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Title: The Boy Scouts of the Flying Squadron
Author: Shaler, Robert
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Boy Scouts of the Flying Squadron" ***


THE BOY SCOUTS OF THE FLYING SQUADRON
by
Scout Master Robert Shaler



CONTENTS

CHAPTERS
    I. The Two Wolf Patrol Boys
   II. A Camp Supper
  III. The Mysterious Explosion
   IV. Reading a "Sign" by Torchlight
    V. The "Fool-Proof" Aeroplane
   VI. A Red Letter Day in the Woods
  VII. Bud's Meteor
 VIII. Uncle Sam's Flying Squadron
   IX. Friends in Khaki
    X. Up in a War Monoplane
   XI. Good-By to the Foreign Spies
  XII. Home Again



CHAPTER I

THE TWO WOLF PATROL BOYS


"I want to own up that I'm pretty nearly all in and done for!"

"Same here, Bud.  The going was tough over that frozen side of old
Stormberg mountain.  Then we are carrying such loads into the bargain."

"For one, I'm glad we are nearly there, Hugh."

"Yes, another steady pull and we ought to strike the shanty.  We aimed
to get to it by nightfall, you remember, Bud."

"Yes, and after eating such a big Thanksgiving dinner, we've been
pretty spry to accomplish all we have.  Why, I haven't had a pull
anything like this since we broke camp last summer up at Pioneer Lake!"

"And we never could have done it only for the lift we got from
Farmer Badgely, going home from market.  That put us some miles on
the way.  If you've rested enough, Bud, perhaps we would better be on
the move again.  The sun is getting close to the diving line, you
notice."

"Here goes, then!"

With these words Bud Morgan, first-class scout and one of the leading
boys in the Wolf Patrol, inserted his arms in the loops of the pack
he was handling, and managed to heave it on to his sturdy back.

His companion did likewise, for each of them was "toting" much more
than the customary amount of luggage that a scout on the hike would
carry with him.

This comrade was an agile chap, about the same weight as Bud, but
with a wide-awake expression on his face that let everybody know in
the start that he was one of those born leaders who forge to the
front through circumstances often beyond their control.

Hugh Hardin was not only leader of the Wolf Patrol.  Sometimes he had
been deputized to act in place of the regular scout master of the
troop, when Lieutenant Denmead and Assistant Rawson chanced to be
called away and could not serve.  So well had Hugh carried out his
task on such occasions, it was generally accepted as a foregone
conclusion that in case the latter officer resigned, as he had lately
given hints of doing, Hugh would be elected in his stead.  There might
be a few boys in the troop, now consisting of four patrols, who would
prefer to see Alec Sands, leader of the Otters, placed in that elevated
position, but his popularity was confined to his particular chums,
while that of Hugh embraced members of every patrol.

On this day, Hugh and Bud had started from home immediately after
partaking of a glorious Thanksgiving feast.  As all preparations had
been made for this trip up into the wilderness many miles above the
home town, it was evident that they had a particular object in view;
which, in fact, was the case.

Bud Morgan was rather given to conjuring up new and sometimes
startling inventions.  These he usually tried upon some of his mates
and not always in a fashion to add to their peace of mind, either.
On more than one occasion in the past they had been suddenly
confronted by some innovation that for the moment rather demoralized
the valiant wearers of the scout khaki.

Bud had not been very successful in his wonderful inventions.  They
were apt to disappoint him in the severe testing out.  Theory might
be all very well, but when it came to practice there was generally
a screw loose in his figuring that could not be tightened; and, in
consequence, trouble often perched on Bud's shoulders.

During the late summer and early autumn he had been working on some
idea that seemed to have taken hold of his mind to a greater extent
than any previous effort had ever done.  His chums knew of it, but
no one had been able to coax Bud to let them share his confidence.

When the time came that Bud could not contain his secret any longer,
he had gone to the leader of his patrol and confessed.  At the same
time he managed to interest Hugh to such an extent that the other
promised to go off with him during the few days of grace granted by
the school authorities around "turkey-eating time" in late November,
so as to give his new invention at least a fair trial.

And this was why they had started so soon after the annual big dinner,
which fact in itself spoke volumes for the grit and determination
of the two lads.  Few boys would have been in condition to walk three
miles during the balance of the day.

They knew one fellow at least, Billy Worth, also a Wolf scout, who
was so fond of eating that doubtless at this very moment he was
stretched out at full length on the sofa in his den at home, trying
to figure how ever he could partake of supper after disposing of such
a stupendous amount of turkey and fixings.

In the previous stories of this series, the reader who may have been
fortunate enough to peruse them has come to know both Hugh and Bud
pretty well.  They have been followed through many adventures
calculated to prove their worth as scouts, and, taken on the whole,
it will be admitted that in most cases the boys carried off the
honors.  In the Wolf patrol, as well as among the Otters, Hawks,
and Foxes, there were other lads who were also animated by the
same sort of progressive spirit, and who never allowed an opportunity
to improve their minds or to broaden their knowledge of Nature
escape them.

After taking up their heavy burdens again, Hugh and his comrade
walked on for some time through the woods.  The leaves were well
off the trees, though the oaks still held their brown mantle, being
the very last to shed their summer coat.  It had frozen quite hard
for several nights previous, and some of the town boys had cherished
vague hopes that there might be ice for the Thanksgiving holidays, a
custom that used to prevail years before, according to the accounts
given by their parents.  As yet, however, only a covering an inch
or so thick had settled on the ponds, and of course the running river
showed no signs of congealing, so that skating would have to be
postponed to a later date.

