly
+ given him, and he sat down and told his mother that he was almost to New
+ York and that he had been having a splendid time. He was careful not to
+ say anything about his experience with Farmer Tinch, or the night he spent
+ with the tramps. He knew these things would only make her unhappy, and it
+ was just as well that she should think everything was smooth sailing for
+ him. His letter was filled with his enthusiasm and his hope for the
+ morrow, so that when good Mrs. Dunn received it she was overjoyed, and
+ hurried over to show it to the Widow Sullivan, who enjoyed it thoroughly
+ and said &ldquo;I told you so.&rdquo; Poor Mrs. Dunn had been having a very miserable
+ time of it. She was hardly surprised that morning when she awoke and found
+ Archie gone, but she was naturally much worried for fear some accident
+ would happen to him before he reached New York. Once there, she felt that
+ she needn&rsquo;t worry much about him, for, strange to say, Mrs. Dunn had a
+ firm belief in the ability of city policemen to take care of every one,
+ and she knew that Archie would not be allowed to suffer for want of food
+ and a place to sleep. And when she received this letter, saying that
+ Archie was nearly to New York, and had even been so successful as to earn
+ some money, she felt more comfortable than for some time, Of course she
+ supposed that he would be home before long. She was positive that he
+ wouldn&rsquo;t be able to get any work in the city, and knew that as soon as his
+ money gave out he would return. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all for the best,&rdquo; she said to Mrs.
+ Sullivan. &ldquo;The habit of running away from home was born in the boy. His
+ father left home when he was no older than Archie, and no harm ever came
+ to him. So I&rsquo;m not going to worry, Mrs. Sullivan.&rdquo; And then Mrs. Dunn
+ would go back to her home, and at sight of Archie&rsquo;s old hat or some of his
+ football paraphernalia, would burst into tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good woman who gave Archie his supper refused to let him start out
+ again on the road that night. She told him that he must remain with them,
+ for they had an extra bed up over the kitchen which was never needed, and
+ that he might just as well sleep there as not. So for the first time in
+ nearly a week Archie slept comfortably, and, as he heard the familiar
+ sounds in the kitchen below him in the morning, it was hard for him to
+ make up his mind that he was not at home, and that it was not his mother
+ who was grinding the coffee in the kitchen below. He heard the ham frying
+ in the skillet, and the rattle of the dishes as his hostess set the table,
+ and then he dressed himself and hastened downstairs, feeling ready for a
+ good day&rsquo;s walking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had eaten his breakfast he started out again. The woman told him
+ that it was only about fifteen miles to New York, and that after he had
+ walked about six of them he could take a trolley-car and ride the
+ remainder of the distance for five cents. So he thanked her for her
+ kindness, and promised to let her know how he succeeded in the city, for
+ the woman was much interested in his future. He felt almost sorry to leave
+ the home-like place, but the prospect of reaching the city this very day
+ was enough to make him anxious to be off. He covered the six miles to the
+ trolley-car before eleven o&rsquo;clock in the morning, and then in an hour and
+ a quarter more the trolley landed him in lower New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His sensations as he was whirled along the smooth pavements, past
+ beautiful buildings and handsome residences, may be better imagined than
+ described. After looking forward to this day for so long, he was almost
+ overcome at the realisation of his hopes, and took the utmost delight in
+ everything about him. When the car stopped at the terminus of the line, he
+ got out and walked up the busiest street in the neighbourhood. He hardly
+ knew what to do first, but continued walking until he came to the New York
+ end of the great Brooklyn Bridge. Then he couldn&rsquo;t resist the desire to
+ walk across the bridge, and he started out upon the journey. Up the steps
+ he walked, and soon he had climbed as far as the middle of the magnificent
+ structure. There he stood for some time, looking out over Governor&rsquo;s
+ Island, nestled like a green egg in a nest of red buildings, and past
+ Staten Island to the open sea beyond It was all grander, more beautiful
+ than anything he had ever seen before, and he felt glad that he had come.
+ Then in another direction he saw the never-ending succession of buildings,
+ some tall, some low ones, but all inhabited with swarms of people. &ldquo;There
+ are three million people in this great city,&rdquo; he said to himself, &ldquo;and
+ over them in New Jersey, in those cities I see, there are a million more,
+ and I am one of four million.&rdquo; The thought was too much for the boy, and
+ he continued his walk across the bridge. Once across, he came back again,
+ for Brooklyn was a strange place to him. In New York City he felt more at
+ home, for he had at least spent two days within its limits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once back in the busy streets, he decided to look about for a cheap place
+ to stay for the night. It was the middle of the afternoon now, and he felt
+ that he ought to make some preparation. He knew better than to apply at
+ the police station for lodging, for he knew they would probably turn him
+ over to the famous Gerry Society, which would send him back home before a
+ day had passed, and then where would his ambitions be?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He remembered the place where he had stayed with Uncle Henry, but he knew
+ that this would be too high-priced for his pocketbook, so he started up
+ the Bowery, where he expected to find some very cheap places. He didn&rsquo;t
+ like the looks of the people he met in the street, but his experiences on
+ the way to New York had taught him not to be too particular about a little
+ dirt. So when he came to a rickety building with a sign up, &ldquo;Beds, ten and
+ fifteen cents,&rdquo; he immediately went up the dark, filthy stairway, and
+ found himself in a large room at the top which served as the &ldquo;hotel&rdquo;
+ office. There were rows of chairs in front of the windows and along the
+ walls, and in the chairs were the queerest-looking lot of men he had ever
+ seen. He didn&rsquo;t pay any attention to them, though, but went up to the
+ seedy individual behind the desk, and asked him if he could get a bed for
+ the night. &ldquo;Sure, Mike,&rdquo; the man replied, and Archie signed his name in a
+ dirty book with torn pages. He paid the man ten cents, and asked if he
+ could leave his bundle while he went outside. &ldquo;Sure, Mike,&rdquo; was again his
+ answer, and the man took his little bundle of necessities and threw them
+ on the floor behind the counter. When Archie had gone out, a fat man with
+ a baby face came up and whispered to the clerk. &ldquo;Anything in the bloke?&rdquo;
+ he inquired. &ldquo;Nit,&rdquo; said the clerk, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t yer see his baggage? Does it
+ look like there&rsquo;s anything in it?&rdquo; And the mysterious conversation closed,
+ to be continued later in the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ LOOKING FOR WORK&mdash;WASHING DISHES IN A BOWERY RESTAURANT.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ AFTER a couple of hours spent in going about the streets, Archie went into
+ a place where he bought some coffee and rolls for his supper. He paid only
+ five cents for three sweet rolls and a large cup of coffee which was not
+ at all bad to taste, and he returned to the lodging-house on the Bowery
+ feeling better than he had expected to feel when he started out from the
+ homestead where he spent the previous night, If he could get a good meal
+ for five or ten cents, and could sleep for ten cents more, he would have
+ enough to keep him going for some time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bowery at night presented a wonderful appearance to Archie&rsquo;s mind. The
+ brilliantly lighted shops, the cheap theatres with their bands of
+ musicians on the sidewalk in front of the entrance, were all attractive to
+ his boyish eyes, but he was wise enough to pass them all by, and to make
+ his way as quickly as possible to the cheap lodging-house. The street was
+ jammed with persons of every description. He was surprised particularly at
+ the number of Chinamen he met, for he didn&rsquo;t know that a block or two away
+ was the centre of the Chinese population of New York, where the Celestials
+ have their theatre, their hotels, their great stores, and their
+ joss-house. There were many Italians in the street, too, and Polish Jews,
+ to say nothing of Frenchmen and Germans. Then there was the typical Bowery
+ &ldquo;tough,&rdquo; who swaggered up and down, looking for trouble, which he usually
+ finds before an evening passes. Archie was not afraid in this cosmopolitan
+ crowd. No one seemed to notice him, and, anyhow, there were a great many
+ policemen about, who seemed to keep a sharp lookout all the time. And as
+ Archie shared his mother&rsquo;s faith in the city policeman, he felt no fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the lodging-house everything looked very much as before. The chairs
+ were still occupied with filthy-looking men, who smoked and spat and
+ talked in undertones among themselves. The boy paid no attention to any of
+ them, but, walking up to the seedy individual behind the counter, asked
+ him if he could go to bed now. The man answered, &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; and sent a
+ fellow with Archie to show him his bed. It was in a long, narrow room,
+ which was poorly lighted with a few gas-jets here and there, and which was
+ filled with about thirty beds, all narrow, and all dirty. One of these was
+ pointed out to Archie, and then the man left him. The poor lad felt more
+ homesick than ever, and had it not been that he had a glorious to-morrow
+ to look forward to, he would have been very miserable indeed. As it was,
+ he undressed and got between the chilly sheets, when he remembered that he
+ hadn&rsquo;t looked after his little roll of bills for a long time, and that
+ some of them might be missing. He crawled out of bed again, and felt
+ inside the lining of his coat for the purse. He had sewed it there for
+ safe-keeping until he reached the city, for he had some little change in
+ his pocket, which he knew would last him for several days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor boy&rsquo;s hand felt nothing but a cut in the lining, where the roll
+ of bills had been, and all at once he realised that the money must have
+ been stolen from him. And he at once thought of the night in the ruins,
+ when he fell asleep among the tramps, and there was no doubt in his mind
+ but that they had taken his money from him. This was a terrible blow. Here
+ he was, with just a few cents in his pocket, and no one to whom he could
+ appeal for aid. It was the worst predicament Archie had ever been in, and
+ he hardly knew what to do. He sat on the side of his dirty little bed for
+ awhile, and then he snuggled under the covers and was soon asleep again.
+ For a boy who has been walking all day seldom stays awake from worry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when he awoke in the morning, it was to realise the fact that he must
+ get some money this very day or go to the police station. The few cents he
+ had remaining were only enough to buy some coffee and bread for breakfast,
+ and the poor lad didn&rsquo;t know where his next meal would come from. As he
+ went out, the clerk in the filthy office of the lodging-house told him
+ that he needn&rsquo;t come back any more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did you tell him that?&rdquo; asked the fat man with a sly face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I went through his clothes last night when he was asleep, and he
+ had only six cents in his pocket. We don&rsquo;t want no starvin&rsquo; brats around
+ here, to bring the Gerry Society down upon us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was well that Archie didn&rsquo;t know his pockets had been searched while he
+ was asleep, or his faith in human nature would have been more shaken than
+ ever before. He had not suspected that the men in this lodging-house might
+ be dishonest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are poor,&rdquo; he said to himself when he saw them first, &ldquo;but they may
+ be good men for all that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a slender meal, Archie found a library where he looked over the
+ advertising columns of the morning papers, trying to find some position
+ open which he thought he might fill. There were several advertisements
+ calling for office boys, and all these he made note of, and then as he
+ looked down the page he noticed that a boy was wanted in a restaurant to
+ wash dishes. He decided that if he didn&rsquo;t succeed in getting a place as
+ office boy, he might get the restaurant place. He knew that in a
+ restaurant he would be likely at least to get enough to eat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For two hours he called at addresses of men who wanted office boys, but at
+ every place he was turned away. &ldquo;We have already hired one,&rdquo; some of them
+ said, and others told him that they never took any boys in the office who
+ were living away from home. Some asked him for recommendations, and when
+ he had none, they looked at him and told him &ldquo;good morning.&rdquo; It was all
+ terribly discouraging, and with every minute Archie was wishing more and
+ more that he were back home again. Somehow the city seemed different now
+ from what it had been when Uncle Henry was with him. Everything was less
+ bright, and the things he had been delighted with before were less
+ interesting now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, he entered a large, handsome suite of rooms, in one of the great
+ sky-scrapers, and was shown into a very elegant private office. There he
+ found an old gentleman seated in a great easy chair, looking over papers,
+ and keeping one eye upon a buzzing instrument at his side which seemed to
+ be spitting out long strips of paper, like a magician in a side-show. The
+ man looked up as he entered, and cleared his throat. &ldquo;Ahem,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you
+ look as if you were from the country. I wonder, now, if you have came to
+ the city to seek your fortune.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie was embarrassed. &ldquo;Yes, sir, I suppose you might put it that way,&rdquo;
+ he replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; continued the old gentleman, &ldquo;my advice to you is to go back where
+ you came from as quickly as you can. Not one boy in a thousand will gain
+ either fame or fortune in New York, and you stand a wonderful chance of
+ sinking lower every year. And even if you do succeed, you will miss many
+ beautiful things in your life which may come to you in the country. You
+ can have a pleasant home there, and live an easy, natural life, while here
+ it will be years before you can expect to accomplish much, and you will
+ spend your life in a nervous strain. Think well, young man, before
+ choosing the great city as your sphere of usefulness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve made up my mind, sir,&rdquo; said Archie. &ldquo;I have quite decided to remain
+ in the city.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said the old gentleman, &ldquo;I hope you may never regret it. But
+ we have already hired an office boy. Good morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie walked out, more discouraged than ever. Perhaps, after all, a
+ country life was not to be so much despised. This man ought to know what
+ he was talking about. But once outside, in the Broadway crowd, Archie
+ forgot everything about the country, and was lost in the delight of being
+ one of four million.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He now decided to accept the place in the restaurant, if it were not
+ taken, and, fortunately for him, it was not. So he rolled up his sleeves,
+ and began to wash dishes as if he had done nothing else in all his life
+ before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ IN THE STREET AGAIN&mdash;THE POLICE STATION&mdash;VISITS THE NEWSPAPER OFFICE,
+ AND IS KINDLY RECEIVED BY THE EDITOR.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ALL day long Archie washed dishes, and before night came he decided that
+ he had never before had such discouraging work. The restaurant was a
+ popular one, and there were very many dishes to be washed, to say nothing
+ of the pots and pans which were always dirty. Archie no sooner finished
+ one sink full of dishes than another large pile was waiting to be put
+ through the same operation, and there was no time at all for looking about
+ him. There was hardly time for eating, even, and at noon he was only able
+ to snatch a few mouthfuls. The work was not interesting, and it was a new
+ sort of labour to Archie, so that altogether he did not get on as well as
+ he might have wished. The cook was constantly nagging him, and telling him
+ to hurry up, and the poor lad tried his best to please him. But somehow
+ everything went wrong, and he was hardly surprised when the proprietor
+ came in at six o&rsquo;clock with a new man for the place. &ldquo;Come around in the
+ morning,&rdquo; he said to Archie, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll pay your day&rsquo;s wages.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the boy was in the street once more, with no money, and no place to
+ sleep. He wasn&rsquo;t hungry, that was one thing, for he had been allowed to
+ eat a good meal before leaving the restaurant. But where was he to sleep,
+ and what was he to do on the morrow, when he would surely be hungry? His
+ experience at looking for work had not been encouraging, and he began to
+ have serious doubts as to whether he would ever get a place. Certainly he
+ would starve if he waited around New York long without anything to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was quite dark at seven o&rsquo;clock, and Archie walked over to the
+ brilliantly lighted street which ran north and south through the city. He
+ had never failed to find something interesting to look at there, and he
+ felt now that he would like to see the bright side of city life, even if
+ he couldn&rsquo;t enjoy it himself. So all the evening he walked up and down the
+ street, watching the well-dressed crowds hurrying into the theatres and
+ the other almost innumerable places of amusement. He stared in
+ open-mouthed amazement at some of the costumes of the women he saw
+ alighting from carriages. Never before had he seen anything half so
+ beautiful, and if any one had told him that there were such dresses he
+ would have told them he didn&rsquo;t believe it. Some of them, he thought, must
+ cost hundreds of dollars, and the jewels worn with them many hundreds
+ more. How interesting, how new, it all was to him! Once he thought of the
+ little home in the village, and at first wished that his mother might be
+ there to enjoy the sights with him. &ldquo;But I wouldn&rsquo;t want her to see me,&rdquo;
+ he thought, &ldquo;not while I am so miserable, and feeling so discouraged.&rdquo; For
+ Archie was beginning to wonder if he hadn&rsquo;t made a mistake in leaving
+ home, whether he had not been overconfident and hot-headed. But he decided
+ to try it a few days more, that is, if he could manage to live for that
+ length of time in the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At twelve o&rsquo;clock he was walking up and down the street, which was still
+ bright with millions of lights, though the crowds had gone home from the
+ theatres, and the restaurants were beginning to be less popular. He was
+ still wondering how he was going to find a place to sleep, when he was
+ accosted by a policeman, and taken into a doorway. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been watching
+ you,&rdquo; said the officer, &ldquo;and I want to know why you are walking up and
+ down the street at this time of night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie could have cried from fright, but he remembered that he was under
+ suspicion, so decided to tell the policeman his whole story, and perhaps
+ he could help him out in some way. So he described his experiences during
+ the day, and was surprised at the interest shown by the officer in the
+ recital. When he had finished he was told that he would be taken to the
+ police station. &ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t be afraid, my lad,&rdquo; said the policeman. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
+ see that the Gerry Society doesn&rsquo;t get you and send you home, that is, if
+ you think you want to try it here a few days longer. You can sleep at the
+ station to-night, and the next morning you can try it again.&rdquo; So to the
+ station they went, and Archie was, naturally, a little frightened when he
+ saw, for the first time, the cells, and the terribly severe appearance of
+ all his surroundings. But he was given a good bed in which to sleep, and
+ he passed a delightful night, dreaming of the wonderful adventures which
+ befell him in the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not awakened until eight o&rsquo;clock, and then he found the good
+ policeman waiting to take him out to breakfast, He expressed surprise that
+ he should be so kind to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I always thought that officers were cross and unpleasant,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but
+ you&rsquo;re not that kind, anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; laughed the officer, &ldquo;we have to be cross very often, though we&rsquo;re
+ sometimes sorry to be so. But I&rsquo;ve taken a fancy to you, my lad. I like to
+ see a boy who does things. When a boy of seventeen is willing to come to
+ New York alone, and make his own way, without friends or influence of any
+ kind, it shows a proper spirit, and he ought to succeed. I know you&rsquo;ll get
+ along if you only persevere. I&rsquo;d advise you to keep on trying.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m going to, now,&rdquo; said Archie. &ldquo;I was very homesick and discouraged
+ last night, but since I&rsquo;ve met you I seem to have received a new impetus,
+ and I&rsquo;m ready to make a new beginning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Archie and the policeman parted friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come around to the station to-night if you want a bed, and you shall be
+ cared for,&rdquo; said the officer, as he turned around the corner into the busy
+ street, where he was lost in the crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie walked down the street, hardly knowing what to do first. He didn&rsquo;t
+ feel like answering any more advertisements in the newspapers, and he
+ decided to go into a few stores and ask for work. He was about to do this
+ when he saw before him the magnificent building of the New York
+ Enterprise. It was a truly beautiful structure, rising fifteen stories
+ above the ground, and surmounted with an artistic tower, which could be
+ seen from almost any part of the city. The home of the city&rsquo;s greatest
+ daily, it looked as if it were always welcoming strangers to the
+ metropolis, and Archie felt an irresistible impulse to enter. Everything
+ connected with a newspaper had for him the greatest fascination, and he
+ knew he would enjoy seeing through this wonderful building, which was
+ almost wholly occupied by the departments of the Enterprise. So he entered
+ the door, and passed from one floor to another, finally arriving at the
+ highest floor of all, where were located the editorial rooms of the
+ Evening Enterprise. All at once a new plan entered Archie&rsquo;s fertile brain.
+ Why shouldn&rsquo;t he be able to get something to do on a newspaper? It had
+ always been his greatest ambition to become a reporter, and here, although
+ he didn&rsquo;t think the editor would take him in that capacity, he thought he
+ might get some sort of work in which he could work himself up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There upon the door were the magic words: &ldquo;Editor of the Evening
+ enterprise. No Admittance.&rdquo; Archie opened the door and entered. He knew it
+ would be useless to send in his name. It was best to see the editor at
+ once, and without ceremony. He was seated before a large desk, which was
+ littered with papers of every description, and he was a very pleasant
+ person in appearance. Archie stood hesitating near the door, and remained
+ there a minute or two before the editor looked up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, my boy, what is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie took courage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&mdash;I want to be a reporter, sir, and I thought it would do no harm
+ to ask you for such a position, anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The distinguished journalist wheeled about in his chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;you want to be a reporter. Why, my dear boy, how
+ old are you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be eighteen my next birthday,&rdquo; said Archie, &ldquo;and, sir, I&rsquo;ve had some
+ experiences in the last two weeks, which make me feel as if I were about
+ five years older than I really am. I&rsquo;ve been through some very trying
+ experiences, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor was interested at once. &ldquo;Tell me what your experiences have
+ been,&rdquo; he said, and Archie began, and told him his whole story; how he had
+ left home to win fame and fortune, and how he had worked on the farm for a
+ week with Farmer Tinch; how he had been robbed the night he stayed with
+ the tramps in the ancient ruins, and how he had finally reached the city.
+ Then he told him of the night in the lodging-house, of his dish-washing
+ experience in the restaurant, and how he had been taken from the street by
+ a policeman the night before, and allowed to sleep in the station-house.
+ When he had finished the editor had a broad grin upon his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Jove!&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;this is certainly rich stuff. There&rsquo;s a good
+ story in it, I&rsquo;ll be bound.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, speaking to Archie, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just wait here a minute, my boy, and I&rsquo;ll see if we can&rsquo;t put some money
+ in your way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He pressed a button at the side of his desk, and when a boy appeared, he
+ told him to bring &ldquo;Mr. Jones, please, or one of the other reporters. And
+ tell Jones to bring an artist with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reporter and the artist soon stood before the editor, who told them,
+ with great glee, that he had a leading feature for the next evening
+ edition of the Enterprise. &ldquo;Just talk to this boy, Jones, and see if you
+ can&rsquo;t make two good columns on the front page and two for the inside from
+ his story. I think it&rsquo;s great, myself. And you Cash,&rdquo; he said, turning to
+ the artist, &ldquo;you make a good sketch of the boy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie could hardly believe his eyes and ears. Just to think that he was
+ being interviewed, and that his picture was to be in the paper. It seemed
+ almost too good to be true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the reporter had finished with him, he was taken down-stairs to the
+ cashier&rsquo;s office and given thirty dollars in bills. &ldquo;This will pay you for
+ the interview,&rdquo; said the editor, &ldquo;and give you enough to fix up with. Now,
+ to-morrow, you come in again, and I think I can give you steady
+ employment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, how happy Archie was! He went out into the street, and seemed to
+ fairly walk on air. Then he heard the newsboys crying, &ldquo;Extra paper, read
+ about the Enterprise&rsquo;s Boy Reporter.&rdquo; And when Archie saw the paper, there
+ on the front page was his picture, together with the story of his
+ &ldquo;startling adventures.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ LIVING IN COMFORT AGAIN&mdash;FEATURED AS &ldquo;THE BOY REPORTER.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ ARCHIE often speaks of the day when he visited the newspaper office for
+ the first time as the happiest day in all his life. The change from
+ despair and homesickness to the joy of being appreciated by some one was
+ so rapid that it made his head fairly swim with the exhilaration of
+ success. With thirty dollars in his pocket, and the knowledge that he
+ would have steady employment of the kind he desired on the morrow, he
+ walked up the Bowery feeling like a prince. He entered the lodging-house
+ where he had left his bundle of clothing, and so surprised the clerk by
+ his new appearance that he was invited to remain there for another night.
+ The shrewd man guessed that some good fortune must have befallen Archie,
+ or he wouldn&rsquo;t be so happy. But the one night of misery which he had spent
+ in the squalid hotel was enough for Archie, and he walked hastily up-town
+ with his bundle, keeping a sharp lookout for a pleasant place where he
+ might get a room. In his previous wanderings he had seen several nice
+ houses with rooms to rent, but now that he wanted a room he found it
+ difficult to find any of these neighbourhoods. He was anxious to get
+ settled as quickly as possible, for he wanted to get everything done
+ to-day, so that to-morrow he could have time to do anything required of
+ him by the editor of the Enterprise. He must get a new suit of clothes, he
+ must get his hair cut, and last, but not least, he must write home to
+ mother and tell her of his great good fortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, in his wanderings, Archie came to a beautiful square which was
+ surrounded on every side by business houses and tenements. But the square
+ itself and the houses on it were very quaint and very handsome, so that it
+ seemed to be a very oasis in the desert. The green trees, just a little
+ tinged with the brown and gold of autumn, reminded Archie of the front
+ yard at home, and he decided to get a room in one of the houses here if he
+ could possibly do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It so happened that there was a hall bedroom empty in one of the
+ best-looking places, and Archie at once engaged it. The price was more
+ reasonable than he had hoped for, even, and this made him happy, for as
+ yet he had no idea how much his earnings would be, and he was anxious to
+ be able to save something to send home, if he possibly could. The room was
+ nicely furnished, and looked out upon the fountain, with the green trees,
+ so that it was highly satisfactory in every respect. It didn&rsquo;t take Archie
+ long to undo his bundle, and it was a pitiful display that greeted him
+ when it was opened. The little comb and brush, a piece of soap, a
+ Testament given him last Christmas by the teacher at Sunday school, a suit
+ of underwear, and a couple of handkerchiefs. The whole lot of things
+ hardly filled a corner in one of the bureau drawers, and Archie realised
+ that he must buy a great many things within a week or two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But before going out to do any shopping, he sat down and wrote a long
+ letter home, describing his success of the morning, and telling his mother
+ of the editor&rsquo;s promise to give him regular employment. He enclosed a copy
+ of the paper with his picture and the story of his adventures, and it made
+ him very happy to think of his mother&rsquo;s feelings when she read it all.
+ Then, when he had finished, he went out to a post-office, and bought a
+ money-order for ten dollars, which he also enclosed. &ldquo;I know I can spare
+ it,&rdquo; he said to himself, &ldquo;and it will gratify her so much.&rdquo; Then, when the
+ letter with its contents was safely mailed, he bought himself a new suit
+ of clothing, and renovated himself in many ways, so that when he returned
+ to his room in the square it was nearly dark, and he looked a different
+ boy entirely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before going to bed, he determined to see his policeman friend, and tell
+ him of his good fortune. &ldquo;He is probably expecting me to sleep in the
+ station,&rdquo; Archie thought, &ldquo;and it will be a great surprise to him.&rdquo; But
+ when he met the good man, he found that he had already heard of his
+ success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I bought the Enterprise, and could hardly believe my eyes,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;but
+ I always thought you would find some one to appreciate your pluck. I&rsquo;m
+ mighty glad for you, my lad, and you must always let me know how you are
+ getting along.&rdquo; This Archie promised to do, and returned to his lodging to
+ sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning he was on hand at the Enterprise office before the editor
+ himself was down. The place was quite as fascinating as it had been on the
+ preceding day, and he found something new to look at every minute. The
+ reporters at their desks, several of whom introduced themselves and
+ congratulated Archie on his perseverance, were a source of great interest
+ to him, and the copy-boys, running here and there with special copy for
+ the first edition, gave an air of hustling activity to the place that was
+ very attractive to this new reporter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the editor came he had already thought of something for Archie to do.
+ &ldquo;Now you&rsquo;ve been introduced to the public,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and we want to
+ feature you for a few days. Every one will be interested in knowing what
+ you are doing, and what is going to become of you. You must write us an
+ article for the paper to-day, telling about your experiences since
+ yesterday, about getting a new suit, and about hunting for a room. And you
+ can tell about your policeman friend, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was surprising. Archie couldn&rsquo;t imagine why any one should be
+ interested in knowing about his daily life, but he sat down and succeeded
+ in writing a very interesting two columns about it. He was much surprised
+ that he should be able to write so easily and so well. Of course he knew
+ that composition and rhetoric had been his two strongest studies at
+ school, but he had never realised before that he had any great talent for
+ writing. When he had finished this article, the editor looked it over, and
+ said, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s great. You&rsquo;re all right, my boy. We&rsquo;ll make a great
+ journalist of you yet,&rdquo; and of course this made Archie very happy. &ldquo;Wait
+ until this story is set up,&rdquo; said Mr. Jennings, the editor, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll see
+ what you can do in the way of correcting proofs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the proofs came, in a very short time, he hardly knew what to do with
+ them. But in reading them he discovered several mistakes, which he lost no
+ time in correcting, and Mr. Jennings said that he had done very well
+ indeed. &ldquo;Now you can spend the day in doing what you please. I would
+ suggest that you go about New York and have as many strange experiences as
+ possible, so that to-morrow you can write them up for us. And it will pay
+ you, by the way, to go out to Coney Island, which is a different place
+ from any you have seen before. You are sure to see some unusual things,
+ and in the morning you can bring me in two columns about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before leaving, Archie was asked if he needed any money. &ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t
+ hesitate to ask for it, because you can have it as well to-day as on
+ Saturday.&rdquo; But as he had left several dollars of the thirty he had
+ received the day before, Archie didn&rsquo;t draw any more, and he thought it
+ most remarkable that the editor should have so much money to pay out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had no difficulty in getting a trolley-car to Coney Island, and, after
+ an hour&rsquo;s riding through Brooklyn streets, he found himself in the most
+ unique and most delightful place imaginable, It was a queer-looking town,
+ with great wheels in the air, high towers, with elevators and innumerable
+ merry-go-rounds, and other sources of amusement. The noise was something
+ terrific. Hand-organs, street-pianos, and German bands were all playing at
+ the same time, while people hurried about from one place to another,
+ enjoying the hundreds of games and riding the various scenic railways and
+ carrousels. Archie stood mute with delight at it all, but before five
+ minutes had passed he had shot the chutes, and had ridden over a
+ steeplechase which took him through dark caverns, where dragons glared at
+ him and where electrical sparks were constantly flying through the air. It
+ was all so new, so different from anything he had seen before, that he was
+ simply lost in admiration. He was standing near a theatre, when a short,
+ dark man touched him on the arm, and said, &ldquo;Come this way, young man, and
+ I&rsquo;ll teach you the best game of all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A DAY AND A NIGHT IN CONEY ISLAND&mdash;RAIDING A GAMBLING DEN.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ARCHIE was at first too much surprised to answer the man at all, but in a
+ few moments he remembered that he was now a reporter, and that it was his
+ duty to see all that he could, and have all the new experiences possible.
+ So he decided to follow the man, and find out what &ldquo;the best thing of all&rdquo;
+ in Coney Island was like. He was taken through several narrow alleyways,
+ and finally he found himself in front of a tumble-down structure, built
+ out directly over the water. It was very modest in appearance, and
+ everything seemed quiet about the place. The shades were carefully drawn,
+ and the dark man had to knock three times before the door was opened and
+ they were permitted to enter. Inside, Archie found himself in a handsomely
+ furnished apartment which differed greatly in appearance from the exterior
+ of the building. There was a rich velvet carpet, mahogany furniture, and a
+ great many small tables standing about the room. The place was filled with
+ men, mostly well-dressed, who were playing various games. Some were
+ dealing cards, others were twirling wheels with numbers on them, and some
+ were playing games with chips. It didn&rsquo;t take Archie long to realise that
+ he had been steered into a gambling den of the worst kind, and he was
+ immediately on the alert for future developments. He watched every
+ movement of his new friend, and noticed that he found it necessary to
+ speak to several of those present in a low undertone. This didn&rsquo;t worry
+ Archie, because he knew that he was in no danger except of losing money,
+ and he felt that he could afford to lose some money, since he was sure to
+ earn more by writing about the experience for the newspaper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he carefully observed all that was going on, making mental notes of the
+ peculiarities of the place and the people. When at last the dark man came
+ up and inquired if he wouldn&rsquo;t like a chance to earn some money easily, he
+ very readily answered yes, and the man was overjoyed to find so willing a
+ victim. Then, of course, Archie was introduced to the mysteries of the
+ famous roulette wheel, of which he had read so much. Archie was interested
+ in everything, and didn&rsquo;t mind losing four dollars in learning so much
+ that was new. He succeeded in getting away when he had lost this sum,
+ though the man assured him that he couldn&rsquo;t help winning back all he had
+ lost, and much more, too, if he would but remain awhile longer. Archie was
+ firm, however, and passed out into the narrow alleyways again, feeling
+ that he had learned a great deal through a very small expenditure of
+ money. He gradually found his way back into the crowded Surf Avenue, where
+ there were hundreds of things, evidently, which he had not yet seen. The
+ crowds, too, seemed greater even than before, and there seemed to be
+ thousands of people arriving every hour from New York and Brooklyn, over
+ the various street-car and railway lines, and by the excursion boats
+ landing at the great iron pier. The noise was still deafening, and every
+ one seemed to be having a splendid time in every way. &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; said
+ Archie to himself, &ldquo;no one can feel blue or despondent in such a place as
+ this, where every one is full of fun, and apparently determined to have a
+ good time while here.&rdquo; And he felt that he would like to remain longer,
+ but he knew he should go back again to the city, so that he might see the
+ editor, and tell him something about what he had seen and done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So again he rode over the great Brooklyn bridge, and stopped on the other
+ side at the handsome building of the Enterprise. It made Archie very happy
+ to feel that he was now a reporter on such a great paper, and he found it
+ hard to realise that so much good fortune had come to him in such a short
+ time. He met reporters in the various hallways, and all of them spoke to
+ him pleasantly, so that he began to feel that he had never been thrown
+ with such pleasant men before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had no difficulty in seeing the editor this time, and found him a ready
+ listener to the story of his Coney Island experiences. He insisted on
+ Archie&rsquo;s describing all the men he had seen in the gambling den, and then
+ asked him if he could identify them, if necessary, and also if he would be
+ able to find the place again. Archie gave good descriptions of most of the
+ men, and said that he could take any one to the place at any time. The
+ editor lost himself in thought for a few minutes, and at the end of that
+ time he rang for a copy-boy. &ldquo;Ring for a messenger boy,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and
+ when he arrives come for a note which I want him to take to Mr. Pultzer&rsquo;s
+ house.&rdquo; Archie stared with amazement at Mr. Jennings, and waited for
+ further information. He wondered what was going to be done. He knew that
+ Mr. Pultzer owned the newspaper, and he knew that it must be something
+ important that Mr. Jennings wanted to write him about. He wasn&rsquo;t long left
+ in the dark, and he felt very proud that Mr. Jennings should have
+ confidence enough in him to tell him about his plans. &ldquo;I think you have
+ discovered something which will prove very important to the paper and the
+ public,&rdquo; he said to Archie. &ldquo;We have suspected for a long time that
+ gambling dens have been flourishing in Coney Island, but up to now we have
+ not been able to locate any of them. Now that you have found one, we hope
+ to arouse public opinion to the danger there is in such places, and we
+ hope to inspire a reform movement which will be strong enough to wipe them
+ out entirely. I will hear from Mr. Pultzer in a short time, and then I
+ want you to go down to the Island with some plain-clothes detectives and
+ two other reporters. And I don&rsquo;t mind telling you now that there will be a
+ good sum in it for you if you succeed in arresting any of the leaders of
+ this gang. You can be excused for an hour now, if there&rsquo;s anything you
+ want to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Full of enthusiasm over the coming adventure and his part in it, Archie
+ hurried out to a quick-lunch counter and bought himself a light meal, for
+ he feared that he would have to remain at Coney Island through the
+ evening. Then, when he had finished, he returned to the newspaper office,
+ where he spent some time in getting acquainted with some of the reporters
+ who were working on the Morning Enterprise. He found them all very
+ pleasant to meet, and he learned a great many helpful things from their
+ conversation. The older men were able to give him many pointers concerning
+ things that he should, and should not, do. While he was in the office of
+ the Morning Enterprise Mr. Jennings came in, and, taking him along into
+ the private room of the managing editor, introduced him to Mr. Van
+ Bunting, who was the editorial head of the morning edition. Then Mr.
+ Jennings told of the new scheme, and Mr. Van Bunting entered into it so
+ thoroughly that before an hour three detectives, two reporters, and Archie
+ were on their way to the Island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once arrived in the resort, which was as noisy and bright as in the
+ afternoon, they all made a bee-line for the gambling den, headed by
+ Archie, who surprised the others with his certainty and confidence as to
+ which was the right direction. In a very few minutes they all stood in
+ front of the dilapidated structure built out over tide-water, and Archie
+ heard one of the detectives say that the place looked &ldquo;mighty suspicious
+ like.&rdquo; He gave three knocks just as the dark man had done in the
+ afternoon, and in a few minutes the door was cautiously opened and a head
+ made its appearance. The detectives lost no time in pushing their way in,
+ amid great confusion and cries of fear, and it seemed only a few seconds
+ until all the inmates were huddled in a corner, covered with pistols, and
+ wailing in fear, when they weren&rsquo;t cursing through anger. Then they were
+ all arrested and taken to the police station, where they were all refused
+ bail, and placed in cells overnight. Then the reporters returned to the
+ office of the Enterprise, where Archie was told by Mr. Van Bunting to
+ write the story of his experience for the morning paper. This was his
+ first work for the morning edition, and he took great pains to make his
+ descriptions as complete as possible, and the details as accurate as he
+ knew how to make them. And his hard work was rewarded by words of praise
+ from the managing editor when he turned the copy in for editing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tired from his hard day&rsquo;s work, Archie then went up-town to the quiet
+ square in which he had his home, and he was glad to get to bed. He had
+ been nervous and excited all day, and found it difficult to sleep, but
+ finally the tired eyelids lay quietly over the tired eyes, and Archie was
+ dreaming of the cool and pleasant arbour of grapes at home, and of how the
+ Hut Club was holding a special meeting there to devise ways and means of
+ welcoming home their distinguished fellow member, Mr. Archie Dunn, who had
+ achieved such great success in the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding his tired feeling, Archie was up early the next morning,
+ and out at the corner to buy an Enterprise. He hastily turned the pages,
+ trying to find the story of his Coney Island adventures, but he looked in
+ vain. It wasn&rsquo;t visible anywhere. He was about to think that it had not
+ been thought worth while printing when he noticed on the front page, in
+ large letters, &ldquo;The Boy Reporter&rsquo;s Great Discovery,&rdquo; and then followed the
+ complete account, just as he had written it. This was the best thing yet.
+ Just to think that his story had been considered important enough to print
+ upon the front page! He could hardly believe it. Surely he had made great
+ strides, and Archie began to realise that it is not experience that is
+ most needed in journalism, but something to write about. &ldquo;I have simply
+ been fortunate in finding some interesting things,&rdquo; he said, to himself,
+ and then, after a light breakfast in a quaint Italian restaurant around
+ the corner, he hurried down-town to the office of the newspaper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie was beginning to feel, by now, that he had worked for a long time
+ upon the paper, and as he had become acquainted with almost every one
+ connected with it, this wasn&rsquo;t a strange feeling for him to have. And it
+ was evident, too, that the editors intended to keep him busy for some time
+ to come, and Archie realised that he was in newspaper work to stay, for a
+ time, at least. And he was overjoyed at the prospect, for he found the
+ whole business as fascinating and as interesting as he had expected it
+ would be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Jennings, of the evening edition, was at the office when Archie
+ arrived, and sent for him to come in. &ldquo;Here is fifty dollars,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;for your work of yesterday, and you will have more coming to you if these
+ men are convicted. I want to congratulate you on what you have done so
+ far. Come in this afternoon, and I think Mr. Van Bunting will have a new
+ plan for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A SUCCESSFUL REPORTER&mdash;THE EDITOR DECIDES TO SEND HIM AS CORRESPONDENT
+ TO THE PHILIPPINES&mdash;LEAVING NEW YORK&mdash;IN CHICAGO.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ AT three o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon Archie was seated in Mr. Van Bunting&rsquo;s
+ office, together with Mr. Jennings and several of the chief members of the
+ editorial staffs of both editions of the paper. The editors had spread out
+ before them, on the large table, several maps, and most of them were
+ busily engaged in making notes on little paper pads. All the time,
+ however, an excited conversation was being carried on, for some editors
+ wanted Archie to proceed to the Philippines one way, and some thought that
+ the better plan would be for him to go by some other route. But the
+ important fact with Archie was that he was really going to be sent to the
+ Philippines as a war correspondent, and that he was going to start very
+ shortly. He had called on Mr. Van Bunting early in the afternoon, and had
+ then learned for the first time what the new plan was to be. When the
+ managing editor asked him how he would like to go to the Philippines,
+ Archie could scarcely reply, so delighted was he with the brilliant
+ prospect before him. He managed to stammer out a few words, though, in
+ spite of his surprise. &ldquo;I always thought war correspondents were selected
+ from the most experienced men in journalism,&rdquo; he said, but Mr. Van Bunting
+ only laughed. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s what we have already done, my boy,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and so
+ far none of our distinguished correspondents have sent us a thing worth
+ printing that we didn&rsquo;t already know. You see they can&rsquo;t send any more to
+ us in the way of news than we can get from the War Department in
+ Washington, and most of these men are too old fogy to send us anything out
+ of the ordinary line of war correspondence. Now, what we want is for you
+ to go over there and have some adventures, and write us something which
+ will be different from what we have had before from the Philippines. We
+ are sending you, because you have had no experience at such work, and will
+ be sure to send us something unusual, and that is what we want. If you can
+ only do as well in the tropics as you have done here in New York, we shall
+ be more than satisfied with your work. I am sorry that I won&rsquo;t have time
+ to give you very complete instructions, but perhaps it will be as well.
+ And now some of the men are waiting outside to come in and talk this
+ matter over, so we&rsquo;ll have them in now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Archie found himself in the midst of an editorial conference, during
+ which many things were discussed. The meeting lasted more than two hours,
+ and finally it was decided that Archie should travel from New York to San
+ Francisco, and go from there to Manila on the army transport which was to
+ sail on the twenty-fifth of the month. This meant that he would have to
+ leave the city in two days&rsquo; time, and Archie announced himself as quite
+ willing to do this, as he had few preparations to make. The editors gave
+ him many instructions about how he was to address his correspondence, and
+ how he should proceed in the event of finding it necessary to send
+ despatches by cable. And at the end of the conference he felt that he knew
+ all that he would need to know, so that he could start off without fear of
+ not being able to fulfil his mission. As far as Archie could understand
+ it, his chief instructions as to duty were to the effect that he must have
+ as many experiences as possible of as many different kinds, and that he
+ must write about them in a perfectly natural way, just as if he were
+ writing a letter to the folks at home. And he thought, of course, that
+ this would be very easy to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Van Bunting gave him a letter of credit for six hundred dollars, which
+ amount, he said, would probably be sufficient to pay his expenses while he
+ was in the Philippines, and he also gave him a cheque for three hundred
+ dollars, which was intended to pay the expense of getting to Manila. &ldquo;Of
+ course,&rdquo; said Mr. Van Bunting, &ldquo;you can spend as much or as little of this
+ as you please, and if you need more, and we find that the venture is
+ paying us, why, we will send it on demand.&rdquo; Archie was so overcome with
+ the knowledge that he possessed nine hundred dollars, that he could hardly
+ thank the editor enough, and he made up his mind that he would spend as
+ little as possible of the sum, and bring back part of it to Mr. Van
+ Bunting upon his return. He couldn&rsquo;t imagine how it would be possible for
+ him to spend so much money, and he felt that, after some of his
+ experiences since he left home, he ought to be able to economise in many
+ ways where other reporters wouldn&rsquo;t know how to save at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the two days were up Archie had made all his preparation, and was
+ ready to leave New York for Manila. He had sent a long letter home to his
+ mother, telling her of his great good fortune, and enclosing a cheque for
+ a hundred dollars, which she was to spend while he was gone. He told her
+ that he would send her more money from time to time, and felt very proud
+ as he mailed the letter. He told her, too, that if at any time she didn&rsquo;t
+ hear from him on time, she could write to Mr. Van Bunting, and he would
+ let her know of his whereabouts. This was something which Mr. Van Bunting
+ had very thoughtfully advised him to do. &ldquo;Your mother is sure to worry if
+ the mails are overdue,&rdquo; he had said, &ldquo;and if she writes to me, I will
+ always be able to tell her of your whereabouts, for we can hear of you
+ through our other correspondents, if not from your own despatches.&rdquo; So
+ Archie felt that his mother shouldn&rsquo;t worry, since he was such a fortunate
+ boy in so many ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night before leaving he took a long farewell walk up Broadway.
+ Everything was bright with light, and there was, as usual, a great crowd
+ of pleasure-seekers on the sidewalks. It was all as fascinating as ever to
+ Archie, and he felt sorry that he was to leave it so soon. New York had
+ begun to grow on him, as it grows on any one living there for any length
+ of time, who is in a position to appreciate the city&rsquo;s attractions. He
+ felt that he would almost rather be on Broadway than in the Philippines,
+ but of course he forgot this feeling when he remembered the confidence
+ which Mr. Van Bunting had reposed in him by sending him upon such an
+ important mission. So, after he had passed all the bright theatres and
+ restaurants, he turned down a quiet side street and returned to his
+ lodging, so that he might have a good night&rsquo;s rest before starting on his
+ long journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At seven in the morning he was up again, and at nine o&rsquo;clock he was
+ bidding farewell to his many friends in the editorial rooms of the Evening
+ Enterprise. Every one congratulated him upon his great good luck in
+ getting such a chance to distinguish himself, and when they had done
+ telling him that he had a great future before him, Archie felt happier
+ than ever before in all his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The train left the Grand Central Station at one o&rsquo;clock, and Mr. Jennings
+ went with him to the station to see him well started upon the journey.
+ &ldquo;You may be sure we are all much interested in you, Archie,&rdquo; he said, as
+ the train was leaving, &ldquo;and we shall look forward anxiously to your safe
+ return.&rdquo; These words made Archie very glad, for it cheered him to know
+ that at least one of the editors liked him for himself as well as for what
+ he could do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Southwestern Limited seemed to fairly fly along the banks of the
+ beautiful Hudson, and everything was so delightful that Archie could
+ scarcely believe that only a week or two before he had been walking along
+ country roads, anxious to reach New York, that he might become an office
+ boy. Every thing in this train was as perfect as modern ingenuity could
+ make it, and there was no lack of interesting things to be examined, when
+ Archie tired of the landscape. Then, when the train had been two hours out
+ of New York, he discovered that the famous president of this great railway
+ system was aboard, and, mustering up his courage, he determined to
+ introduce himself. He had long been anxious to see this famous
+ after-dinner orator and statesman, and here was a chance which might not
+ come soon again. So he went back to the drawing-room, and found the great
+ man to be quite as pleasant as he was interesting, and Archie was asked to
+ seat himself and tell something about his experiences since leaving home.
+ Everything he said was listened to with great interest, and this
+ distinguished wit seemed to find many of the adventures very funny indeed.
+ &ldquo;You have certainly had some wonderful experiences,&rdquo; he said, when Archie
+ had finished, &ldquo;and I can appreciate your anxiety to leave school. I had
+ that desire myself when I was a boy of about fifteen, but my father
+ succeeded in making me change my opinion on the subject, and without much
+ argument, unless you can call an ox-team and a stony pasture an argument.
+ I had been asking to stay at home from school for a long time. I said that
+ I was too old to be sitting there with a lot of girls and some younger
+ boys, and that I wanted to work. Finally, my father said that I could stay
+ at home if I cared to, and that he would let me work on the farm for a
+ time. I was overjoyed, of course, at the prospect of staying out of
+ school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The next morning I was awakened at four o&rsquo;clock, and had to swallow my
+ breakfast in a hurry, because I was late, my father said. Then he took me
+ out to the barn and ordered me to hitch up the ox-team, and when this was
+ done he took me out to a pasture lot and told me to pick up all the
+ boulders there. Well, I picked up boulders all day long, and by evening my
+ back and arms were so sore I could hardly move them. I was too tired to
+ eat supper, and was soon asleep in bed. When my father awoke me at four
+ the next morning, I told him to let me alone and that I was going back to
+ school. After that I was content to stay in school, and said nothing more
+ about leaving until I had finished the course and was ready to go to
+ college.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Archie thought it very queer that such a famous man should have had
+ such experiences when a boy. He remained in the drawing-room for more than
+ an hour, and when he left he felt perfectly sure that he had been talking
+ with the most charming man in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The train sped on and on, and when daylight came the next morning they
+ were passing through Northern Ohio. Early in the afternoon they reached a
+ great smoky metropolis, spread out for miles over the plains. Archie knew
+ that this must be Chicago, and he decided, as this was Saturday, and the
+ steamer wouldn&rsquo;t leave San Francisco until the next Friday, that he would
+ have time to remain here over Sunday. So he left the train at the station
+ in Pacific Avenue, and, Finding a hotel near the station, he started out
+ to see something of the city famous for its dirt and for the World&rsquo;s Fair,
+ two widely different things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ SAN FRANCISCO&mdash;THE TRANSPORT GONE&mdash;WORKING HIS WAY TO HONOLULU BY
+ PEELING VEGETABLES ON A PACIFIC LINER&mdash;THE CAPITAL OF HAWAII.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ARCHIE found Chicago to be so widely different from New York that
+ everything he saw was new and interesting to him. In the afternoon he
+ managed to see something of the congested business section of the city,
+ the tall office buildings, the great stores, and the famous Board of
+ Trade. It was all very fine, he thought, but still it wasn&rsquo;t nearly so
+ fascinating to him as New York had been on the first day he visited it.
+ &ldquo;Chicago seems so very much like some great town,&rdquo; he explained to the
+ hotel clerk in the evening. &ldquo;I feel as if I were not in a great city at
+ all, because there are not the evidences of a large and wealthy population
+ that we have everywhere in New York.&rdquo; Archie spoke of New York as if he
+ had lived there always, and found much to criticise in Chicago. But toward
+ evening he went up to Lincoln Park and the beautiful North Shore, and he
+ felt that there was nothing more beautiful in New York than this
+ magnificent park, and this handsome Lake Shore Drive, with its great
+ houses whose lawns reached down almost to the lake itself. On the South
+ Side of the city, too, he found some handsome streets and residences, but
+ there was always that feeling of being in some rapidly growing town. It
+ wasn&rsquo;t hard for Archie to realise that there were older houses in his
+ native town than could be found anywhere in the great city of Chicago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The greatest difference between Chicago and New York was to be noticed in
+ the evening. Instead of the brilliantly lighted thoroughfares of upper
+ Broadway and Twenty-third and Thirty-fourth Streets, he found but one
+ street in Chicago which was at all illuminated, and the illuminations
+ there were chiefly signs in front of dime museums. The streets, too, were
+ not so crowded, and Archie almost longed that he could be back on
+ Broadway, if only for a little while.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Sunday he found Chicago to be a more noisy city than he had ever been
+ in before on that day, and he found that the people made good use of their
+ one weekly holiday. All places of amusement were open, and everything was
+ running in &ldquo;full blast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parks seemed to be very popular, indeed, and there were numerous water
+ excursions upon Lake Michigan, to Milwaukee, St. Joe, and various other
+ neighbouring cities. The street-cars were crowded all day long, many of
+ them taking people to a Sunday game of baseball at the Athletic Park. All
+ of this was very interesting and very new to Archie, but it didn&rsquo;t make
+ him anxious to remain in Chicago any longer than Monday morning, so on
+ that day he took the limited train for the Pacific Coast, for he had
+ determined not to stop off again until he reached Denver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Days of weary travel over a level, uninteresting stretch of ground
+ followed the departure of the train from Chicago, and had not Archie found
+ some interesting persons to talk with he would have been very weary long
+ before reaching Denver. As it was, he managed to pass the time very
+ pleasantly until the train entered Colorado, and after that he found much
+ that was new to look at until he reached Denver. Here he remained for half
+ a day, just long enough to see something of the city and a little of the
+ neighbouring country. Then, taking a train for San Francisco, he reached
+ that city on Thursday afternoon, and immediately began to make
+ arrangements for sailing. He found, to his great disappointment, that the
+ army transport had sailed the previous day, contrary to the expectations
+ of the editors, and of the War Department itself, until the arrival of
+ important despatches from Manila, which made it necessary to start the
+ transport at once with supplies of ammunition. Archie hardly knew what to
+ do. He had not anticipated anything like this, and could scarcely think of
+ any plan for a time, but, finally, he proved himself equal to the
+ emergency. He went to the naval agent and asked him when the transport
+ would be due at Honolulu, and then he ascertained that a passenger steamer
+ sailing for that port on Saturday would reach the destination three days
+ sooner than the transport, so that by taking the liner he would have three
+ extra days in Honolulu, and would be able to reach Manila on schedule
+ time, after all. He at once decided that this was the thing for him to do,
+ and as soon as he thought of taking the steamer it occurred to him that he
+ might possibly be able to work his way to Honolulu, instead of paying the
+ regular passenger fare, which he knew was high. So he went down to the
+ great docks, and, after interviewing the second steward, he approached the
+ chief steward himself, and asked if there wasn&rsquo;t something that he could
+ do aboard the ship to earn his passage. The chief steward was thoughtful
+ for a time, and finally said, &ldquo;Well, yes, I believe there is. We haven&rsquo;t
+ any one to peel vegetables yet, and if you think you care to do that work
+ I guess we can fix you up all right.&rdquo; Archie didn&rsquo;t wait to consider
+ whether peeling vegetables was hard work or not. He was too glad to have a
+ position of any kind aboard ship to be particular about what his work was
+ like, so he told the steward that he was willing to take the place. &ldquo;Well,
+ be on hand at about eight in the morning, and we&rsquo;ll see that you get to
+ Honolulu.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie was overjoyed at his good management. &ldquo;I am going to save about a
+ hundred dollars,&rdquo; he said to himself, &ldquo;and I will have this money to send
+ home to mother.&rdquo; The rest of the afternoon and the evening he spent in
+ going about San Francisco, and he found it to be more like New York than
+ any city he had yet seen. There was the same cosmopolitan crowd on the
+ main thoroughfares, and the same foreign districts here and there
+ throughout the city. He found a great deal to interest him, especially at
+ the Presidio, where everything connected with the army monopolised his
+ attention. He made friends with many of the soldiers who were waiting to
+ be sent to the Philippines, and hoped, on leaving, that he would meet some
+ of them there, but he hardly expected that he would meet some of them in
+ such a strange manner as it was his fate to do in Luzon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a good night&rsquo;s rest he was on hand early at the great steamer, where
+ there was such a scene of bustle and confusion as he had never seen
+ before, not even in New York. There was a throng of men with trucks who
+ were loading the late freight, and there was a constant din of noisy
+ voices, which, combined with the shrieks of escaping steam, made it
+ impossible to carry on a conversation. Archie hurried aboard to find the
+ steward, who immediately took him into the galley and introduced him to
+ the cook, a large, fat Frenchman, with small, blue eyes set far back in
+ his head. He seemed to be a pleasant man, and Archie thought that he would
+ like him very much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, does ze youngster vant to vork, eh! Eef he do, I say you pare zis
+ potate for dinee as quick you can.&rdquo; And the fellow pointed to a great bag
+ of potatoes and a paring-knife. &ldquo;Now you sit zere in da corner,&rdquo; continued
+ the cook, &ldquo;and keep out uf my vay.&rdquo; Archie found a stool and sat down,
+ and, having brought an apron with him, he put it on and began work. The
+ cook watched him closely, so that Archie soon learned to pare the potatoes
+ very nicely, and of course he was able to get along faster and faster as
+ he became more and more experienced. He managed, through great effort, to
+ get the bag finished in time for dinner, or luncheon, as it was called on
+ the bill of fare, and then he soon had to begin on other vegetables, which
+ were to be served at the more complete evening meal. There were more
+ potatoes, and some turnips and apples as well, to be prepared, and it kept
+ the boy busy all the afternoon, cleaning as hard as he could, and never
+ seeming to get done. The cook urged him always to hurry, and seemed
+ determined to have everything ready on time. And Archie began to realise
+ that he was working under a rather severe master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was again successful in getting the vegetables finished in time for the
+ evening meal, and then he had an idea that he might be allowed to rest for
+ awhile, but he soon realised his mistake. He was advised to begin work on
+ the potatoes for breakfast if he didn&rsquo;t want to get up at two o&rsquo;clock in
+ the morning and pare them, so once more he took up the knife and began to
+ clean and scrape. It was ten o&rsquo;clock before he had finished, and he found
+ himself too tired to spend any time on the after-deck with the crew, but
+ went at once down into the small, stuffy room where he was to sleep with
+ some of the stewards. His back ached from bending over, and his hands were
+ all sore from being scraped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Things were not very pleasant in this bedroom, but poor Archie was glad
+ enough to be able to lie down on the hard straw tick and go to sleep. He
+ slept soundly until he was awakened at four o&rsquo;clock in the morning by the
+ second cook, who ordered him up-stairs to work. There was no time to wash,
+ and no place where he could wash, so the boy was obliged to go up just as
+ he was, much as he disliked doing so. And once up-stairs there were
+ various chores which were waiting for him in the galley, so that he was
+ kept running until breakfast was served. And then it was time to begin
+ paring vegetables again. This turned out to be the invariable daily
+ programme, and Archie became rather discouraged. Had it not been for the
+ thought that by doing this he was saving money to send home, he would have
+ been miserable indeed, but this idea kept him hopeful. He was seasick,
+ too, for a time, and was obliged to keep cleaning vegetables in the galley
+ during the whole period of his suffering. The days when he was ill in this
+ way were the most disagreeable ones of the voyage, and Archie often
+ described afterward his feelings as he sat peeling potatoes with a bucket
+ standing beside him. Each night he slept like a log, and each morning he
+ was obliged to get up at four o&rsquo;clock and start work again. It was the
+ same thing day after day, tiresome and monotonous, so that Archie wasn&rsquo;t
+ sorry when the beautiful island hove in sight, and they anchored in the
+ picturesque bay of Honolulu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once at Honolulu, Archie&rsquo;s term of service on board the liner was over,
+ and he was glad, indeed, to get ashore, where he learned that the
+ transport had not yet arrived, but was expected in two or three days&rsquo;
+ time. These two or three days Archie determined to spend in sightseeing,
+ and he spent his time to excellent advantage in visiting every quarter of
+ Honolulu and seeing every side of life in the Hawaiian capital. He found
+ it a delightful place. There was much that was interesting to see, the
+ people were pleasant to meet, and the climate was perfect. He was almost
+ sorry when he learned that the transport had anchored in the bay!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE VOYAGE ON THE TRANSPORT&mdash;A STORM AT SEA&mdash;ARRIVAL IN MANILA.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ THE transport did not remain long at Honolulu, and before leaving Archie
+ had several things which he wanted to do. In the first place, he felt that
+ he ought to write the story of his experiences so far, and send it to Mr.
+ Van Bunting; so he did sit down and describe in detail his experiences at
+ cleaning vegetables on board the Pacific liner. He wasn&rsquo;t sure whether
+ this was anything that Mr. Van Bunting would care to print, but he decided
+ to send it on, anyhow. He would have been surprised had he observed the
+ enthusiasm with which this letter was read in the Enterprise office a
+ month later. He would have been no longer in any doubt as to whether it
+ was anything worth printing had he read the Enterprise of the following
+ day, when the letter appeared on the second page as one of the chief
+ features of the paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before leaving, too, Archie sent a long, cheerful letter home, saying
+ nothing of his being seasick on board the liner, or of his having had to
+ work so hard. He devoted his letter to telling of the many interesting
+ things he had seen, and of his bright prospects for becoming a successful
+ newspaper man. He wrote a shorter letter to Jack Sullivan, which was
+ intended to be read to all the members of the Hut Club, for Archie felt
+ that it was no more than right that they should know something of his
+ success. He found it very hard to realise, away off here in Honolulu, that
+ he had ever been a member of the club, and that he had ever lived in tents
+ behind the barn. He felt very manly now, and his boyhood seemed far away
+ behind him, so far away that he now felt like a man of twenty-five rather
+ than like a boy of eighteen. He was beginning to realise that age is not
+ always governed by years alone, but that experience does much to make one
+ old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the transport had anchored in the bay, Archie went aboard to
+ present his credentials to the commanding officer. He found the general
+ very pleasant to meet, and a very appreciative listener as he told of his
+ scheme for overtaking the transport. The officer was surprised, of course,
+ that such a young fellow should be going to the islands as correspondent,
+ but the things he said were very encouraging to Archie, &ldquo;I tell you what,&rdquo;
+ the general remarked, at one time during the conversation, &ldquo;I believe that
+ a young fellow like Dunn, here, can find out a great many more interesting
+ things than an older man could ever discover. You see the youngster has
+ ambition and energy on his side, and ambition and energy are two mighty
+ powerful things when they&rsquo;re combined. I&rsquo;d hate to buck up against &lsquo;em
+ myself.&rdquo; The other officers agreed with the general in this remark, and
+ Archie began to feel that, after all, he might not have such a hard time
+ finding interesting things to write about as he had expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The transport remained in port but one day, and in thirty hours after her
+ arrival Archie found himself sailing again over the blue Pacific. The
+ weather, for a few days, was almost perfect. A cloudless sky overhead, a
+ warm breeze from the west, and a smooth sea made things very pleasant
+ aboard ship, and Archie began to realise that there are times when it is
+ delightful to be at sea. The vessel was very much overcrowded with troops,
+ and the sleeping quarters were but little more pleasant than aboard the
+ liner. Archie shared a stateroom with three sergeants, and they managed to
+ have a lively time during the voyage. They played games, told stories, and
+ slept in the afternoons, but all this, of course, grew rather tiresome
+ after a time, and the voyage was becoming monotonous, when there came a
+ severe storm which kept things moving for three days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ None of the navigating officers had expected a gale, so that when it came
+ every one was taken wholly by surprise, and it came so suddenly that there
+ was no time at all for preparation. The sky became quickly dark one
+ afternoon about three o&rsquo;clock, and soon the whole horizon was a mass of
+ great black clouds, which every moment seemed to come lower and lower
+ until they directly overhung the ship. There was great excitement aboard
+ the ship. Officers hurried here and there shouting orders to their men,
+ and the cavalrymen rushed about in a frenzy of haste, trying to devise
+ means to save their horses, most of which were stabled upon the deck.
+ Archie looked on in breathless interest, and was surprised to find that he
+ wasn&rsquo;t at all frightened. He even found himself making mental notes of the
+ scene, so that he could send the story of it all to Mr. Van Bunting when
+ he reached Manila.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was but little time for rushing about, and it was soon evident that
+ the horses would many of them be lost, because there seemed to be
+ absolutely no way of saving them if the waves were high enough to break
+ over the bulwarks. The storm soon broke in great fury, beginning with a
+ fierce wind which swept the waves before it. There was but little rain,
+ and the waves rose higher and higher with every minute, until the heavy
+ ship began to roll and pitch in a frightful way, so that the soldiers
+ began to think, some of them, that she would certainly sink. Finally the
+ waves were so high they dashed themselves over the decks, and no one was
+ allowed above the gangways. The cries of the poor horses, as they felt
+ themselves being washed overboard, were frightful to hear, and many a
+ trooper cried himself as he thought of his horse foundering in the raging
+ sea without. Before many minutes all was as dark as night, though the
+ watch pointed to but four o&rsquo;clock, and all lights were burning below deck.
+ It was impossible to keep a light above, for no lantern could burn in such
+ a storm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The waves began gradually to subside at ten o&rsquo;clock at night, and a slow
+ steady rain came, which soon calmed the sea to a great extent. As soon as
+ it was safe to go above deck, it was found that more than a hundred horses
+ had been lost overboard, and that one mast had been carried away. Down
+ below nearly every man was in his bunk, for there was scarcely a person
+ who was not seasick, and most of them wouldn&rsquo;t have cared if the ship had
+ gone down with all aboard, such was their feeling of despondency. Archie
+ was as sick as any of the others, but was able to make notes of
+ occurrences just the same. And when he grew better the next day, he wrote
+ an excellent account of the storm to send to the Enterprise on his arrival
+ in Manila.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this rough weather experience, every man aboard was anxious to reach
+ port, and when, after many more days, the Bay of Cavité was reached, a
+ great cheer went up from a thousand throats, for everyone was overjoyed at
+ the sight of land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The transport came to anchor off the forts which had once been Spain&rsquo;s,
+ and it was announced that no one would be allowed to land for two days,
+ until advices could be had from Manila and the interior of the island.
+ This was very trying for Archie, being obliged to sit on deck for two
+ whole days, looking at a shore which seemed very inviting, in spite of the
+ general dilapidated appearance of the various buildings and docks.
+ Everything looked different from anything he had seen before, and the boy
+ felt that he could hardly wait to be allowed to explore some of those
+ streets which were so narrow, and those houses which were built in such a
+ peculiar fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, the permission came for the troops to land, and Archie received
+ the permission of the general to remain with them as long as he wanted to
+ do so. And as he had no other plans, the young correspondent decided that
+ it would be a good plan for him to stay right with one of these regiments,
+ for the time being at any rate. He knew that they would be likely to be
+ sent to the front immediately, and the front seemed the place for him to
+ be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then he was already acquainted with many of the men, and with the
+ colonel, and he realised that this would be an advantage to him in his
+ work. So he made his plans to keep with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First they went to Manila, where they remained for a week. The quaint old
+ city was a veritable fairy-land of wonders to Archie, who had never before
+ been in a city so ancient, and here there were so many unusual things to
+ be seen. There seemed to be absolutely no end to the winding streets,
+ delightful old houses, and interesting churches, and the boy spent many
+ days in exploring every corner of the island capital. The colonel warned
+ him several times that he must look out for robbers and other suspicious
+ characters, but Archie laughed at his fears. But the colonel was right, as
+ he found later on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ARCHIE STARTS OUT ON AN EXPLORING TOUR AND HAS SOME STRANGE ADVENTURES
+ AMONG THE NATIVES&mdash;SEIZED BY THE REBELS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ THE days passed very quickly in Manila, the regiment was quartered in an
+ old palace which had once been used as a residence by the Spanish
+ governors of the islands, and Archie remained in the palace with them.
+ There was very little to do while they were there. Each morning there were
+ anxious inquiries for news from the front, but there was always the same
+ discouraging reply that no trace had yet been found of the fleeing
+ Aguinaldo. The men were gradually becoming disheartened at the long wait,
+ and there were frequent statements by the officers that Aguinaldo would
+ soon be caught if they were sent out after him. The dissatisfaction with
+ the general in command grew stronger every day, and at last things reached
+ a point where there was very little loyalty and patriotism displayed among
+ the troops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The drilling was continued, however, by order of the colonel, and every
+ morning the troops marched out to a public square near the palace, and
+ went through the same old manoeuvres which they had practised for months
+ past. And it was harder for them to drill each week. At first they were
+ willing enough to work, for there was then some prospect of their being
+ able to use their knowledge in a fight, but now it was beginning to seem
+ that they would simply remain in this old palace for a few months longer,
+ and then go back again to San Francisco. With this opinion in their
+ hearts, it is not to be wondered at that most of the men became slouchy
+ and careless in their manners and dress, or that even the officers
+ themselves became disgusted at the long wait for marching orders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Things had been going on in this way for a long time, when Archie made up
+ his mind that it was time he was hustling about and finding something to
+ write about which would be interesting to readers of the Enterprise. He
+ had sent two articles describing his life with the soldiers in the old
+ palace, but he knew that he ought to find something more exciting, and
+ more like his first articles. So, after much thought, he decided that a
+ good plan would be for him to take a little trip into the interior of the
+ island, to see whether he could find any traces of the insurgents. The
+ colonel had held all along for a month, now, that the Filipinos were
+ probably all about Manila, and still he couldn&rsquo;t get the permission of the
+ general in command to go out and investigate the matter. The colonel
+ figured that it would be an easy thing for the insurgents to come as near
+ to the city as they cared to now, for Lawton and Wheeler were far away in
+ the interior after Aguinaldo, and the troops in Manila were quietly
+ drilling, and eating, and sleeping, with no thought of doing anything
+ else. This line of argument seemed very reasonable to Archie, and he
+ volunteered to go out and see if he could make any discoveries. The
+ colonel assured him that he would be in no danger, even if he were caught
+ by the rebels, for they would never suspect a boy of Archie&rsquo;s age and size
+ of being a spy. So the lad felt no fear at all, and made what few
+ preparations there were to be made before starting. He secured a knapsack
+ from the commissary officer, and in this he placed what few belongings he
+ wanted to take with him, together with his note-books and some provisions
+ for the trip. Then he secured a small pistol, which he carried in his hip
+ pocket, and he was disappointed because the colonel would not allow him to
+ carry a rifle. And when he had everything ready he said good-bye to his
+ friends in the regiment, and departed from the palace amid a multitude of
+ cheers. At the last moment the colonel tried to dissuade him from
+ starting, for fear he might meet with some accident, but Archie was
+ determined to make the attempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was his plan not to go farther than fifty miles in the interior, for he
+ thought that if he found no traces of the rebels in that distance there
+ would be little use in going farther into the forest, for, it would be
+ almost impossible to find them there. So he set out gaily upon his trip of
+ exploration, and Archie couldn&rsquo;t remember when he had been so happy
+ before, save on that day when he first visited the office of the
+ Enterprise. This adventure was exciting enough to please the wildest boy
+ in America, and Archie could imagine how envious the other boys would be
+ if they could but know the trip he was having. It had an official air to
+ it, too, for had not the colonel been most anxious, in the beginning, that
+ he should go, and did he not say that he would reward him handsomely if he
+ were successful in locating any of the insurgents, or in proving that he
+ had been right when he said they were near Manila? It was all as perfect
+ an adventure as Archie could have imagined. He could not have planned a
+ better one if he had been able to select any trip he could think of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He planned that it would take him at least three days to walk fifty miles,
+ and perhaps longer, for the roads were not very good in some places. He
+ knew that he would find many villages and towns along the way, too, for
+ the island was thinly settled in this neighbourhood. So if he were obliged
+ to rest, he would never be at a loss for a place to get a bed. Archie
+ couldn&rsquo;t help thinking, as he walked along the road outside Manila, this
+ first morning, that he might find a body of the insurgents in possession
+ of one of these towns. They were very bold, he had heard, and they
+ probably knew that there were no American troops anywhere in the
+ neighbourhood, outside the city of Manila itself. And, knowing this, he
+ knew they wouldn&rsquo;t hesitate to camp at the very gates of the city, for
+ they were marvellously successful in getting away into the interior
+ whenever an American force made its appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he thought of this possibility, Archie couldn&rsquo;t help being a little
+ fearful of what might happen to him should he fall into the hands of the
+ insurgents, and he began to wonder if he had not been a little foolhardy,
+ after all, in starting off on such a wild-goose chase. &ldquo;But I will have
+ something new to send Mr. Van Bunting about the interior towns,&rdquo; he said
+ to himself, &ldquo;and if I am captured, why, I will have a great deal to write
+ about when I am released.&rdquo; This thought made the lad happy again, and he
+ trudged along the road with as much vim and energy as he had displayed
+ during those weary days when he was walking to New York to make his
+ fortune. And it was a much more interesting country in which to walk than
+ the New York State counties had been. The vegetation was rich and
+ luxuriant everywhere, palm-trees, vines, and flowers growing in profusion
+ all along the road. In every dooryard, in front of every hut, there grew
+ what seemed to Archie a veritable fairy bower of the most richly coloured
+ flowers in existence. And they were growing, apparently, without
+ cultivation. He had seen nothing like them before, even in California, and
+ he longed to pluck some of them to send home, if they had only been wax
+ instead of nature&rsquo;s blossoms. As it was, he kept his arms filled with them
+ for awhile, but after a time he grew tired carrying them, and was obliged
+ to drop them by the roadside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country looked as if it might have been very prosperous at one time.
+ There were plantations laid out in excellent fashion, and the soil seemed
+ rich and fertile. But instead of growing crops, and storehouses filled
+ with spices and coffee, there was desolation everywhere, and it was easy
+ to see that the Spaniards had determined to leave but little behind them
+ for the Yankees. Every other farmhouse and wayside hut was deserted, their
+ occupants having gone, apparently, to join Aguinaldo, and the whole
+ country, outside the towns, seemed to be wholly deserted and left to grow
+ up in weeds and tangled vines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun was warm, the sky was a perfect blue, and it seemed a delightful
+ day in every way. But it made Archie sad to walk through a district which
+ had been made so desolate, and he hadn&rsquo;t walked many hours before he
+ wished that he might soon reach a town, where he could find some life, and
+ where he could remain overnight. For by the middle of the afternoon he was
+ tired walking, and made up his mind that fifteen miles was enough for any
+ one to do in one day. But he was obliged to keep on walking for two hours
+ longer before he reached a village, and the great sun was just sinking
+ behind the blue hills in the distance when he entered the one main village
+ street, which was long and narrow, winding in and out among the cabins and
+ huts, as if it had been laid out after the houses were built, for the
+ convenience of the people. It was a poor excuse for a public thoroughfare.
+ There had probably been a pavement of some sort at one time, but now the
+ street was a mass of rubbish of every sort, straw, dust, old bricks, and
+ bits of stone being thrown together in every rut, so that it was
+ exceedingly difficult to walk along with any comfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no life visible in the settlement. Almost every hut had its
+ shades drawn at the windows, and there was absolutely no one to be seen in
+ the street. As he passed down the road, Archie could catch occasional
+ glimpses of black eyes staring at him through a lattice, or he could hear
+ some muttered word as he walked close to a window. From these signs he
+ knew that he was observed, and he felt very much embarrassed as he
+ continued his walk down this deserted lane, for he felt instinctively now
+ that hundreds of eyes were watching his every movement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, he came to the public square, and he sat down here to look about
+ him. From general appearances, he judged this to be a town of some two
+ thousand inhabitants, for there was a very respectable administration
+ building, and a good-sized church. There were but two streets of any
+ consequence, the one by which he had entered the town, and another running
+ at right angles in the opposite direction. In this latter street, as he
+ stood in the square, he noticed a three-story structure with a sign
+ outside, and he decided to go there and make inquiries as to where he
+ might be able to secure a lodging for the night. It looked as if it might
+ be an inn of some sort, or at least a store, so he walked rapidly up to
+ the entrance and knocked twice upon the door. This place, in spite of its
+ sign, looked more deserted and shut-up than any other building he had yet
+ seen in the town, and he wondered whether he would receive any answer to
+ his knocks. It was indeed a long time before he heard a sound within, but
+ at last there was some muttering inside, the door flew open, and Archie
+ found himself in the arms of three Filipinos, who threw him upon the floor
+ and bound him, hands and feet. It was all so sudden that he had no time to
+ cry out, and before he could say anything at all he was thrown into a dark
+ room, and the door shut behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A PLEASANT CAPTOR&mdash;BRAVE BILL HICKSON ALLOWS ARCHIE TO ESCAPE&mdash;FIRST
+ GLIMPSE OF AGUINALDO.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ FOR a long time Archie lay still upon the floor, being unable to move a
+ muscle from the shock of his encounter with the men, and because he was
+ tightly bound with ropes. And then he at last went off to sleep, feeling
+ frightened because he was in the hands of strange men, and a little
+ satisfied, too, because he was the victim of some adventure which might
+ turn out in a very interesting way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he awoke, it was morning, and the light came into the room through
+ two small square windows, set high up in the wall. Archie looked about the
+ room with great curiosity, but found little there to interest him. There
+ was nothing to be seen but an old bed without spring or mattress, and a
+ rickety chair with but three legs, which stood in one corner. The walls,
+ he was surprised to observe, were handsomely decorated with tapestries,
+ and Archie at once made up his mind that this had at one time been a
+ private dwelling-house, and had probably been owned by some rich Spaniard
+ who kept a store on the ground floor, and lived in these rooms. The
+ insurgents had probably driven the family out of the country and had taken
+ possession of the house, which they had stripped of everything useful,
+ leaving the tapestries and works of art behind them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These suppositions were cut short by the entrance of a man who appeared to
+ be a half-breed, and who immediately began to speak to Archie in broken
+ English. The fellow had a pleasant face, and presented a fairly good
+ appearance, and Archie wondered how he could have come to this place. &ldquo;I
+ suppose you have been wondering,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;why you have been thrown
+ into this room, and it won&rsquo;t take me long to explain things. You see this
+ town belongs to us just now, and we don&rsquo;t propose to have any Yankee spies
+ around here to tell Otis of our whereabouts. There ain&rsquo;t no troops in this
+ town now, but there&rsquo;s likely to be any minute, and we patriots was sent
+ here to take possession of things and arrange quarters for our army. Let
+ me tell you that the Filipino army will be in this town to-day, and if you
+ don&rsquo;t look sharp you&rsquo;ll be the first prisoner to be shot. Aguinaldo isn&rsquo;t
+ a man to deal easily with spies, and if he thought you was out here for
+ that purpose he&rsquo;d have you riddled with bullets in a minute.&rdquo; The man came
+ up to Archie and began to undo the ropes. &ldquo;I reckon I can trust you free
+ for awhile, for there&rsquo;s no use in your trying to get away, with the
+ Filipino army all around the town. Sit down there now, and I&rsquo;ll see that
+ you get some breakfast. You can tell, perhaps, that I ain&rsquo;t no Filipino,
+ nor never was one. I&rsquo;m from Arizona, U. S. A., and I&rsquo;m fightin&rsquo; with these
+ rebels for what there is in it just now. I&rsquo;m mighty curious to find out
+ how you come to be out in these diggin&rsquo;s, youngster.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie was willing enough to tell all about himself. He liked this man, in
+ spite of his being with the rebels, and he felt that he would be able to
+ make friends with him if he were careful to do so. And the best plan
+ seemed to be for him to tell all about himself, how he happened to go to
+ New York, and how he had been sent out here as a boy correspondent for the
+ Enterprise. The man from Arizona listened to the recital with open mouth
+ and eyes, and he frequently laughed outright at some of the experiences
+ Archie described. When the narrative was finished, he seized Archie&rsquo;s
+ hand, and said, &ldquo;My name&rsquo;s Bill Hickson, and you can count on me after
+ this fer a friend, youngster. I&rsquo;ll swan if I ever heard tell of sich nerve
+ in my life. I&rsquo;ll see that you get out of this scrape all right, but you
+ must be careful to keep up appearances of being under guard. I&rsquo;m a big-bug
+ in this Filipino shack, but I wouldn&rsquo;t dare to let you out openly. So you
+ jist kind of lay around and look despondent, and depend on me to make
+ things as easy for you as I can. You kin come down-stairs now, if you
+ like, and I&rsquo;ll present you to my friends. There don&rsquo;t none of &lsquo;em speak no
+ English but me, and all I can do is to interduce you, and tell &lsquo;em that
+ you ain&rsquo;t no spy, and that you are very sorry you ever ran up agin this
+ here town. And I guess I&rsquo;ll be expressin&rsquo; your sentiments exactly, won&rsquo;t
+ I?&rdquo; Archie nodded, but in his heart he felt that he wasn&rsquo;t sorry he had
+ run up against the town. This Bill Hickson, in himself, was a character
+ worth going miles to meet, and if what he said was true, Archie stood a
+ good chance of seeing the notorious Aguinaldo, with his army of Filipinos,
+ before the day was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he reached the lower floor, he found several men lounging about in
+ another poorly furnished room, and they were all similar in appearance to
+ the men he had seen at the door the night before. They looked at him in an
+ indifferent way, and didn&rsquo;t seem surprised that he should be walking about
+ without restraint. Bill Hickson stepped up to some of them, and, after a
+ few words in some language Archie didn&rsquo;t understand, motioned for the boy
+ to step up. He was told to shake hands with &ldquo;all the gents,&rdquo; and after he
+ had done so he was offered a cigar, and Archie began to realise that it
+ was a very good thing that he had a friend at the Filipino court. He
+ thought, too, that if these men were samples, Aguinaldo had a very poor
+ lot of retainers, and later on he perceived the real cause for the failure
+ of the rebels to do anything more than keep up a constant retreat. It was
+ plain to see that the followers of the rebel leader were &ldquo;in it for what
+ it was worth.&rdquo; They had no difficulty, any of them, in getting enough to
+ eat, and often they had opportunities to enjoy themselves in great fashion
+ by taking possession of some Filipino village and ejecting the inmates of
+ some particularly fine house, with a well-stocked wine-cellar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In looking out of the window Archie perceived that the town looked very
+ different this morning than when he saw it the evening before. Instead of
+ drawn blinds and shuttered windows, there was everywhere an evident
+ attempt at decoration in honour of the coming army. The streets were
+ crowded with a throng in holiday garb, and some of the soldiers of the
+ rebel army had already arrived, as they could be easily distinguished by
+ their ragged dress and ridiculous airs, walking up and down the street. It
+ was all such a scene as Archie had never seen before, and would have made
+ a great success as the scenario for a comic opera. But as a welcome to an
+ army, supposedly victorious, it was a dismal failure, and Archie wondered
+ what General Aguinaldo would think when he entered the town and saw such
+ shoddy patriotism everywhere. He hadn&rsquo;t long to wait, however, before
+ seeing the famous rebel and the effect upon him of the celebration in his
+ honour. It was about ten o&rsquo;clock in the morning when he rode into the
+ public square, followed by about two hundred ragged Filipinos, armed with
+ all sorts of guns and pistols. Archie saw the arrival from the roof of the
+ building which was his mock prison, and he could scarcely refrain from
+ laughing outright when he saw the boasted Filipino &ldquo;army.&rdquo; It was the
+ poorest excuse for a body of troops that he could imagine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aguinaldo rode a fine bay horse, as did several of his followers, but by
+ far the majority of the regiment, if such it could be called, was afoot,
+ and most of them were barefooted, too. The rebel leader looked very much
+ like most of his pictures, with the exception that he had an older look,
+ and some gray hairs about the temples. He was attired in a gaudy uniform
+ of some sort, with epaulets and a Spanish general&rsquo;s hat, and he carried
+ himself with great dignity of manner. Dismounting from his horse, he
+ entered the administration building, where he held a conference with the
+ town officials, and probably made them pay over whatever money was in the
+ treasury &ldquo;for the cause.&rdquo; He remained within for two hours or more, and
+ all this time Archie stood upon the roof and watched the remarkable scene
+ in the streets below. The troops had scattered, and were engaged in
+ robbing the housewives of whatever they had in their houses to eat. And
+ the women seemed willing to provide them with whatever they could afford,
+ and there was much enthusiasm evident everywhere. But the celebration was
+ very quiet, in spite of the friendly reception, There were no bands of
+ music, no cheering, and no singing of battle-hymns. The whole affair
+ reminded Archie of some camp of a section of the famous Coxey army, when
+ he had seen it long ago. The soldiers were no better dressed than tramps,
+ and there was but little more discipline among them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the celebration and occupation of the town came to a sudden end. While
+ Archie stood upon the roof at noontime, he saw a runner enter the
+ administration building in great haste, and in a minute Aguinaldo came
+ hurrying down the steps. Then there was a great commotion in the streets,
+ and the two hundred followers of the chief were seen assembled in the
+ square, and before they were all there the general was riding out of the
+ town toward the interior of the island. There was no noise, and the
+ inhabitants stood about apparently speechless, and wondering what had
+ happened. Their reception had come to an untimely end, and their hero had
+ left them unceremoniously. Soon the last of the straggling troops were out
+ of the town, and just as Archie was beginning to think of going down from
+ the roof Bill Hickson stuck his head up and gave him some astonishing
+ news. &ldquo;Stay where you&rsquo;re at, young feller, till these fool Filipinos gits
+ away from here. You saw how they skedaddled, didn&rsquo;t ye? Well, Uncle Sam is
+ comin&rsquo; after &lsquo;em with shot-guns, and old Aggy heard the news just in time.
+ He is bound for the jungle, about forty miles southeast, and he won&rsquo;t
+ reach it until to-morrow night, anyhow, and if the officers are quick they
+ may be able to catch him. Now you stay here, lad, and give &lsquo;em the news
+ when they git here. They&rsquo;ll thank you for it, and you may be the means of
+ gittin&rsquo; this fool of an Aguinaldo captured. If you does, why, your
+ future&rsquo;s all right. And ye can tell the colonel, or whoever&rsquo;s in command,
+ that Bill Hickson is still with &lsquo;em, and that he&rsquo;s doin&rsquo; his best fer
+ Uncle Sam, and tell &lsquo;em that Aggy has got about three thousand troops
+ altogether, but only about a thousand with him. Now, good-bye, lad, and I
+ hope I&rsquo;ll see ye again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Archie saw brave Bill Hickson get down from the roof. He brushed some
+ tears from his eyes as he realised that here was a brave soldier doing
+ good work for his country. A moment later he saw him running across the
+ square with four of the Filipinos, and waving his hat to the &ldquo;youngster&rdquo;
+ as he went. He followed him with his eyes as long as he could, and then he
+ sat down and made a solemn vow that Bill Hickson should be named among the
+ heroes of the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ARRIVAL OF THE AMERICAN TROOPS&mdash;ARCHIE THE HERO OF THE REGIMENT.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ARCHIE descended from the roof, and found everything below in a state of
+ wild disorder. The fleeing rebels had taken with them all they had time to
+ get together, but in their haste they had left behind many of their most
+ useful belongings. In a cupboard of the dining-room Archie found a supply
+ of food and wines sufficient to feed several people for a week, so he
+ supposed that it had been the intention of the occupants of the house to
+ remain for some days. The news that the Americans were coming upset all
+ their plans, however, and now, as often before, they were obliged to flee
+ before them, leaving behind most of their creature comforts in the way of
+ food and furniture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a life they must be leading,&rdquo; thought Archie to himself, &ldquo;going from
+ one place to another, constantly endeavouring to hide from the Americans.
+ Now in some town, now in the wilderness, and again venturing as near as
+ possible to the boundaries of Manila.&rdquo; And he could scarcely help admiring
+ their courage, or recklessness, rather, in camping so near the head of the
+ American government, where they might expect to be caught in a trap at any
+ moment. But Archie realised, too, that such an army can get away in a very
+ short time, and he began to have serious doubts as to whether the
+ Americans would ever be able to capture Aguinaldo and his men. For knowing
+ the islands perfectly, and being able to get from one point to another in
+ the easiest and quickest way, the rebels have a great deal in their
+ favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selecting some canned beef and some native bread and cheese, Archie
+ managed to make a very good meal for himself, though he ate hurriedly for
+ fear some of the rebels might return. As soon as he had finished he
+ returned to his position on the roof, for there he knew that he would be
+ safe in case the building was entered by the townspeople. From his high
+ perch he looked down into the streets, and was surprised to find them as
+ quiet and as much deserted as they had been the night before. The news of
+ the coming of the Americans had been effective in quieting the enthusiasm
+ of the morning, and all the townsfolk had again entered their homes and
+ put the shutters up before their windows. One would have taken the place
+ for a deserted village, judging from appearances. But Archie knew that
+ within the shuttered windows and barred doors there were hundreds of
+ people waiting anxiously for the arrival of the American troops, and
+ making ready to come out, when required to do so, and again declare their
+ allegiance to the stars and stripes. The cowardly wretches were diplomatic
+ enough to be always on the side of the victorious. When the rebels
+ occupied the town they were loyal to them, and when the Americans came, as
+ they often did, they came out into the square and cheered loudly for Uncle
+ Sam. But of course the Americans knew very well that their sympathies were
+ with the rebels, and the rebels knew it, too, or they would never have
+ dared to venture so near Manila.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About five in the afternoon, there was a sound of many men marching along
+ the road, and in a little while Archie was able to see the Americans
+ coming down the street. It was a sight to cheer his heart after all his
+ experiences of the last day and night. The column was marching at
+ double-quick, and the handsome colonel rode a great gray horse at the head
+ of the regiment. Archie saw that they would reach the square in two or
+ three minutes, and, throwing discretion to the winds, he descended from
+ the roof, almost fell down the stairways in his haste, and was soon
+ running toward the administration building. He mounted the great steps
+ leading up to the portico, just as the colonel rode into the square, and
+ the expression of surprise on the faces of all the men was funny to see.
+ In a minute every hat was off, and the regiment was giving &ldquo;three cheers
+ for the boy reporter,&rdquo; while the colonel, rapidly dismounting, hurried up
+ to speak with Archie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, how did you come here?&rdquo; he demanded. &ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t the rebels been here,
+ and how did you escape them? Which way did they go, and was Aguinaldo with
+ them? For pity&rsquo;s sake, say something.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie wasn&rsquo;t long explaining things, and his news was so explicit and so
+ valuable that the colonel grasped his hand and said, almost with tears in
+ his eyes, &ldquo;God bless you, lad. You may have aided us to catch the gang,
+ and anyhow you&rsquo;ve proved your bravery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the regiment was standing at ease, and all the men were
+ watching Archie and the colonel with great interest. Knowing that they
+ were all curious to learn how the lad happened to have escaped the rebels,
+ the good colonel made a short speech in which he explained everything. He
+ dwelt particularly upon the bravery of Bill Hickson, and held him up as a
+ model for all the men to follow. &ldquo;And now three cheers for Bill Hickson
+ and our boy reporter again,&rdquo; he cried, when he had finished, and they were
+ given with a will by all the men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The regimental officers held a short consultation, and it was decided, on
+ the strength of the news brought by Archie, to push on after the rebels as
+ fast as was possible. But it was now sunset, and there was no use trying
+ to go farther to-night, so it was agreed that the best plan would be to
+ give the men a good rest overnight, as they had made the entire march from
+ Manila since five o&rsquo;clock in the morning. &ldquo;They will do all the better
+ to-morrow for the rest,&rdquo; said the colonel. Archie was valuable in being
+ able to guide the officers to the building where he had been confined,
+ assuring them that they would find everything needful there in the way of
+ food, and a place to sleep. Some of the soldiers were quartered in various
+ houses of the town, for the people had soon turned out into the street
+ again, and had expressed their friendship for their &ldquo;masters,&rdquo; as they
+ called them. Archie could hardly refrain from laughing as he saw some of
+ those who in the morning had bowed down to Aguinaldo vowing everlasting
+ allegiance to our flag, and he assured the colonel that he couldn&rsquo;t be too
+ careful while in the town to guard against surprises. &ldquo;No one knows the
+ beasts better than I do,&rdquo; was the answer. &ldquo;I know they can&rsquo;t be trusted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie was invited to remain in the building with the officers, and while
+ they prepared and ate a lunch he busied himself in writing a description
+ of his last two days&rsquo; experiences. He knew that a messenger would soon
+ start for Manila, and that a boat would leave that city on the next day
+ for Hong Kong, so he wanted to get his narrative written in order to send
+ it to Mr. Van Bunting at once. He felt that he had some very interesting
+ things to write about, for it wasn&rsquo;t every correspondent who had seen
+ Aguinaldo, and had been captured by the rebel army. He knew that most of
+ them were content to remain in Manila, and send only what they could get
+ from the general in command, and that this description of the rebels would
+ be something new, at any rate. So he wrote it very carefully, and
+ succeeded in getting it ready in time to send, so that it would be in the
+ office of the Enterprise in less than a month. As he sat at the table
+ writing, Archie thought of the great changes which can take place in one&rsquo;s
+ surroundings in a few weeks. It seemed ages to him since the day when he
+ left home for the first time, and the experiences he had on his way to New
+ York seemed now to belong to the far-away period of his boyhood. He was
+ beginning to feel very old now, because he had been through so much of
+ late, and he could hardly realise that he was still eighteen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wrote a short note to his mother at home, telling her not to worry, and
+ assuring her that he was in good health and in no danger whatever of being
+ captured by the rebels, for Archie felt quite safe after his experience
+ with the insurgent leaders. He knew that no one of their prisoners was
+ ever likely to come to a very bad end. They were far too slipshod in their
+ methods of holding prisoners. He was sorry not to be able to send a longer
+ letter home, but he knew that this note was much better than sending
+ nothing at all, and that it would make his mother very happy to hear from
+ him at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The officers, when Archie returned to the dining-room, if such it could be
+ called, were engaged in making a very good meal from the provisions in the
+ cupboard, and they thanked Archie warmly for leading them to such a good
+ place. &ldquo;By Jove,&rdquo; said one of the captains, &ldquo;we sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t want to return to
+ Manila at all, when we can get such grub as this is outside.&rdquo; But the
+ colonel assured them all that they needn&rsquo;t expect to find such
+ accommodations everywhere in the interior of the country. &ldquo;No doubt we&rsquo;ll
+ all be living on plantains in a day or two, if we don&rsquo;t catch that fox of
+ an Aguinaldo. And I&rsquo;m willin&rsquo; to bet now that we won&rsquo;t find him. That
+ feller&rsquo;s too slick for us. He&rsquo;s proved it many a time before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And to think that he was here only this morning! The nerve of him, to
+ come within twenty-five miles of Manila!&rdquo; said another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be mighty well satisfied if we can catch a few of his ragged men,&rdquo;
+ continued the colonel. &ldquo;That will be something to have accomplished,
+ anyhow, and more than some other regiments have done, when they were sent
+ after him. He&rsquo;s the cutest feller I&rsquo;ve heard of in a long while. If it
+ wasn&rsquo;t for Bill Hickson we&rsquo;d never hear tell of him, even. He could enter
+ Manila, I believe, and go out again without us ever knowin&rsquo; it at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie was now called on to tell something of the rebel leader&rsquo;s
+ appearance, and how he had acted while in the town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t see very much of him,&rdquo; said Archie, &ldquo;because he spent most of
+ the morning with the big-bugs of the town, over in the administration
+ building. But when he rode into town on his horse he looked mighty
+ dignified, though he fell some in my estimation when I saw him standing
+ up. He looked rather dumpy then. He carried himself with a lot of dignity,
+ a little more than was becoming, I thought, and he received the cheers of
+ the people as a matter of course, and hardly took the trouble to
+ acknowledge them, even by a bow. The officers of the town treated him with
+ great deference, and I guess there&rsquo;s no doubt but what the Filipinos look
+ upon him as their leader.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, there&rsquo;s no doubt of that,&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve learned that long
+ ago. They stand up for him whenever he needs them, and they give him all
+ they&rsquo;ve got to help carry on the war.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The meal finished, the officers smoked awhile, and then went to bed, for
+ they were to be up at four in the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE MARCH AFTER THE REBELS&mdash;THE FIRST BATTLE&mdash;ARCHIE WOUNDED.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ARCHIE was awakened at four the next morning by the sound of the bugle,
+ and, hastily dressing, he hurried down-stairs to learn the plans of the
+ officers. He found that they were going to start on the march as soon as
+ the men had drunk their morning coffee, and Archie immediately made
+ preparations to go with them. The colonel looked on in amazement. &ldquo;Why are
+ you packing your knapsack!&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;You surely don&rsquo;t think you&rsquo;re going
+ with us? You never in the world can stand this hard march in the hot sun.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes, I think I can,&rdquo; said Archie. &ldquo;You see I have walked a great deal
+ in these last two months, and I don&rsquo;t think I will have any difficulty in
+ keeping up with the troops. And I do so want to see some fighting, and to
+ learn whether you capture Aguinaldo. You don&rsquo;t object to my going, now, do
+ you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;If you think you can stand the marching, and are
+ so anxious to come, why, I suppose you can do so. But you mustn&rsquo;t blame me
+ if anything should happen to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie was ready enough to promise this, for he had no idea that he would
+ meet with an accident of any kind, and so he continued to pack his things
+ in the knapsack. The rebels had emptied everything in a corner, and had
+ evidently intended taking the knapsack with them when they went; but they
+ left so hurriedly they couldn&rsquo;t possibly think of everything, and so had
+ left it behind, much to Archie&rsquo;s relief, for he would have been unable to
+ secure another one anywhere outside Manila. In a very short time the
+ regiment gathered in the streets immediately about the square, and soon
+ the men were marching out of the town, much to the gratification of the
+ residents, who watched them from their roofs and windows. Archie fell in
+ at the head of the column, and found no difficulty in keeping up with the
+ soldiers near him, though they were marching at a rapid rate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The town limits were soon passed, and they swung into the white country
+ road, which presented the same scene of desolation which had been
+ everywhere visible to Archie on his way from Manila. The farm-houses were
+ nearly all deserted, and there was but little attempt at cultivating the
+ soil, which would have been productive enough had it not been overgrown
+ with tangled vines and weeds. And as they went farther into the country
+ the wilderness increased, until at last the road itself was filled with
+ growing vines, and the men had difficulty in walking. Every little while
+ some trooper would fall headlong, tripped by some vine, and the others
+ would laughingly help him up before passing on. These little incidents did
+ much to enliven the march, which became monotonous after the first six or
+ seven hours, and Archie appreciated the mishaps very much until he took a
+ few tumbles himself. He was usually, much to the amusement of the
+ officers, marching at the very head of the regiment, and &ldquo;setting the
+ pace,&rdquo; he said, so that he was more likely to trip than any of the others.
+ He was always the first to discover a snake in the road, too, and kept a
+ great stick with which to kill them. He seemed to have no fear of them,
+ but walked up to lay them out, and on one occasion the colonel warned him
+ just in time or he would certainly have been bitten by a snake whose bite
+ is certain death. This experience made him more careful, but he still kept
+ his place at the head of the regiment, and came to be called the mascot by
+ the men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At noon the regiment halted at a grassy spot, where there were trees, and
+ made their dinners from their knapsacks. The officers warned them to go
+ carefully, or they would find themselves without provisions before
+ returning to Manila, for they had been so sure of catching the rebels at
+ the town behind that they had neglected to bring along many supplies. Now,
+ of course, they didn&rsquo;t know how long it would take them to find them,&mdash;two
+ days at least, and probably longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie had stocked his knapsack with some food from the old headquarters
+ in the town, so that he felt safe for a few days, at any rate. He ate
+ carefully, however, and was careful not to waste anything, for he realised
+ that he might be called upon to aid some of the soldiers before long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dinner over, the regiment marched on again, for the officers now began to
+ think that they had made a mistake in not pursuing the fleeing rebels the
+ night before. They met several Spaniards, who told them that Aguinaldo had
+ marched all night long without stopping, so that he was now at least
+ thirty-six hours ahead of them, and some of the men began to be
+ discouraged, saying that it was no use following him up with such a small
+ force. &ldquo;Other regiments have tried to find him in this way, and none of
+ them have succeeded,&rdquo; said one of the privates to Archie. &ldquo;They keep us
+ marching for three or four days, and finally they decide to return to
+ Manila, without having found any trace of the rascal beyond hearing that
+ he had passed this way or that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The officers couldn&rsquo;t depend upon what the natives told them of
+ Aguinaldo&rsquo;s movements, for, almost without exception, they were in his
+ favour, and always lied to the Americans to try to throw them off the
+ track. It was due to this that they proceeded very cautiously, and still,
+ notwithstanding their extreme care, they found themselves, when night came
+ on this first day, in a small village where no one had seen anything of
+ the rebel army. There was no denying the fact that they were off the
+ trail, and the colonel stormed about in a terrible way when he learned of
+ their mistake. There was no use going back in the dark to hunt for a trail
+ they had mistaken in the daylight, so the regiment remained in the village
+ overnight. They were a lot of very discouraged men, and the officers were
+ enraged at the mistake, for which there was no one but themselves to
+ blame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the morning they retraced their way, and started off in an
+ opposite direction to the one taken yesterday. It seemed that this must
+ certainly be the path taken by the rebels, but the regiment marched until
+ nearly noon without seeing any signs of them. Then, when they had halted
+ for dinner, the colonel decided to let the men rest while two companies
+ were sent ahead to reconnoitre, and report as to whether there were any
+ signs of men having passed this way. He was beginning to think that the
+ whole affair would be a wild-goose chase, and he decided that, if these
+ companies found nothing, the whole regiment would return to Manila
+ forthwith, probably to be the laughing-stock of the army there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remaining companies had nothing to do now but lay about on the soft
+ grass, and rest. They were encamped in a stretch of grassy loam in the
+ midst of what appeared to be a dense forest, and all about were evidences
+ of the great fertility of the soil. The vegetation was so dense that one
+ could scarcely see through it, and the glade was cool and pleasant, though
+ overhead the sun was shining as warm as ever. It was a lovely oasis in a
+ wilderness of undergrowth, and the men enjoyed it to the utmost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About three in the afternoon the sound of firing was heard in the
+ distance. First there was one shot, then another, and several more at
+ rapid intervals. Archie was one of the first to jump to his feet, but in a
+ second every man was at attention, with his musket in his hands. The
+ colonel listened closely for two minutes, and then the firing began once
+ more, and this time it seemed nearer. He hesitated no longer, but gave the
+ order to march ahead. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ve evidently found the cowards at last,&rdquo; he
+ muttered to Archie. &ldquo;You stay here, where you will be out of danger.&rdquo; But
+ Archie was determined to do nothing of the kind. He felt his pistol safe
+ in his hip pocket, and when the companies swung out of the forest and into
+ the road he was marching in his old place at the head of the column. Again
+ the colonel ordered him to remain behind, but Archie insisted that he
+ would not, &ldquo;Then go to the rear,&rdquo; cried the colonel, angry for the moment.
+ &ldquo;I will not have you shot down by a rebel sharpshooter the very first
+ one.&rdquo; And Archie knew that he would have to obey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The column went ahead at double-quick, and finally broke into a steady
+ run. Every minute the noise of rifle-shots sounded nearer, and it seemed
+ probable that the two companies were retreating before the insurgents. The
+ men were wild to reach the scene of the firing, and the officers had all
+ they could do to keep them in line. All the time they were running hardly
+ a sound was heard save the noise of their boots upon the soft earth, and
+ they all knew that they could probably take the insurgents by surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie&rsquo;s heart was beating very hard as they drew nearer and nearer to the
+ scene. He felt that he was about to see his first fighting, and he
+ determined not to miss any part of it. So he gradually ran ahead until
+ finally he was almost at the head of the column again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The troops made so little noise that the two companies, retreating slowly,
+ were upon them without knowing it. But when they discovered that their
+ comrades had come to their aid they set up such a cheering as Archie had
+ never heard before, and immediately faced about and went ahead again. The
+ rebels were about a quarter of a mile behind, marching rapidly forward,
+ and firing as they came. Some of them were running among the trees at the
+ roadside, firing incessantly, and hitting some poor soldier almost every
+ time they fired. They were the famous sharpshooters, of whom the soldiers
+ in Manila had heard so much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the rebels observed that the Americans had received reinforcements,
+ they halted suddenly, and before they could turn about the Yankees were
+ almost upon them, firing volleys into them as they came. Many of the
+ insurgents fell in the roadway, and the others fled wildly in every
+ direction. Most of them entered the dense forest, where the Americans
+ captured nearly a hundred of them after the others had surrendered, and
+ some were such good runners that they escaped down the roadway. The whole
+ rebel army presented a scene of wild confusion. Some of the men knelt and
+ begged for mercy, and some cried out in a horrible way as they saw the
+ dreaded Yankees advancing. But it was all over very soon. The prisoners
+ were placed in line, and marched back along the road, and the dead, of
+ which there were about fifty, were soon buried. Aguinaldo had escaped in
+ the forest, and no one suggested that he should be followed. All the
+ officers knew that such a course would be useless, and most of them were
+ very well satisfied with what had already been accomplished. The prisoners
+ numbered more than six hundred, and the dead a hundred more, while there
+ were about seventy-five wounded. So if what Bill Hickson said were true,
+ not more than two hundred insurgents could have escaped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the seriously wounded was a man whom Archie recognised immediately
+ as one of his captors of two days previous, and while he was looking over
+ the bodies for the other men, he came suddenly to brave Bill Hickson,
+ lying face downward in the road. He almost screamed with fear that he
+ might be dead, and when one of the men hurried up to him he told him who
+ the man was. The colonel was soon on hand, and it was found that the brave
+ spy was not seriously wounded, and would recover soon under proper
+ treatment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the insurgent wounded were cared for, it was discovered that the two
+ companies sent out to reconnoitre had also suffered losses, and when they
+ marched back along the line of their retreat no less than five dead and
+ about twenty wounded were found. This sad news threw a gloom over the
+ entire regiment, and when they started back to Manila they marched in
+ quiet, and without rejoicing over their victory, which had proved so
+ costly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Archie, when they started to march, found, to his great disgust, that
+ he was so weak he couldn&rsquo;t walk far, and he thought this must be due to
+ the fright he had received. He was very angry with himself, until the
+ surgeon examined him and announced that he had a bullet in his arm. And
+ then Archie confessed that he had felt a stinging sensation at one time
+ during the firing, but had thought nothing of it. Now his disgust was
+ turned to great delight, for the idea of being wounded in battle was
+ glorious to his mind. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet I wounded more than one insurgent,&rdquo; he
+ told the surgeon, &ldquo;for I discharged every barrel of my revolver.&rdquo; The
+ wound was not at all serious, but he was told to be quiet for a few days.
+ He was given one of the rebel horses to ride back to Manila, and he felt
+ like a real hero in many ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ RETURN TO MANILA&mdash;IN THE HOSPITAL&mdash;CONGRATULATED BY ALL&mdash;WRITING TO
+ THE PAPER OF HIS EXPERIENCES.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ IT took the regiment much longer to march back to Manila than it had taken
+ it to follow the rebels, for the wounded of both sides had to be carried,
+ and the arrangements for carrying them were very imperfect. Fortunately,
+ most of them were able to ride horses, and the officers were successful in
+ securing wagons enough to carry most of the others, but there were about a
+ dozen who could neither ride horses or lie in wagons, but had to be
+ carried on stretchers all the time. Of course this was slow work, and the
+ officers were glad enough when they reached the town with the three-story
+ building. Here they found things very much as they had left them, two days
+ before, save that the inhabitants were more abject than ever to them, now
+ that they had captured most of the rebel force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It wasn&rsquo;t an easy matter to find quarters for so many men, and some of the
+ Filipinos were obliged to camp in the public square overnight, while the
+ wounded and ill were given beds in the various houses of the town. The
+ inhabitants were required to furnish food, too, for the Americans were
+ entirely out of almost everything. They still had some hardtack, but of
+ meat and coffee there was none. The people of the town pretended to be
+ very glad to serve their &ldquo;masters,&rdquo; but every one knew that the natives
+ would be only too glad of a chance to cut the throat of every Yankee
+ soldier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The officers again occupied the old building which they had used during
+ their former stay, and Archie was invited to share it with them, for they
+ expected to rest in this town over the next day, before proceeding to
+ Manila. The men&rsquo;s uniforms and equipment generally needed cleaning and
+ repairing, and the colonel was anxious for them all to appear as well as
+ possible when they returned victorious to the island capital. So the next
+ day was spent in cleaning and washing, and by evening most of the soldiers
+ looked as if they had never left Manila. Then came a surprise for every
+ one, for into the town marched a regiment of militia from Manila, sent out
+ to see whether the first regiment needed reinforcements. They set up a
+ great cheer when they learned that most of the rebel force had been
+ captured, and the night was spent in a celebration of the great event. A
+ band was scraped up in the town, the great hall of the administration
+ building was thrown open, and there was dancing and music until an early
+ hour in the morning. All the belles of the town turned out to welcome the
+ soldiers, hypocrites that they were, and they danced with their enemies as
+ readily as they would waltz with their own dear Filipinos. Every one
+ seemed to have a good time, and the soldiers went to bed just in time to
+ get three hours&rsquo; sleep before starting for Manila in the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a great sight to see the two regiments, with the prisoners, march
+ out of the town at five the next morning. They made a fine appearance in
+ their well-brushed uniforms and bright equipment. The townsfolk watched
+ them out of sight, and then most likely cursed them for a lot of
+ vagabonds, but the soldiers didn&rsquo;t mind their curses. They were all very
+ happy at the prospect of getting back to Manila again, and no one was more
+ glad than Archie. He had somewhat recovered from his wound now, and rode
+ in his old place at the head of the column, where he was the centre of
+ interest to every one. The men congratulated him on having proved such an
+ excellent mascot, and he laughed and talked with them until he was tired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outskirts of the city were reached about five in the afternoon, and as
+ they marched through the streets to headquarters a band of music preceded
+ them, playing popular and patriotic airs. The sidewalks were crowded with
+ people, and Archie felt happier than for a long time, because every one
+ was curious to know who that boy could be riding at the head of the
+ troops, alongside the colonel. He was known to most of the other troops in
+ Manila, and received many a cheer from them as they saw his arm in a
+ sling, and when they finally reached the general&rsquo;s headquarters, he was
+ honoured with a handshake and the congratulations of the commander
+ himself. This was the climax to a very happy day, and Archie went to bed
+ in his little old bunk feeling that he was a very lucky boy for having
+ been wounded in battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course the next few days were very busy ones for all the men, and for
+ Archie, too. He was obliged to tell, over and over, the story of his
+ experiences, and how he had managed to escape from the rebels when they
+ had him. This story always made the men roar with laughter, and increased
+ their already strong contempt for the Filipino army. He told, too, about
+ brave Bill Hickson, and that gentleman&rsquo;s cot was always the centre of an
+ admiring throng of visitors, who shook his hand and told him how proud
+ they were of what he had accomplished. And all the poor hero could do was
+ to smile feebly, for he was still too ill to talk much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie felt that he had almost volumes to write about his experiences in
+ battle, and he did send a very long account of this encounter to Mr. Van
+ Bunting. It was written in his boyish way, but one of the officers who
+ read it said that it was the best thing of its kind he had ever read, so
+ he wasn&rsquo;t at all backward about mailing it. All the other newspaper
+ correspondents in Manila were wishing they had gone with the regiment and
+ witnessed the battle, but they had stayed in Manila, thinking that this
+ would be like the other expeditions of the kind, a mere wild-goose chase,
+ which wouldn&rsquo;t amount to anything at all. They were all very anxious to
+ get the details of the affair from Archie, but he was shrewd enough not to
+ tell them anything of value. And the other correspondent of the Enterprise
+ in Manila insisted that Archie should send a cable message describing the
+ affair, as well as a written account, and this he finally consented to do.
+ The correspondent added a long account of Archie&rsquo;s personal bravery, how
+ he had been wounded, and how he had ridden back to Manila at the head of
+ the column. Archie would have been very much embarrassed had he known
+ this, for he was still modest, but the first thing he knew of it was from
+ a letter he received a few weeks later from Mr. Van Bunting,
+ congratulating him on what he had accomplished, and telling him that he
+ had long since more than earned his six hundred dollars. But for weeks he
+ was ignorant that any one in New York knew of his being wounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The days now began to pass as before in the camp at Manila. The wound in
+ Archie&rsquo;s arm was healing slowly, but he was hardly able to use that member
+ for a month or six weeks. Bill Hickson did not fare so well. He lay for
+ weeks on his cot in the hospital building, and was hardly strong enough,
+ for awhile, to talk. He was improving slowly, but the doctors said it
+ might be two months before he was able to walk about and take his former
+ active part in the campaign against the insurgents. This enforced quiet
+ was very trying to the brave man, and Archie spent many hours reading to
+ him, and telling of various things he had learned at school and elsewhere.
+ This constant companionship served to strengthen their already close
+ friendship, and it was soon known among all the troops that Bill Hickson
+ and the boy reporter were inseparable. And every one who knew the story of
+ their experiences looked upon them as the two chief heroes of the war so
+ far, because as yet there had been few feats of bravery in the desultory
+ campaigning against the rebels. General Funston had swum the river, of
+ course, but many held that not even that feat compared with the bravery of
+ Bill Hickson in serving as a spy under Aguinaldo&rsquo;s very nose. The more
+ people heard about his experiences, the more remarkable they thought him
+ to be, until at last he was by far the most popular man in the army at
+ Manila.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie sent many interesting letters to Mr. Van Bunting, telling of the
+ adventures of the brave spy, and one day he received a cablegram telling
+ him to send at least one of these letters by every steamer, for people had
+ become interested in hearing about him. So for some time Archie wrote
+ about Bill Hickson rather than about himself, and was glad of the
+ opportunity to do so. He knew that if a letter were published every week
+ or two in the Enterprise Bill Hickson would soon be famous, and this was
+ something he was very anxious to accomplish. He felt that no fame could be
+ too great for such a man, and no praise too strong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commanding general decided, about this time, to begin a more active
+ campaign against the insurgents. It was now the month of December, and
+ with the beginning of the new year he wanted to inaugurate a series of
+ attacks against them in every part of the islands. He was beginning to
+ feel the criticisms of the papers at home, and of the newspaper men at
+ Manila, and he felt that something must be done immediately to retrieve
+ his lost reputation for active fighting. Every one, as soon as this
+ announcement was made, wondered what plan would be pursued to worry the
+ rebels into submission, for it was now generally agreed that the Americans
+ would hardly be able to capture the whole rebel army. It was too evident
+ that they were familiar with numerous hiding-places in the islands. The
+ only thing to do seemed to be to prevent their getting supplies, and to
+ drive them from one point to another, hoping that they would become
+ discouraged in the end and submit to the inevitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far the campaigning had consisted chiefly of such expeditions as that
+ accompanied by Archie, and most of these had returned to Manila without
+ having even seen a rebel soldier. It was not surprising, then, that the
+ general was becoming discouraged, and that he was anxious to try a new
+ policy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one knew what the new plan would be until one day several cruisers and
+ gunboats made their appearance in the harbour. There had been no war-ships
+ at Manila for several weeks, and every one was surprised that so many
+ should arrive at once. There were rumours of a German onslaught, and also
+ gossip saying that Japan had decided to interfere, but all these were set
+ at naught when the general announced that the war-ships were to be sent
+ around the islands to bombard the rebel villages, and to drive the rebel
+ troops to the interior of the islands, where it would be hard for them to
+ receive supplies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This news made Archie very happy, and a plan at once occurred to him. Why
+ shouldn&rsquo;t he and Bill Hickson be allowed aboard a cruiser? It would be the
+ best thing possible for their health, and he set about getting the
+ necessary permit from the admiral.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bill Hickson was able to be about now, and he was overjoyed when Archie
+ said he thought they could arrange to go. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like nothing better than a
+ voyage in the good salt air. I believe it will do me more good than a
+ month in the hospital,&rdquo; he said. Archie secured a very strong letter from
+ the general, and one day he stepped aboard the flag-ship in the harbour.
+ He had no difficulty in seeing the admiral, and found him to be a very
+ pleasant man to talk with. He read the letter carefully, and then shook
+ Archie cordially by the hand. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard of you, and of
+ your friend, too. Every one in Hong Kong knows how you two together
+ bearded old Aguinaldo in his den, and robbed him of most of his troops. It
+ did me good to read about it in the New York papers, too, and to know that
+ you are both getting your just measure of credit for the achievement.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie blushed, and assured the admiral that he didn&rsquo;t do very much, that
+ it was all owing to Bill Hickson&rsquo;s bravery. &ldquo;Oh, yes, I know,&rdquo; laughed the
+ admiral, &ldquo;you lay it to him, and he will most likely give you the credit.
+ I&rsquo;ve seen your kind before. But I like you all the better for your
+ modesty, lad. Of course you and your friend can have a berth aboard ship,
+ and aboard the flag-ship, too, where I can see you both very often. You
+ can come aboard whenever you wish, and stay as long as you like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie could hardly thank the good officer for his kindness, and hurried
+ back to Manila. He found Bill Hickson waiting for him at the wharf, and
+ they rejoiced together over the good news.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ AROUND THE ISLAND ON A WAR-SHIP&mdash;BOMBARDING A FILIPINO TOWN.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ IT was early one morning that Bill Hickson and Archie went aboard the
+ flag-ship, but all hands were on duty there, and the gallant cruiser was
+ raising anchor preparatory to sailing off on her errand of pacification by
+ means of shell and shot, The two newcomers were assigned a pleasant
+ stateroom where they would not be far from the cabin of the admiral
+ himself, and where they could step out of their door upon the
+ quarter-deck, and get all the fresh air they needed. It was a very
+ comfortable place, with two soft bunks, and every convenience usually
+ found aboard the fastest ocean liner. When the fellows saw it first, they
+ could hardly believe it could all be for them, but the officer assured
+ them that it had been given them by the admiral&rsquo;s own orders. So there was
+ nothing for them to do but accept the kindness, and to settle themselves
+ down to having just as pleasant a time as possible during the coming weeks
+ at sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was generally understood that the cruiser was to make a complete tour
+ around the island of Luzon, investigating every suspicious port, and
+ shelling towns when such action proved necessary to convince the rebels of
+ Uncle Sam&rsquo;s superiority. The voyage was expected to occupy nearly a month,
+ for there was no reason for them to hurry, and the admiral said he would
+ like to take things easy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither Hickson nor Archie had ever before been aboard a war-ship, and
+ they both found much to interest them during the first few days at sea.
+ Every movement of the crew, every action of the ship, was of great moment
+ to them, and they found no lack of entertainment in examining the great
+ guns and the equipment of the vessel in the way of firearms and
+ ammunition. Archie became much interested, too, in the science of
+ navigation, and spent much time with the captain on the bridge, or with
+ the pilot in the lookout, learning as much as possible about how the
+ movement of the vessel is controlled. Before long he had mastered the
+ rudiments of the art, and the captain told him that he might some day make
+ an excellent navigator if he continued to take as much interest in the
+ charts as he did now. And Archie told him that he was determined to master
+ as much as possible of the business during the voyage. Before he returned
+ to Manila he knew more about it all than even the captain would believe he
+ knew, and the knowledge was very valuable to him in days to come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two visitors aboard took their meals at the officers&rsquo; table, and they
+ kept the whole party interested for many days, with their stories of the
+ war in Luzon and of their very unusual adventures both at home and in the
+ Philippines. For it turned out that Bill Hickson had visited almost every
+ part of the United States, and had lived in all sorts of places. He had
+ been a cowboy in Texas, and a miner in the Klondike, and he had also been
+ a policeman in Chicago. He knew more stories to tell than any other man at
+ the table could think of, and he told them in a way that was wholly
+ charming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie found that every one was very much interested in hearing about his
+ leaving home, and how he had happened to become a reporter on the New York
+ Enterprise. No one seemed to tire of listening to his stories of his
+ adventures in the great American city, and many of the officers told him
+ that they would give a good deal to have had his experiences in life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so it wasn&rsquo;t long until the two chums were friendly with all on board,
+ and after awhile things went along as though Archie and Bill had never
+ lived elsewhere than aboard ship. There was nothing exciting for nearly a
+ week. The cruiser steamed slowly along the shore, sometimes stopping
+ entirely, while the officers levelled their glasses upon the beach, to see
+ whether there were any signs of the rebels being there. Sometimes, if
+ things looked suspicious, parties were sent ashore to reconnoitre, but
+ they seldom returned with news that would encourage the admiral to
+ investigate further. The days passed quietly, and the two convalescents
+ enjoyed themselves well enough. They were both much improved already by
+ the trip, and felt almost as well as ever. They each had a steamer chair,
+ and hour after hour they sat upon the deck and watched the ever-changing
+ panorama of the tropical shore. Now the beach would descend slowly to the
+ sea, and there would be numerous palm-trees and luxuriant vegetation
+ growing close within view, but again there would be steep clips, which
+ looked menacing to a ship in the dark. But it was all beautiful, cliffs or
+ sandy beach, and Archie thought he had seldom passed such a wholly
+ delightful week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, of course, it all became monotonous in time, and every one, even the
+ officers, longed for a change. The reconnoitring parties were sent out
+ more frequently now, and every one hoped each time that they would return
+ with news of the rebels, but they were always disappointed. The admiral
+ now determined to steam ahead more rapidly, so that they might get around
+ the western end of the island. It was evident that there were no
+ insurgents along this shore, and as there were no villages of any
+ consequence, either, he was anxious to reach the southern shore, where it
+ was known the rebels had recently been gathering. The towns, too, were
+ very numerous here on account of the excellent fishing, and it was hoped
+ that some good work might be accomplished for Uncle Sam before another
+ week passed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Subsequent events soon proved the wisdom of the admiral&rsquo;s plan. The
+ cruiser, it seemed, had no sooner rounded the western point than signs
+ were visible of rebel activity ashore. It was one Tuesday morning that a
+ village was sighted, built around a narrow inlet of the sea. When the
+ binoculars were levelled upon this harmless-appearing settlement, it was
+ soon perceived by the admiral that there were soldiers in the streets with
+ the rebel uniform, and that the insurgent flag was flying from the
+ administration building in the village square. All this was just what had
+ been expected, and there was great rejoicing aboard the cruiser. Every
+ man, without exception, almost, was anxious to be one of a party to be
+ sent ashore to attack the rebels, but the admiral hesitated before sending
+ any one at all. &ldquo;It is impossible to tell from here,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;how
+ numerous the rebels are, and it is quite possible that they may have a
+ large force of men in the village. If the appearance of the streets is any
+ sign, there must be quite a force of them in the place.&rdquo; But every one
+ laughed at the very idea of there being a rebel company of any consequence
+ in the place, and the admiral was finally prevailed upon to send a boat
+ ashore, armed with thirty men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Remember,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if you come to grief, that I advised against this
+ venture. Don&rsquo;t be too bold, or risk too much, for though I can shell the
+ place, that won&rsquo;t help you any, once you are captives.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But every one was anxious to be one of the party in the boat, and the
+ officers had a hard time making selections. &ldquo;You can go, Archie, because
+ you&rsquo;re a correspondent,&rdquo; said the captain, &ldquo;and you can go, Mr. Hickson,
+ because you&rsquo;re a brave man,&rdquo; and then he continued to pick out men until
+ the required number was secured. Of course there were many disappointed
+ ones left aboard the cruiser, but the captain assured them that they might
+ have their chance yet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boat was soon off, and it was noticed that there was great excitement
+ ashore as soon as the departure was observed. All the inhabitants, it
+ seemed, were gathered upon the beach, anxiously awaiting developments.
+ They seemed to be absolutely ignorant of what the presence of a war-ship
+ in their harbour meant, and were apparently not at all anxious as to the
+ outcome of this visit. One of the men told Archie that they had probably
+ never seen a war-ship before, and that they wouldn&rsquo;t know a cannon at all.
+ &ldquo;But we&rsquo;ll let them know the meaning of our presence,&rdquo; declared the
+ sailor, &ldquo;if they shoot at us.&rdquo; The boat drew every minute nearer the
+ shore, and it was soon perceived that there were many soldiers among the
+ crowd on the beach. Every one thought it remarkable that they should be so
+ quiet, but not one of the natives made a move until the boat was within
+ two hundred feet of the shore. Then one of the rebel soldiers suddenly
+ raised his rifle and fired at the boat. The lieutenant in command stood up
+ in the boat and gave the order to return the fire, and a perfect volley of
+ shot was poured into the crowd, which immediately scattered in every
+ direction. The rebel soldiers, however, seemed determined to stand their
+ ground, and they were so numerous, and kept up such a steady fire, that it
+ was deemed best to return to the cruiser, which was signalling for this
+ action on their part. So the boat was turned about as quickly as possible,
+ and the sailors pulled for the cruiser, amid the derisive yells of the
+ Filipinos, who had gathered again upon the beach. The rebel soldiers
+ continued their firing, but were such poor marksmen that but three of
+ their shots took effect. One sailor was shot in the arm, another in the
+ side, and still another was shot in the leg as he stood up to take aim at
+ the rebels. None of these wounds, it was afterward discovered, were at all
+ serious, though they were enough to arouse the anger of the entire crew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the boat reached the cruiser again, preparations were at once begun
+ for bombarding the town. The natives still stood upon the shore, and it
+ could be seen that they were immensely proud of their present victory. It
+ was amusing, then, to see the change in their behaviour when the great
+ six-inch gun of the cruiser belched forth a cloud of fire and smoke, and a
+ burning shell landed in the village street, apparently just in front of
+ the administration building, which was soon afire. The poor natives fled
+ in every direction, and the rebel soldiers followed their noble example,
+ and took to their heels, too. Another shell followed the first, and soon
+ several buildings were burning in the village. The admiral watched
+ developments carefully, and finally he decided that they would be glad to
+ surrender the village if another boat was sent ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, the same boat started out again, with three new men in place
+ of those who were wounded, and for sake of effect the cruiser steamed
+ farther in toward shore. This time there were no crowds upon the beach,
+ and the thirty men marched to the burning buildings, where the natives
+ fell before them, begging for mercy. The soldiers were nowhere to be seen,
+ so the crew took possession of the town and slept there, in company with
+ thirty more sailors, that night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ CONTINUING THE CRUISE&mdash;ANOTHER VILLAGE CAPTURED&mdash;THE ADMIRAL ARCHIE&rsquo;S
+ FRIEND&mdash;A GREAT BATTLE AND AN UNEXPECTED VICTORY&mdash;LONGING TO BE HOME
+ AGAIN.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ IT may go without saying that the sixty men from the cruiser had a very
+ interesting time before the night was over. The entire village was in a
+ constant uproar; the poor natives, horrified by what they had witnessed
+ during the afternoon, ran hither and thither, some even leaving the place
+ entirely and starting for the interior with their goods and families. The
+ rebel soldiers had evidently gone for good, and a small party sent out to
+ look for traces of them returned without learning anything of their
+ whereabouts. The bombardment of the village had certainly had great
+ effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only a tiny place, with possibly not more than a thousand
+ inhabitants, but there were evidences that it had been formerly a
+ flourishing town. There were fine residences in some of the streets, which
+ were now quite deserted, and there were some very respectable business
+ houses in the village square. All these had once been occupied by Spanish
+ traders, who had been driven away when the rebels came, and if the
+ insurgents had never come the town might now have been a booming place.
+ But the rebels were lazy, as usual, and did no work, so that now the fine
+ residences were vacant, and the business blocks stood empty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the sailors looked about for a casino, where they might be able to
+ find entertainment of some kind for the evening, but every place of
+ amusement was closed, and the streets were deserted. Since the occurrences
+ of the afternoon all the people had locked themselves into their houses,
+ to await the departure of the Americans. But, even though the casino was
+ closed, the Yankees managed to have a good time. They sang and danced and
+ played the banjo until an early hour in the morning, when they finally
+ went to sleep, leaving only two for a night watch, for there was no danger
+ that the insurgents would return, after their engagement, in which they
+ had lost six men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When morning came, some officers landed from the cruiser, and all the
+ villagers were summoned to the public square and made to swear allegiance
+ to the American flag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the afternoon the cruiser steamed away again on her errand of forcible
+ pacification, and more days of quiet watchfulness followed, as the vessel
+ steamed along near the shore. There were many small villages along this
+ coast, but all of them seemed peaceful and free of insurgents. The captain
+ even said that some of the people in them probably didn&rsquo;t know that there
+ had ever been a war between Spain and the United States. Archie, who had
+ enjoyed his experiences during the occupation of the last village, now
+ began to be impatient again at the long quiet. The day when the cruiser
+ bombarded the administration building would be a memorable one to him, and
+ the succeeding events were just such as he had been longing to see for
+ months. And then to think that he had taken part in the occupation of the
+ village. It was all very wonderful, but very real, too, and for several
+ days he took much pains in writing an article for the paper describing the
+ events leading up to and including the capture of the village. And in the
+ narration Bill Hickson was an important character. He had again proved
+ himself a hero of the first water by insisting that the boat proceed when
+ the first attempt was made to land, and by being the first man ashore when
+ a landing was finally effected. He was a leader in everything that was
+ done. He marched at the head of the squad when they marched through the
+ streets of the village, calling all the people to assemble in the public
+ square, and he stood beside the officers with his rifle handy when the
+ ceremony of swearing allegiance was gone through with. When it was all
+ over he was called to the admiral&rsquo;s cabin aboard the cruiser and
+ congratulated for being so brave and so ever-ready to lead in any
+ dangerous undertaking; but Bill Hickson simply blushed and said he hadn&rsquo;t
+ done &ldquo;anything worth mentionin&rsquo;.&rdquo; The men aboard thought differently,
+ however, and he was even a greater hero after this adventure than he had
+ been before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie, too, received the congratulations of the admiral. &ldquo;You have been a
+ brave boy,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and deserve much credit for showing so little fear
+ in the face of danger. I hope you will be rewarded upon your return to New
+ York for your bravery while with us here.&rdquo; Archie, too, blushed, and said
+ that he had no doubt that Mr. Van Bunting would treat him fairly when he
+ reached New York again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Archie was now beginning to wish that the time for his return would
+ soon arrive. It was the month of February, and he had been away from
+ America an age, it seemed to him. He felt that he had seen most of what
+ there was to be seen in the Philippines, and when this naval tour was over
+ with, the active campaigning would no doubt cease until the rainy season
+ was over. So for many reasons the boy wished he might be able to start
+ home soon, and as the days passed he became more and more anxious to
+ receive word from the Enterprise that he might return. He had sent many
+ interesting articles to the paper, and would be able to write many more
+ just as interesting upon his return, so he felt that the editors wouldn&rsquo;t
+ object to his early return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For an entire week the cruiser found no signs of the rebels, but at last
+ there came a day when they were steaming slowly along near the shore, and
+ saw, back among the trees, some specks of white resembling tents in shape.
+ Immediately the whole vessel was excited, and there was much gossip and
+ wonder as to what the tents could be doing there. The admiral at last
+ decided to send two boats ashore to investigate, and gave strict orders
+ that the men should be cautious and not allow themselves to be ambushed or
+ caught in a trap of any kind. Of course Archie and Bill Hickson were among
+ the crew of the first boat, and each was as fully armed as any of the
+ sailors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two boats pulled quietly for the shore, keeping close together, and
+ they were beached at the same time. The natives, or whoever occupied the
+ tents, had evidently not yet discovered them, and the men halted upon
+ landing to decide what they had better do. The tents could be plainly seen
+ through the trees, and there was smoke rising from a fire somewhere in the
+ neighbourhood, but there were no noises which could be heard so far away.
+ It was decided to march up to the tents and find out who occupied them,
+ and the column kept close together as they advanced, for things were so
+ quiet it was feared the rebels, if such they were, might be in ambush.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men got within a hundred feet of the camp, when they heard several
+ terrible yells in succession, and several natives ran out from behind one
+ of the tents, screaming at the top of their voices, and not pausing to
+ look around at all. The officer in command of the company of men was much
+ disturbed by this demonstration, and, without pausing a moment, gave the
+ order to fire. Five of the natives fell immediately, but the other six
+ kept running, and soon disappeared among the trees on the other side of
+ the clearing. The men stood still awaiting developments, but though they
+ waited several minutes nothing more was heard, and it was decided that the
+ camp must be deserted. So they marched up to the tents, and then the
+ officer almost fainted, for inside the first one he entered was standing
+ an American flag, and scattered about were the accoutrements and camp
+ equipment belonging to an American force in the field. There was now no
+ doubt but what the tents belonged to an American regiment, and that the
+ fleeing natives were either servants or prisoners, more likely the former.
+ The men were all much excited at this discovery, and the officer ordered
+ the natives to be looked after at once. It was found, however, that all
+ but one were dead, and he expired within an hour, so that the men felt
+ that they had killed five innocent men, a thought which made some of them
+ weep, hardened though they were.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now decided to await the return of the regiment, which was out, the
+ officer thought, on a practice march, and could not possibly be gone much
+ longer. So the men lounged about on the grass for more than an hour. Then,
+ about three in the afternoon, a rifle-shot was heard in the near distance,
+ and instantly every man was on his feet, rifle in hand. &ldquo;They must have
+ found the rebels,&rdquo; said the officer; &ldquo;so be ready, men, to help them out,
+ should they be retreating to the camp.&rdquo; This supposition turned out to be
+ correct, for a few minutes later some members of the regiment came running
+ into camp and announced that a large body of insurgents was after them.
+ Later the remainder of the regiment followed, and the joy of the colonel
+ when he found these unexpected reinforcements was very great. &ldquo;There must
+ be more than fifteen hundred rebels,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and they will all be on us
+ here in less than an hour, for their sharpshooters have been following us
+ up for a long time. I was beginning to think that we would be unable to
+ fight them, for they seem to be well equipped, but with the cruiser to
+ kelp us we can whip them at once. The thing to do will be to let them come
+ on without suspecting that we have received any help, and then, when the
+ fight is getting a little warm, or they are about to charge us, let the
+ cruiser fire a few shells into the air, and it will all be over. Most of
+ them are country troops, and have never seen a cruiser, so they will be
+ too much frightened to speak when they hear the thunder of the guns, and
+ see the shells explode in the air. And then they have a village about
+ three miles back from the coast, and if you can send a few shells into
+ that village it will simply ruin the insurgents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had no idea of meeting these rebels,&rdquo; the colonel then explained. &ldquo;I
+ took the men out for a little practice marching, but before we had gone
+ far we encountered these sharpshooters, and later discovered that they had
+ all these men about a mile and a half away. Then we decided to return to
+ camp as quickly as possible, to get more ammunition, and we felt, too,
+ that we would stand a better chance of resisting them here among the
+ trees. But now we will soon finish them up, if you will just send a man
+ out to tell the admiral of our plans.&rdquo; Archie immediately volunteered to
+ carry the information, and as he could be spared better than one of the
+ soldiers or sailors, he was permitted to undertake the mission. So he
+ started out, and was on board the cruiser in a very short time. The
+ admiral was dumbfounded to learn that American troops were encamped on the
+ shore, and in imminent danger of being defeated, and he at once set about
+ giving orders with great vigour. &ldquo;We will show them how they can attack a
+ small regiment of Americans with their ridiculous army,&rdquo; he declared, and
+ at once gave orders for the vessel to move inshore. &ldquo;But wait,&rdquo; he cried,
+ a minute later, &ldquo;I see by my chart that there is a deep stream about a
+ mile up the coast, and if I am not mistaken we can enter this stream and
+ perhaps get very near the advancing rebels. We may even be able to destroy
+ them before they have a chance at our soldiers,&rdquo; and the old admiral
+ almost danced in the enthusiasm of this idea. So the cruiser steamed
+ rapidly up the coast, and was soon at the mouth of the stream, which
+ seemed to be the estuary of some great river. Then she steamed up-stream,
+ and, sure enough, the admiral soon discovered the rebels marching rapidly
+ along the road, about half a mile away. They had evidently not perceived
+ the cruiser, on account of the high reeds growing along the banks, and the
+ admiral gave orders to begin firing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first shell rose high in the air and exploded with a deafening
+ thunder, and when the smoke cleared away it was seen that the insurgents
+ were almost paralysed with fright, and had just discovered the cruiser in
+ the river. But this first shell had not hurt any one, and another was
+ immediately ignited. This one exploded over the very heads of the troops,
+ and many of them must have been killed. Those who were not either killed
+ or wounded turned about and began to run, and their leaders were powerless
+ to make them stand their ground. One shell followed another from the
+ cruiser, and hundreds must have been killed outright among the insurgents.
+ Finally they were all running, and it was soon perceived that the
+ Americans had advanced, and were now pursuing them with great energy. So
+ the cruiser could fire no more shells, and the admiral ordered her about
+ and back to the anchorage onshore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would take many pages to describe in detail the events of the remainder
+ of that afternoon, as Archie witnessed them from the deck of the cruiser,
+ and learned of them later from Bill Hickson. The insurgents were nearly
+ all killed or taken prisoners, and it was found that they numbered nearly
+ two thousand. So it was a great achievement to have vanquished them all.
+ The affair turned out to have been the greatest victory of the war, so
+ far.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ RETURN TO HEADQUARTERS&mdash;A LETTER FROM THE EDITOR, WITH PERMISSION TO
+ RETURN TO NEW YORK&mdash;BILL HICKSON GOES, TOO.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ARCHIE left the cruiser when she was once more at anchor, and, going
+ ashore to the American camp, he found things in a very lively condition at
+ the close of the afternoon&rsquo;s battle. Every man was very jubilant over the
+ retreat which had been turned into a great victory, and Archie was
+ congratulated on having been the lucky man to carry the news of the coming
+ of the rebels to the admiral. The officers were all in the best of humour,
+ except the colonel, who felt somewhat sad on account of the death of his
+ five faithful servants, as the men first shot turned out to have been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There were never any better men than they,&rdquo; said the colonel, &ldquo;and I
+ would almost as soon my own men had been shot.&rdquo; But he bore the ship&rsquo;s
+ company no malice for their mistake, which he said was a very natural one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the capture of so many rebels, and the killing of so many others, it
+ was felt that the rebel army in this part of the island was pretty well
+ disbanded, and that it would soon disappear altogether. It had been known,
+ from the very beginning of hostilities, that there was a large force of
+ insurgents somewhere in this neighbourhood, but not until to-day had the
+ colonel seen anything of them. But it was impossible, all the officers
+ said, that there could be any more troops about, for these two thousand
+ represented a very considerable portion of the entire rebel army. And now
+ that these were done away with, the colonel said there was no need of his
+ remaining any longer in this place, and that he would like to get back to
+ Manila as quickly as possible. Hearing this, the admiral said he thought
+ room could be made for all the men aboard the cruiser, and that they could
+ all return at once if they so desired. This generous offer was at once
+ accepted by the colonel, and the next day the work of embarkation began.
+ By night every man was aboard, and a place of some kind had been found
+ where he could sleep, but of course, every portion of the vessel was much
+ overcrowded. This only made things all the more lively, however, and
+ Archie, as well as all the others, thought he had never enjoyed any trip
+ so much as these three days spent in getting back again to Manila. There
+ was always fun of some sort going on. If some one wasn&rsquo;t dancing, there
+ was sure to be singing. And then there were several ingenious games which
+ were invented for the occasion, so that time never passed slowly. Indeed,
+ there were many who were sorry when the capital was finally reached, but
+ Archie was not among these, for he expected some mail to be awaiting him
+ from the editor of the Enterprise. And he hoped that in this mail he would
+ find permission to return to New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All officials were very much surprised when the cruiser anchored off
+ Cavité, but the admiral explained that he thought it no use to spend more
+ time in touring the island, even though the month which it was supposed to
+ take him had not yet expired. He said that he felt sure there were no more
+ insurgent villages along the coast, because it was perfectly evident, from
+ all signs, that the rebels were all in one division. And this division, of
+ course, had been vanquished four days previously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the report of the engagement went the rounds there was much
+ enthusiasm, for it was felt that at last some progress was being made
+ against the insurgents. The admiral was a popular hero at once, and
+ Archie, with Bill Hickson, was again the centre of admiration and interest
+ in the old palace, where they both returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie was surprised to find no mail awaiting him, but he was not
+ discouraged, and wrote two long articles to send to the Enterprise. One
+ described the great engagement, and the other was descriptive of the daily
+ life aboard ship upon the return to Manila. These articles, with the
+ others he had written during the latter part of the cruise, were sent off
+ at once, and Archie felt confident that they would be read with great
+ interest by Mr. Van Bunting. And now the days passed very pleasantly in
+ Manila. He had a great deal to tell his comrades in the old regiment, for
+ none of them had been out of Manila since he left, and were very anxious
+ indeed to hear about the events of the round-the-island tour. And Archie
+ was very willing to tell them all he could, for he had been much
+ interested in the entire voyage, and never tired of talking about it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, while things were very pleasant, and he was having a good time in
+ many ways, Archie was very anxious to see New York again and to get back
+ to America. And then, what was even more important with him, was the
+ knowledge that he would certainly be allowed to visit his mother upon his
+ return. Therefore he was a very happy boy when he one day received two
+ letters from the Enterprise office, one from Mr. Van Bunting, and one from
+ Mr. Jennings. They were both very encouraging and very friendly. Mr. Van
+ Bunting wrote to tell Archie how delighted they all had been with his
+ success in finding interesting things to write about, and he enclosed a
+ check for three hundred dollars, which he thought &ldquo;would come in handy
+ now.&rdquo; The letter from Mr. Jennings was of later date, and stated that he
+ had prevailed upon Mr. Van Bunting to allow Archie to return to New York,
+ to work upon the Evening Enterprise. It was a very delightful letter,
+ Archie thought. &ldquo;We believe,&rdquo; wrote Mr. Jennings, &ldquo;that we can use you
+ here to very good advantage, and we will be glad to have you return as
+ soon as possible. I enclose two hundred dollars to pay your expenses home
+ again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So now it was all settled that Archie was to leave Manila for New York,
+ and, now that it was sure he was going, he felt somewhat reluctant to
+ leave the soldiers with whom he had become friendly, and to get away from
+ all this life of adventure which had been so interesting and so delightful
+ in many ways. It was hard, too, to leave the dear old palace in Manila,
+ through which he had wandered so often, and every room of which had for
+ him some story of a Spanish prince or a great governor-general, wealthy
+ and wise. There would be none of all this at home or in New York, but then
+ there would be something better; there would be mother, and the old grape
+ arbour, and the Hut Club.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On investigation, Archie found that the quickest way to get home would be
+ to travel by way of Hong Kong and Yokohama, taking the steamer from there
+ to San Francisco. It would take him more than a month to make the trip,
+ and, as it was now the second week in March, he could hardly expect to
+ reach New York before the first of May. He at once cabled Mr. Jennings
+ that he would leave at once for Hong Kong, and received an answer telling
+ him to do so by all means, and to continue to write letters describing his
+ trip. Archie knew that these letters would probably not reach New York any
+ sooner than he would, but he did write them, anyhow, and he did see some
+ of them appear in the paper after his arrival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie was overjoyed to learn one day that Bill Hickson had received
+ permission from the commanding general to return to the United States, and
+ he at once hunted up the bashful hero, and insisted that he leave at once,
+ and make the trip with him. This was finally agreed to, and when it was
+ settled that the two old chums were to travel homeward together the whole
+ camp in Manila was interested in the news. They were both very popular,
+ and almost every night before their departure there was a pleasure party
+ of some kind arranged for them. One night they would give a regular
+ &ldquo;stag,&rdquo; as they called them, and then again they would arrange a sort of
+ musicale, at which there would be clog-dancing, banjo music, and various
+ games to increase the fun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The four days passed very quickly indeed, and at last the day for sailing
+ arrived. There was a great throng at the pier to see them off, and there
+ was no end of good wishes and stories of the good times now gone by. When
+ the steamer finally moved out into the open, there were three cheers each
+ for Archie and &ldquo;brave Bill Hickson,&rdquo; in which every man appeared to join
+ with all his heart and voice. And there were tears in Archie&rsquo;s eyes at
+ having to part from such true friends. It was hard to tell, too, when he
+ would ever see any of them again. He realised that hereafter his path and
+ theirs would probably lie in different directions. He was going to New
+ York to work as a reporter, and they, if they were not killed in battle,
+ would be scattered in all parts of the great United States, at the
+ mustering out of the troops. It was all very sad, and even Bill Hickson
+ seemed to feel the solemnity of the occasion, for he had nothing to say
+ for many hours after the vessel had started on its journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie, too, felt homesick at having to leave, and they went to bed very
+ early, apparently feeling that the best thing under such circumstances was
+ to be asleep. And when morning came they both felt somewhat better, for
+ Archie arose filled with hope for the future, and more anxious than ever
+ to reach home. Bill Hickson, too, was not loath to return to the United
+ States, even though he had no relatives waiting there to welcome him. The
+ poor fellow had been through a great deal while in the Philippines, and
+ his constitution was almost wrecked by the constant strain to which he was
+ subjected. He had never fully recovered from his accident of several weeks
+ before, and he felt that he needed a rest from the constant excitement and
+ worry of life in the army. He was tired, too, of being a spy. He had never
+ relished the work, but he had realised how necessary it was for the
+ Americans to have some one to follow up Aguinaldo and let the general know
+ of his movements. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll be a long time catching him now,&rdquo; he said, time
+ and again, to Archie. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a much shrewder man than they think, and he
+ knows his Philippine Islands like a book. He can go from one place to
+ another without the Americans ever knowing where he disappeared to, and
+ without some one to follow him they will never be able to learn anything
+ of his movements.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bill had received nearly two hundred dollars in back pay, so he felt quite
+ rich, and Archie told him that if he should happen to run out, and need
+ more money, he would be very glad to furnish it to him, For Archie was now
+ determined to take Bill Hickson to New York, and introduce him to Mr. Van
+ Bunting, feeling sure that the wise editor would thank him for bringing to
+ his attention a man at once so interesting and so worthy as this hero of
+ the war had proved himself to be. But for the present Bill would discuss
+ nothing of the kind. He was thoroughly content to sit beside Archie on the
+ warm steamer deck, and watch the ever varied surface of the Indian Ocean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ HONG KONG&mdash;A HAPPY TIME IN TOKIO&mdash;HONOLULU AGAIN&mdash;ARRIVAL IN SAN
+ FRANCISCO, AND A GREAT RECEPTION BY THE PRESS&mdash;ARCHIE AND BILL ARRIVE IN
+ NEW YORK, AND ARE THE HEROES OF THE HOUR.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ AFTER a short and pleasant voyage they reached Hong Kong, and Archie found
+ this city to be much more interesting than he had expected to find it. It
+ was charming, he thought, to run across a place which combined the
+ conveniences of England and America with the picturesque oddities of China
+ and Japan, and he enjoyed himself to the utmost during the two days they
+ spent there. Bill Hickson enjoyed the place, too, and they would both have
+ liked to remain longer had it been possible for them to do so, but they
+ were anxious to see something of Japan before sailing for San Francisco,
+ and their steamer was due to leave Yokohama in eleven days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they did enjoy Hong Kong to the utmost while they were there. They
+ called first, of course, upon the American consul, whom they found to be
+ an exceedingly pleasant man. They learned, to their great surprise, that
+ he had read of Archie Dunn, and of Bill Hickson, too, in the Enterprise,
+ and Archie began to think that his paper had a much wider circulation than
+ even the editors claimed for it. He thought it very remarkable, at first,
+ that a man living in Hong Kong should have read about his Philippine
+ experiences in a New York paper, but of course, after he thought of it
+ awhile, it didn&rsquo;t seem such a very remarkable thing, after all. And after
+ this, when they heard of people having read of them, they weren&rsquo;t so much
+ surprised, having come to realise the tremendous circulation of this
+ paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The consul did all in his power to make their stay in Hong Kong pleasant.
+ He was anxious to have a formal dinner for them, but Bill Hickson said
+ that he would much prefer not having to dress up, and Archie was willing
+ for Bill&rsquo;s sake to forego the honour. So they spent their two days in
+ going about the city, visiting the quaint Chinese shops, and seeing
+ everything of particular interest. They found many wonderful things to
+ look at, and Archie said that he couldn&rsquo;t imagine any more delightful
+ place; but Bill told him to wait until they reached Japan, for he&rsquo;d find
+ that much more charming than Hong Kong. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been there before,&rdquo; said
+ Bill, &ldquo;and I know what I&rsquo;m talkin&rsquo; about, and I say there ain&rsquo;t no such
+ place on earth as Japan for interestin&rsquo; things to look at, and pleasant
+ things to do.&rdquo; And when, a few days later, Archie was initiated into some
+ of the mysteries of Japanese life by his experienced friend, he was
+ willing to admit the truth of all he had heard concerning the land of the
+ chrysanthemum. He found everything quite beyond his expectations. The
+ people themselves were more quaint in their dress and manners than he had
+ expected to find them, and the houses and the pagodas were much more
+ picturesque than he had imagined they would be. And the whole atmosphere
+ of the country seemed filled with romance and history, and it wasn&rsquo;t at
+ all hard to believe that the Japanese have longer family trees than any
+ other nation on earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They spent a few days travelling through the provincial districts of the
+ little kingdom, and then they reached Tokio, where Bill was anxious to
+ spend several days. &ldquo;I know some folks here who can take us around and
+ show us everything that&rsquo;s worth seeing,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and we can spend our
+ time to better advantage here than anywhere else I know of.&rdquo; And sure
+ enough, Bill did know some people in the capital city, some pleasant
+ English people, who had met the open-hearted Westerner when he was in the
+ city years before, and who had at once appreciated the true nobility of
+ his character. They were very kind to Archie,&mdash;so kind that the lad
+ thought he had never before met such pleasant people. And they were
+ thoroughly interested in all his adventures, from the time he left home
+ late in the preceding summer until now. He had to tell them all about his
+ New York adventures, and also about their experiences together in the
+ Philippines, and his new friends showed the greatest interest in all he
+ had to say, and seemed to find it all vastly entertaining. They were
+ anxious, Archie thought, to make him have a very good time in Tokio, to
+ make up for some of his hard experiences, and if this were indeed their
+ object, they succeeded admirably in accomplishing it. Every day was filled
+ with surprises, and every night Archie thought he had enjoyed himself more
+ this day than the day before. They travelled about the city so
+ persistently, on foot and in the quaint jinrikishas, that he felt that he
+ knew almost every part of Tokio, and he witnessed every side of native
+ existence, as well as the life in the foreign quarter. It was all
+ charmingly new and interesting, and, as in Hong Kong, they were both sorry
+ when the day for their sailing came around. And always since Archie has
+ declared that no one can be more kindly hospitable than the English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voyage from Yokohama to San Francisco was slow and monotonous, Archie
+ thought, for he was now very impatient to reach the United States, and he
+ had also grown very tired of travel by water. There were some very
+ pleasant passengers, but Archie couldn&rsquo;t see that he had a much better
+ time than when he was peeling potatoes corning over. That was interesting
+ enough, anyhow. The only break in the monotony was the day they were
+ enabled to spend in Honolulu, and on that day Archie went again to some of
+ the places he had seen during his first visit to the attractive city. And
+ he called again upon some of the friends of his first visit, and found
+ that most of them had read of his great success as a war correspondent,
+ and of his many exciting experiences in the Philippines. They were all
+ profuse in congratulating him upon what he had accomplished, and every one
+ seemed to think he had been very successful indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While they were in Honolulu a vessel arrived, bound for Japan, and Archie
+ was delighted to find it was the same vessel upon which he had worked his
+ passage from San Francisco on his way to Manila. He went aboard and met
+ some of the friends he had made there, and found that they all knew now
+ who it was they had carried as chore-boy in the galley. They all seemed
+ glad to hear of his success, and to know that he was coming home as a
+ first-class passenger. The cook treated him with much deference, and
+ started to apologise for his treatment of Archie on the way over; but the
+ boy stopped him, and told him that no apology was necessary. &ldquo;I think I
+ may have been an unwilling worker,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;because of course I didn&rsquo;t
+ like the work at all, and it was hard for me to take an interest in
+ peeling potatoes when I was looking forward to accomplishing such great
+ things in the Philippines.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said the cook, &ldquo;you was a fine worker. Sure, I ain&rsquo;t had so good a
+ boy since.&rdquo; And Archie laughed to see the change in opinion which is
+ sometimes brought about by a change in circumstances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie enjoyed the city quite as much as before, but he was glad,
+ nevertheless, when the steamer continued her voyage east. And then he
+ began to count the days until they should arrive in San Francisco, and of
+ course these last days seemed the longest ones of the voyage. But they
+ gradually passed away, and as they steamed ahead, coming nearer every hour
+ to that dear land called &ldquo;home,&rdquo; both Archie and Bill began to wonder how
+ they would like it all, after their adventurous life in the Philippines.
+ Bill, in particular, was doubtful whether he would again be able to settle
+ down to a quiet existence in some small place, and Archie assured him that
+ he must live in New York, where he would be sure to find things lively
+ enough to suit him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last came the eventful day when the great steamer threaded her way
+ through the beautiful Golden Gate, and discharged her passengers at the
+ pier. As Archie and Bill had but little baggage, they were almost the
+ first ones to leave the vessel, and were hurrying away to find a hotel
+ where they could remain overnight when Archie felt some one touch him on
+ the shoulder, and, turning about and seeing no one he knew, was about to
+ go on, when a man introduced himself as being the San Francisco
+ correspondent of the Enterprise. &ldquo;And these gentlemen here,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;are
+ reporters from the newspapers here. They would be glad to have you say a
+ few words about your experiences during the last few months.&rdquo; Archie was
+ quite dumbfounded. It had never occurred to him that he was a person so
+ important as to be interviewed, but he was willing and glad to accommodate
+ the reporters, and told them to accompany him to his hotel. Once there, he
+ answered all their questions, and didn&rsquo;t find it hard at all to give them
+ his opinion of the situation in the Philippines, and what he thought
+ should be done by the government to stop the rebellion. &ldquo;The President
+ will soon put an end to it,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if he can only have the support of
+ Congress. But as long as there are members of Congress fighting his
+ policy, the insurgents are going to continue their insane efforts to
+ establish an independent government.&rdquo; And some of the reporters smiled to
+ hear so young a fellow talking about the policy in the Philippines. They
+ felt that he was well-informed, however, and put down every word he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interviews over, Archie and Bill went early to bed. The Enterprise
+ correspondent had telegraphed the news of their arrival to New York, and
+ had received word from Mr. Van Bunting to send them on to New York at
+ once. So, early in the morning, the two started for the East, and the
+ train seemed to travel quite as slowly as the steamer. &ldquo;It does seem good
+ to be in our own country again,&rdquo; they said a hundred times during the days
+ that followed, and when they reached the Empire State and began their
+ journey down the Hudson River, Archie could hardly restrain his enthusiasm
+ at being again in his native commonwealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was quite a delegation at the Grand Central Station to meet them.
+ Mr. Jennings was there in person, and he explained that Mr. Van Bunting
+ was waiting anxiously at the office to see him. Then there were reporters
+ from the various other city papers, who wanted interviews, but Archie was
+ told to say whatever he had to say in the columns of the Enterprise, so he
+ had to deny the reporters for the first time. Bill Hickson was introduced
+ at once, and became the lion of the hour. Every one had read of him, and
+ was glad to shake his hand, and poor Bill was quite bewildered by so much
+ attention. They didn&rsquo;t linger long at the station, however, but hurried
+ down to the Enterprise office, where Mr. Van Bunting was awaiting them. He
+ grasped Archie&rsquo;s hand in his as they entered, and cried, &ldquo;Well done, my
+ boy, well done.&rdquo; And Archie felt as if he had grown three feet that
+ instant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ DOING &ldquo;SPECIAL&rdquo; WORK UPON THE EVENING PAPER&mdash;INTERVIEWS WITH FAMOUS
+ MEN&mdash;CALLS UPON OLD FRIENDS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ THERE was so much to tell Mr. Jennings and Mr. Van Bunting, that Archie
+ didn&rsquo;t get away from the Enterprise office until seven o&rsquo;clock in the
+ evening. And what a lot they did say to each other during the afternoon!
+ Archie told of all his experiences, and found them all anxious to hear
+ about them. He learned, to his joy, that everything he had sent had been
+ printed, and that the articles had made a great hit with the public. &ldquo;We
+ would have liked to keep you there longer, but we knew you must be worn
+ out, and then we want you to stay right here, now, and see if you cannot
+ get us some good interviews and articles of various kinds for the Evening
+ Enterprise. The paper has been losing ground somewhat, of late, and we
+ need some new life for its pages. Of course the morning paper profited
+ greatly by your articles, but the evening edition seemed very weak in
+ comparison, and we think it only fair to Mr. Jennings to let him have you
+ on his staff for awhile now. So if you are willing, you can start in
+ to-morrow as a member of the staff. We will see that you are well paid for
+ what you write, or we will put you on salary, whichever you like. You can
+ think it over, and in the morning you can tell us which plan you like
+ best.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie wanted to ask for a few days&rsquo; absence to return home, but he felt,
+ somehow, that he ought not to ask it just now. So he contented himself
+ with writing a long letter to his mother, in which he enclosed a very
+ large check, money which he had not used on his return to New York. He
+ told her that he would be home just as soon as he could get off for any
+ length of time, and he knew that she would now be looking forward to the
+ visit every day. She had written him about the enthusiasm displayed by
+ every one over his achievements, and how proud she was of what he had
+ accomplished. &ldquo;I think I am the proudest mother in the country,&rdquo; she wrote
+ one day, and this sentence made Archie very happy, of course, and more
+ anxious than ever to return home. He received a letter, too, from Jack
+ Sullivan, telling him how much the boys all thought of his success, and
+ how every member of the Hut Club had longed time and again to be with him.
+ &ldquo;It all reads just like some book,&rdquo; Jack wrote, &ldquo;and we are dying to have
+ you come home and tell us all about it.&rdquo; Then his mother sent him
+ clippings from the town papers, eulogising his efforts, and calling him
+ the &ldquo;coming man of the State.&rdquo; All this was very pleasant and very
+ encouraging, and Archie couldn&rsquo;t help having a kindly feeling for the
+ townsfolk who thought so much of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ New York was as delightful as ever. It was now the last of April, and the
+ trees were all green with fresh leaves, and the numerous little parks
+ scattered over the city were looking their very best. The asphalt
+ pavements looked clean and elegant when Archie thought of some other
+ streets he had seen, and the tall office buildings lifted their ornate
+ domes and cupolas into a sky of clear blue. &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; he thought to
+ himself, &ldquo;this is the most charming city in all the world.&rdquo; Fifth Avenue,
+ with its crowds of fashionable folk, and its throng of vehicles, was a
+ delight of which he never tired, and when he went into the Bowery, just to
+ see how things were looking now, he found it quite as interesting and as
+ dirty as in the fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the first place he visited was the dear little square away down-town,
+ where he had lived during those few happy days spent in New York. It, too,
+ looked the same, only the flowers and grass were fresher now, and the
+ fountain seemed to flow more joyously, now that spring was here. The house
+ where he had lodged was as clean as ever, and Archie at once decided to
+ engage a room here, where he could have his New York home. So he called
+ upon the motherly landlady, and was glad to learn that the room he had
+ first was still vacant, and that he could take possession at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As before, when he came to this house, Archie was almost out of clothing,
+ so he went out and fitted himself with everything he needed. And this time
+ he felt able to buy the best to be had, for he thought he had now earned
+ the privilege to dress well if he liked. And then, when he had everything
+ he needed to wear, he went out and bought many pretty things for his room,
+ for he felt that he would like to have it just as cosy and home-like as
+ possible. He wasn&rsquo;t able to do much at it this first night, but in the
+ succeeding days he furnished the place in a charming way, so that the
+ landlady said it was the &ldquo;handsomest room in the house, sir.&rdquo; The dear old
+ lady could hardly understand this great change in her lodger&rsquo;s
+ circumstances. She worried about it very often, and discussed the question
+ with many of the neighbours. &ldquo;He come here last fall looking mighty
+ poor-like, but, lawsy me, he&rsquo;s as fine now as any man on the avenue.&rdquo; And
+ she never did understand it until one day she learned that her lodger was
+ the &ldquo;very young man who had been to the war in the Philippines, and writ
+ about his battles in the Enterprise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no ceremony when Archie began work on the evening paper. Mr.
+ Jennings told him that he thought they understood each other pretty well,
+ and that he could use his own discretion, very often, about getting
+ articles. &ldquo;You can be as independent as you like, Archie,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and
+ use your own ideas as much as you like.&rdquo; This pleased the boy very much
+ indeed. He was beginning to feel now that he had really won his spurs, and
+ that he was a full-fledged journalist. It seemed scarcely possible that it
+ had taken him little more than six months to make this great advance in
+ circumstances, and yet he could see himself a few months previous,
+ sleeping in the station-house. Now his days of poverty were surely over,
+ and he would have a clear path ahead of him to accomplish his great
+ ambition to be a successful author and writer of books. For the present,
+ it was good experience for him to be working upon the Enterprise, and he
+ felt that he ought to be very much contented, since there were men old
+ enough to be his father who were not earning as much money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He liked the work upon the evening paper very much. He didn&rsquo;t have to get
+ down early in the morning, and at three o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon he was
+ always through. He was very glad indeed that there was no night work, for
+ he now spent his evenings in studying shorthand, which he thought might be
+ helpful to him in many ways. He didn&rsquo;t have much routine work to do upon
+ the paper in the beginning, but he told Mr. Jennings that he would like to
+ get as much experience as possible, so the good editor gave him a lot of
+ regular reporting to do, as well as the special work which was daily
+ featured in the paper. This special work consisted of interviews with
+ various successful men. Archie had always felt a great admiration for men
+ who had &ldquo;done something,&rdquo; and as New York was simply filled with wealthy
+ and successful men, who had started as poor boys, he found a wide field
+ for work. He found it very interesting to meet these men of affairs, and
+ have them tell him of their early struggles, how they had begun on the
+ farm or in the factory, and had worked themselves up through industry and
+ perseverance to the high places they now occupied. He found it very easy
+ to get access to most of them, for they had all read of his experiences in
+ the Enterprise, and Archie found that his fame as the &ldquo;Boy Reporter&rdquo; was
+ quite general and widespread. Some of the great men were quite as much
+ determined to interview him as he was anxious to interview them, so that
+ he usually got along very well by telling them first of his own
+ experiences, and then asking them about their own boyhood days. It was
+ work that never became monotonous, for each day he saw a man quite
+ different in most respects from the man he had interviewed the day before,
+ and of course every one had something different to say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These interviews proved very successful when published in the Evening
+ Enterprise, and Mr. Jennings had him continue them during all the weeks
+ Archie was connected with the paper. And of course he did other things,
+ too, work which took him into every part of the great city, looking up
+ this event, or investigating this reported disappearance or murder. Archie
+ was quite successful in this line, too, and, as he was being paid by the
+ column, his weekly income was something larger than he had ever dared to
+ hope for in all his life. He was now enabled to study his stenography at
+ the best school, and to indulge himself in many things which had been
+ denied him before. He could, for instance, attend the performances of
+ grand opera, and hear the great musical artists of the world. He was able,
+ too, to read the best literature, and he gradually learned to appreciate
+ all the many good things in life. He was very glad to find himself
+ broadening in such a way, for he realised that he would not always want to
+ be a &ldquo;Boy Reporter,&rdquo; and that he had better be developing his mind in
+ every possible way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had not been back long in New York before he met all his old friends.
+ One of the first upon whom he called was the good policeman who had been
+ so very kind to him when he had no place to sleep. The large-hearted man
+ was as enthusiastic over his success as if he had been his own son, and
+ Archie felt that here was one true friend upon whom he could always
+ depend. The policeman never tired of telling about that first night when
+ he found Archie walking up and down Broadway, and he always spoke of him
+ to the other officers as &ldquo;that boy of mine.&rdquo; So the boy, who was now a
+ full-fledged reporter, spent as much time with this friend as possible,
+ and many a time he sat at the station-house telling them all of his
+ adventures in the Orient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another friend whom he met was the great railway president with whom he
+ had travelled to Chicago on his way to San Francisco. Archie had liked
+ this man from the very first, and he felt that in him he would always find
+ a friend, because he had shown such interest in his first undertaking. And
+ when he called upon him in his elegant office, he received a very cordial
+ greeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, indeed,&rdquo; said the great man of affairs, &ldquo;I have never forgotten our
+ trip West together, and I have followed you with much interest through the
+ columns of the Enterprise. And I am glad that you are back again in New
+ York, for I hope to see a great deal of you. You must come up to my house
+ some evening and tell us all about yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie was naturally much surprised to receive an invitation of this kind,
+ but he resolved to accept it, nevertheless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bill Hickson was now employed in the Brooklyn navy yard. He had been
+ featured for several days in the Enterprise, and had enjoyed the
+ excitement of New York for awhile, but he decided he would like to be at
+ work. So one day Archie learned that he was working at the navy yard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got to be with Uncle Sam,&rdquo; was all the reason Bill would give for
+ his action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ PRIVATE SECRETARY TO A MILLIONAIRE&mdash;STUDYING AT EVENING SCHOOL&mdash;LIVING
+ AMID ELEGANT SURROUNDINGS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ IT was now September. Archie had been in New York the whole summer
+ through, attending carefully to his work on the Evening Enterprise, and
+ continuing his study of stenography. He had taken occasional trips to Long
+ Branch and Asbury Park on Saturday afternoons, but every other day he
+ spent in working up ideas for the paper, and each evening he devoted to
+ the shorthand school. By this time, though, he felt that he knew all that
+ was necessary of shorthand, and found himself more free to go about in the
+ evenings. He visited his friends more frequently, and sometimes spent
+ whole evenings in studying works on English literature, for he was
+ ambitious to know more of the great work he had decided to make his own.
+ This study was not really work to him, for his interest in everything
+ connected with literature was so great that he found a pleasure in reading
+ even the most classical books on the subject, and of course so much
+ reading of this sort did a great deal to educate his mind along this line
+ of work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One evening in the early fall, Archie decided to accept the invitation of
+ Mr. Depaw, the railway president, to call. So he carefully dressed himself
+ in the best he had, and walked up Fifth Avenue and into the side street
+ where the great man had his home. He rang the bell and presented his card,
+ and waited in the drawing-room for an answer. The footman was gone but a
+ moment, and returning, announced that the family would be down directly.
+ Archie was very much pleased that he was to meet the entire family, and
+ looked about him with great interest at the elegant furnishings of the
+ room in which he sat. He couldn&rsquo;t help thinking how lovely it must be to
+ have so many books, so many pictures, and so many works of art of every
+ kind. The boy thought then that he would like to be a wealthy man, just to
+ be able to gratify his desires for beautiful things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had to wait only a short time before the genial Mr. Depaw entered the
+ room, accompanied by several members of the family. Archie was greeted
+ very warmly, and introduced to every one, and then they immediately began
+ an animated conversation, in which Archie soon found himself taking an
+ active part, much to his surprise. He felt that he had never before
+ realised what a great gift it is to be able to talk entertainingly, and
+ this evening was a revelation to him in the ways of good society. He found
+ that every one was much interested in the story of his adventures, and he
+ talked more about them than for a long time past. He was now beginning to
+ feel that his Philippine experiences were an old story, but he learned
+ that they were quite as entertaining as ever to these people. But they did
+ not talk entirely about Archie. They realised that this would be
+ embarrassing to him, and they were careful to guide the conversation into
+ a discussion of music and literature, and whatever else they imagined him
+ to like. And so it was that the evening passed very quickly, and it was
+ time to leave before he knew it. Then he was asked to be sure to call
+ again, and Mr. Depaw, as he accompanied him to the door, requested him to
+ call at his office on the following Wednesday, if possible. Archie
+ promised, and walked home down the avenue, wondering what it could be that
+ Mr. Depaw wanted to talk to him about. He didn&rsquo;t worry long about it,
+ however, but went home and to bed as quickly as possible, for he had
+ formed a habit of rising at six o&rsquo;clock in the morning to study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The days passed quickly until Wednesday, and the afternoon of that day
+ found Archie in the waiting-room of Mr. Depaw&rsquo;s office. He had not long to
+ sit there after sending in his card, for the busy man received him as soon
+ as he could get rid of his present visitor. He shook Archie warmly by the
+ hand as he entered, and then, pulling two chairs together, they sat down.
+ &ldquo;I have been thinking for some time,&rdquo; said Mr. Depaw, &ldquo;that I need a sort
+ of private secretary. Of course I have men here at the office who take
+ dictation from me, and who fulfil the duties of a secretary to a certain
+ extent, but I want a young man who can attend somewhat to my personal
+ affairs; I want one whom I can trust, and one who is likely to grow as he
+ works along, so that eventually he may be able to fill any place I may
+ have open for him.&rdquo; Then he stopped a moment, and Archie felt his heart
+ beating very fast beneath his coat. He waited almost breathlessly to hear
+ what Mr. Depaw would say next.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ever since I met you first,&rdquo; he at last went on, &ldquo;I have somehow thought
+ that you are the kind of a young fellow I would like. You are ambitious,
+ you are persevering, and you are willing to learn. You say, too, that you
+ know shorthand, and I know that you are a good penman. You have seen quite
+ a little of the world, I am sure, and I think you can prove yourself equal
+ to almost any occasion. The only question is whether you will care to give
+ up reporting for a position of this kind. I can assure you that I will pay
+ you as much as you are earning now, and I shall be glad to offer you a
+ home at my house, because I shall want you at my right hand all the time.
+ Do you think you will care to take the place?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie could hardly speak, it was all so wonderful, but finally he
+ recovered himself sufficiently to explain his hesitancy in accepting the
+ position. &ldquo;I would like just one day,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to consult with my
+ friends on the newspaper. You see Mr. Jennings and Mr. Van Bunting have
+ been very good to me, and I shouldn&rsquo;t care to leave them now if they
+ object very strongly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s quite right, quite right,&rdquo; said Mr. Depaw. &ldquo;I can appreciate your
+ feelings, and you can tell the editor that you will have some time for
+ writing, and that you will contribute occasional articles to his paper.&rdquo;
+ Archie was now delighted. &ldquo;Oh, thank you,&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;I am sure I can come
+ now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, come in at this time to-morrow,&rdquo; said Mr. Depaw, &ldquo;and let me know
+ what you have decided to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie hurried at once to Mr. Jennings&rsquo;s office to tell him the good news.
+ He wondered how his friend would take it, but all his fears were soon put
+ at rest. &ldquo;Archie,&rdquo; said Mr. Jennings, &ldquo;this is the best opportunity you
+ can ever have to improve yourself in every way. Mr. Depaw is a man highly
+ respected all over the country, and a man who is known to be extraordinary
+ in many ways. Association with such a man will do more for you than four
+ years in college, and you will make a mistake if you do not accept his
+ offer. Of course we shall all be sorry to lose you here, but, as Mr. Depaw
+ says, you will have some time for writing, and we hope you will always
+ continue to do some work for us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie could almost have thrown his arms about Mr. Jennings&rsquo;s neck to hug
+ him for his splendid feeling, and when, a little later, Mr. Van Bunting
+ said practically the same thing, he felt that he had never known two such
+ men. He assured them both that he would never forget them, but would try
+ and spend as much time as possible in the Enterprise office.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day he called again on Mr. Depaw, and told him of his decision to
+ accept the place, and the good man seemed overjoyed. &ldquo;I will see that you
+ never forget it, Archie,&rdquo; he said. It was arranged for him to begin work
+ the very next day. &ldquo;You can transfer your things to my house as soon as
+ you like, for your room is waiting for you, and I will begin to-morrow to
+ teach you how to do things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now Archie found it hard to leave the dear little room in the quaint
+ old square, which was looking now just as when he saw it first. The leaves
+ in the trees were turning brown and gold, and Archie realised that he had
+ been away from home more than a year. &ldquo;Oh, I must go back soon,&rdquo; he said
+ to himself, &ldquo;or I shall simply die of homesickness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a couple of days he was installed as a member of the Depaw household,
+ and he soon felt at home there. Every one was very kind to him, he was
+ given a handsome room, and everything seemed almost perfect. One of the
+ best things about it all was that he had access to the fine library, and
+ he longed for the long winter evenings when he could devour the many
+ interesting books he saw there. He was soon initiated into his work, and
+ it was much easier than he had expected. Mr. Depaw, of course, started him
+ very gradually, so that he learned as he went along. Every morning at
+ eight o&rsquo;clock he was in the library with Mr. Depaw, taking dictation, and
+ receiving instructions for the day. They remained together here until ten
+ o&rsquo;clock, when Mr. Depaw either walked or drove to his office. Archie
+ always accompanied him, and took charge of some of the mail there,
+ attending to it during the morning. Then at noon he returned to the house,
+ where he spent the afternoon in writing the letters which had been
+ dictated in the morning, and in doing various things for Mr. Depaw. The
+ evenings he always had to himself, and he had no difficulty in finding
+ enough to do at home without going out. He almost invariably passed the
+ evenings in reading, but occasionally he was asked to accompany the family
+ to some musical event at the opera house, for they had soon learned of his
+ love for music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In work and study the winter passed quickly and happily for Archie, who
+ now felt quite at ease amid his elegant surroundings. His only wish was
+ that he might go home, and as spring approached Mr. Depaw promised him
+ that he should have a short vacation. The suggestion of Mr. Depaw that
+ Archie&rsquo;s mother come to New York for a week was heartily accepted by
+ Archie, but when he wrote home Mrs. Dunn replied that she would rather
+ wait for Archie at home. She had never visited New York, and felt that she
+ wouldn&rsquo;t like it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bill Hickson came over very often from the navy yard, and was always a
+ welcome visitor at Mr. Depaw&rsquo;s office. He didn&rsquo;t seem to care for his work
+ in Brooklyn, however, and Archie finally requested a place for him about
+ the elegant new station which the road had just constructed in the city.
+ Mr. Depaw very readily gave him an excellent position, one which he could
+ keep always if he so desired. And Bill was highly pleased with his new
+ work, so much so that he surprised them all one day in the spring by
+ leading into the once a young lady whom he introduced as his wife. Of
+ course Archie was very much pleased at this new development, for he had
+ often thought that his friend must be very lonely, living in a
+ boarding-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The days were all busy ones for Archie now. He had learned the work so
+ thoroughly that he was given more than ever to do, and he still continued
+ to write, too, for the Enterprise. He worked too hard, however, and in
+ April he looked so thin that Mr. Depaw sent him home for a week&rsquo;s rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ DECIDES TO VISIT HOME&mdash;A GREAT RECEPTION IN THE TOWN&mdash;A PUBLIC
+ CHARACTER NOW&mdash;DINNER TO THE HUT CLUB&mdash;DEMONSTRATION AT THE TOWN HALL&mdash;
+ A TELEGRAM FROM HIS EMPLOYER LEAVING FOR EUROPE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ IT was a beautiful April day. There had been a light shower in the
+ morning, and now everything looked as fresh and green as possible all
+ along the railway. Archie lay back in his comfortable Wagner seat,
+ admiring the beauties of spring, and thinking, too, of the days he spent
+ in walking along this very road. It seemed hard to believe that he was now
+ secretary to the president of this railroad, and that he was returning
+ home, after a year and a half, a very successful young man. He had much to
+ think of in the hours it would take him to reach the little town. He tried
+ to remember everything about the place, and his mother as he saw her last,
+ and it wasn&rsquo;t at all difficult for him to do so. But, oh, how he hoped
+ that things had not changed! He almost dreaded going home for fear he
+ would find things different.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had changed, that much was sure. He knew that he had grown to look much
+ older than his years, and he knew that he was not looking particularly
+ strong. He used to be so sturdy, and he had such a splendid colour in his
+ cheeks. Mother would be sorry to see him now, but of course he would be
+ sure to improve very much during the week he was to remain among old
+ friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was very anxious to see his boy friends, the members of the Hut Club,
+ and the boys and girls who were in his class at school. He had telegraphed
+ his mother that he was coming, so she would probably tell the boys about
+ it. He was sure they would be there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the stations looked more familiar. This one just passed was near the
+ Tinch farm, and Archie remembered the days he spent working for old Hiram,
+ and how he had suffered. He wondered if the farmer had ever seen any
+ copies of the Enterprise. It would be very interesting to him to know that
+ his chore-boy was now a secretary to a millionaire. This next station he
+ remembered very well indeed, because he used to come here every fall to
+ visit the county fair, where he marvelled at the wonderful things he saw
+ in the side-shows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now the train was entering the limits of his own town. Here was the
+ old elevator, and the machine shop near the railway track. And, oh, there
+ was his own home, looking green and pleasant as the train sped by. It
+ almost brought tears to Archie&rsquo;s eyes to think that he was so soon to see
+ his mother. Now they had reached the station, and he stood upon the car
+ platform ready to alight. My, what a crowd there was! and why did they
+ cheer as he made his appearance? All at once it dawned upon him that all
+ these people were here to meet him, and to bid him welcome home. He could
+ hardly speak as he found himself in his mother&rsquo;s arms, and then he began
+ to shake the hands of the big crowd. They were all old friends, and then
+ there was the mayor, and the superintendent of schools, and quite a
+ delegation of leading citizens. How nice it was of them to welcome him in
+ this way!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After awhile the handshaking was over, and the mayor was able to get a few
+ minutes with Archie. &ldquo;We are all very proud of what you have
+ accomplished,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and we want to give you a public reception
+ to-morrow night in the town hall, if you don&rsquo;t object.&rdquo; Archie stared
+ blankly at the mayor, and it was several moments before he realised the
+ meaning of the words. Then he was almost overcome. It was almost too good
+ to be true, it seemed, but he warmly thanked the mayor, and told him how
+ he appreciated the honour which they had done him. He said that he would
+ be glad to attend the reception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crowd was scattering now, and Archie, wild to reach home, took his
+ mother to a carriage, in which they drove rapidly out to the little house
+ among the trees and arbours. The old town looked beautiful in every way.
+ The great maple and oak trees along the road were green with new leaves,
+ and every dooryard was bright with snowballs and yellow roses. &ldquo;This is
+ the very best time of the year,&rdquo; he said to his mother, &ldquo;and I am the very
+ happiest boy in all the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I am the happiest mother,&rdquo; was the answer. Then they sat in silence
+ until they reached the old home. They entered by the kitchen door, and,
+ once inside, and seated in the old cane rocking-chair, Archie bowed his
+ head in tears of joy at being home with mother once again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hours which followed were sweet with joy. Mrs. Dunn busied herself in
+ preparing the supper, and Archie hung around the kitchen, telling some of
+ the many things he had planned to tell. Mrs. Dunn was smiling, and Archie
+ thought her the sweetest mother any boy could have. She was changed
+ somewhat, but she looked very young to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Supper over, Archie went over the fence to see the Sullivan boys, and he
+ found them looking much the same. He was truly glad to see them, and they,
+ of course, were glad to see him, too, though at first they were just a
+ little bashful, remembering, no doubt, all the things which had happened
+ to Archie since they saw him last. The boys were soon telling all about
+ the Hut Club, though, and Archie learned to his joy that it was still a
+ flourishing organisation. &ldquo;We spoke of you every time we were together,&rdquo;
+ said Jack, &ldquo;and we always wished you were back again.&rdquo; Archie was
+ delighted to hear that he had been missed, and all at once an idea came to
+ him which he put into execution three days later. He determined to give an
+ elegant dinner to this club of boys, and the very next day he sent to New
+ York for a caterer to arrange it. He wanted it to be something finer than
+ any of the boys had ever seen, and it certainly turned out to be so. The
+ caterer did his best, and when, three days later, the Hut Club sat down
+ together for the first time in more than eighteen months, they partook of
+ a dinner which would have done credit to Mr. Depaw&rsquo;s table. It was a
+ memorable night for them all, and every boy enjoyed himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archie enjoyed this Hut Club dinner more than anything else while he was
+ at home, though of course the great event of his stay was the public
+ reception at the Town Hall on the second evening after his arrival. This
+ was a truly grand affair. The town authorities hired a brass band, which
+ played inside the hall and out, and there was such a crowd in attendance
+ that many were turned away from the doors. It was a night that Archie will
+ never be able to forget. He sat on the platform, in company with the mayor
+ and other town officials, and he listened to several speeches
+ congratulating him on what he had accomplished since leaving the town.
+ Then he had to get up and tell them all of his experiences, from the time
+ he left until now. He told it in a simple manner, but from the close
+ attention he received it was evident his audience was deeply interested.
+ When he had finished, there were calls for &ldquo;three cheers for Archie Dunn,&rdquo;
+ and they were given with a will. Then Archie, rising from his seat, called
+ for &ldquo;three cheers for the President of the United States,&rdquo; and they, too,
+ were given, for Archie had told them all his feelings on the subject of
+ the President&rsquo;s policy in the war. After this there were three cheers for
+ Mr. Depaw, whom one man said would be the next United States Senator from
+ the State. The meeting closed with some cheers for the New York
+ Enterprise, and then followed a long siege of handshaking for Archie, who
+ stood beside his mother on the floor in front of the platform. It was a
+ happy night for them both, and Mrs. Dunn said afterward that she could
+ never wish for anything more the rest of her life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fourth day of his visit was a Sunday, and, to Archie&rsquo;s joy, brave Bill
+ Hickson and his wife came up from the city to spend the day. What a jolly
+ time they had, all day long! They went to church in the morning, where
+ they saw all the people, it seemed, whom they hadn&rsquo;t seen before, and in
+ the afternoon there were many callers at the little house. The evening was
+ spent quietly by the happy four, talking of old times and plans for the
+ future. The town authorities were anxious to give Bill Hickson a reception
+ while he was in town, but the bashful hero declined the honour, and
+ returned with his wife to New York by the midnight train.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the two succeeding days Archie talked a great deal with his mother,
+ and finally gained her consent to come to New York to live in a year&rsquo;s
+ time. Mrs. Dunn had never really understood that Archie had so good a
+ position, but now that she realised what a splendid beginning he had made,
+ she was very willing to come and keep house for him. This question
+ settled, everything seemed wholly delightful in the cosy home, and Archie
+ settled down to enjoy the two remaining days of his visit in quiet rest.
+ He had already much improved during his stay, and was sure of going back
+ to the city feeling much better than for a long time past, and this made
+ Mrs. Dunn very happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Archie didn&rsquo;t stay his week out at home. On the fifth night he
+ attended a reception in his honour at one of the neighbours&rsquo; houses, and
+ he was just in the midst of a description of Tokio when a messenger boy
+ entered with a telegram for him. He opened it at once, and read it aloud
+ to the company:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear Archie,&rdquo; it said, &ldquo;return as soon as possible. I sail for Europe on
+ Saturday&rsquo;s steamer to remain six months, and wish you to accompany me.&rdquo; It
+ was signed by Mr. Depaw, and there was great applause from the crowd when
+ he finished reading it. But Archie&rsquo;s face was a study. He wasn&rsquo;t sure
+ whether he wanted to go to Europe or not, but of course there was no
+ question about what he should do. He at once telegraphed a reply, saying
+ that he would reach the city to-morrow at noon, leaving home on the early
+ morning train.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course the reception soon broke up, and Archie walked quietly home with
+ his mother, who was saddened at the prospect of losing him so soon again.
+ She soon brightened, however, and began to plan things for him to do
+ abroad, and soon she entered into the preparation for his departure with
+ all her heart. But Archie was not so soon made glad, and he didn&rsquo;t rest
+ until he made his mother promise to accompany him to the city on the
+ morrow to spend the two days previous to his departure in helping him get
+ ready. Mrs. Dunn wasn&rsquo;t anxious to make the trip, but for Archie&rsquo;s sake
+ she consented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And early the next morning they left for the city, where the time passed
+ rapidly until the hour of the steamer&rsquo;s sailing. At the pier they said
+ good-bye. Archie could hardly speak, but Mrs. Dunn was brave. &ldquo;Archie,&rdquo;
+ she said, &ldquo;God has been with you so far and he will keep you yet. And
+ remember that a boy with honest ambition will always get along. You are
+ sure to have friends about you always, for you have proved that you
+ possess energy, perseverance and a good heart.&rdquo; She said good-bye without
+ a tear, but as the steamer left the pier Archie saw, on looking back, a
+ sweet mother seated on a coil of rope, with her handkerchief to her eyes.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE END.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventures of a Boy Reporter, by
+Harry Steele Morrison
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>