Around the two scouts there lay a complete wilderness of trees.  Had
they searched high and low it is doubtful whether they could have
found a more lonely spot within twenty miles of home.

Stormberg Mountain, on which many of their previous adventures had
taken place, reared its peak on the right; and Rainbow Lake was
within two miles of their present location.  In selecting this place
for their little outing, Bud had probably figured that the chances
of their being disturbed or spied upon by any of the curious town
boys would be very slight.  And, like all modest inventors, Bud was
very shy about showing off until he could be certain that he had
actually something worth talking about to display.

The sun had seemed to hesitate upon the horizon, but now it took a
sudden dip below the earth's rim, and Bud exclaimed:

"Say, did you see the sun just slide out of sight then, as though he
was ashamed to leave us in the dark?  This place has all grown up
since I was here last, so I hope we'll get to the shack before night
really sets in."

"We will all right, Bud, so don't worry any," laughed Hugh, whose
aim it seemed to be to take things as philosophically as possible,
especially when they could not be changed.  "Right now I'm beginning
to recognize some familiar things around us.  There is that chestnut
that has thrown out three young suckers.  When it gets big, it will
make a land-mark worth talking about.  I noticed it the last time I
was through these woods."

"Yes, like as not," grumbled Bud, who was very tired, "if the old
chestnut bug that's killing all the trees in the next county doesn't
get up here next year and put the kibosh on our fine nut trees for
keeps.  Oh!  look at that rabbit spin out of that brush pile!  He's
on the jump, let me tell you!  Hugh, I'm beginning to recognize some
things around here, too, that I remember must have been close to the
shack.  There's the meadow clearing that I had in my mind when
choosing to come away up here to try out my latest wonder.  Yes, and
as sure as anything, I can hear the singing of that little waterfall
just below the big spring."

"It seems to tell _me_ that I'm thirsty enough to stop and get a
drink before going on.  The shack lies just back of that screen of
trees and bushes, anyway," Hugh remarked, as he turned slightly aside
and headed directly toward the quarter from whence that melodious
song arose.

Apparently Bud was of the same mind, for he instantly followed suit.
In another minute both scouts had deposited their packs on the hard
ground and were kneeling at the rim of the little basin where the
clear water, bubbling up from the sand, ran away in a busy stream
that as yet had not felt the chilling hand of Jack Frost.

Each boy produced a collapsible metal cup with which he could dip
into the sparkling spring.  This is a much better way than bending
down and sucking in great quantities of water, without knowing what
impurities may be swallowed.  Some scouts on their tramps even carry
a small filtering stone such as is used in the army, and this is
considered a wise precaution by thoughtful scout masters.

"Well, that tastes pretty fine," remarked Bud, after he had drunk his
fill and carefully replaced his cup in its receptacle; "and now to
get under cover.  I reckon the very first thing we ought to attend
to is getting a supply of wood indoors, so as to make the old shanty
feel comfortable.  I never think of a camp without seeing a camp
fire as the best thing in it.  It is that that binds scouts together
more than any other part of the outdoor game, I think.  Does it
strike you that way, too, Hugh?"

"Yes, I came to that conclusion," replied the leader of the Wolf
patrol, "after watching how anxious the boys always were to get
plenty of fuel ready long before night came.  Then you know a
fire stands for grub time, too, and that always appeals to scouts
who have done lots of things during the day to tire themselves out."

"That's so, I've had heaps of fun just watching Billy Worth's eyes
dance while he hauled firewood into camp.  With every armful he
seemed to be saying, 'There, that's going to help cook our supper
to-night!  And we're going to have fried onions, and potatoes and
ham omelette!'  I had half a notion to ask Billy to come along with
us on this trip, but somehow I hated to think of the fun he'd poke
at me in case my wonderful invention turned out to be a fizzle,
like so many of them have in the past.  I knew _you_ wouldn't give
me away, Hugh, if that happened,---and if I lived to tell the tale!
Well, I hope I can get my pack on my back again for the last hundred
feet; but it comes harder every time.  Thanks awfully for the poke,
Hugh; it did the business.  Now I'm in harness and ready to go on."

The two weary scouts staggered more or less as they started to push
through the last barrier of trees and brush.  They knew that they
would speedily discover the long deserted shack there among the
second growth thicket of young trees.  Indeed, it was hardly half
a minute later when Bud came to a sudden halt, at the same time
saying in a hoarse whisper:

"Hugh, look there, will you?  There's a light in the shanty!  What
do you think of the meanness of that?  After we've come all the
way up here just to keep to ourselves, then to find somebody camping
on the ground!  Shucks! It makes me feel as if it was a bad omen,
and right in the start, too!"



CHAPTER II

A CAMP SUPPER


The two boys stood there looking for a full minute.  Hugh had
discovered the presence of a light in the cabin about the same
time that Bud mentioned the fact.  It could be seen shining through
the aperture that had once been used as a window.  There was no
glass in this now, and a heavy shutter, hung on rusty hinges, gave
the only means of keeping out the cold air, though this had not
been closed by the unknown party within.

"Whoever can it be?" muttered the disgusted Bud, doubtless begrudging
that long tramp from the road where the friendly farmer had dropped
them.

"Perhaps some one who's thinking of using the old shanty as
headquarters while trapping this season," Hugh replied.  "You know
Ralph Kenyon used to take quite a lot of pelts around this region
before he joined the scouts and changed his mind about that sort of
thing."

"Then you don't think it could be a hobo?" queried Bud with a
relieved vein in his voice.

"Well, tramps nearly always stick close to the railroads, you know,"
the other observed with the air of one who had made it a point to
take note of such happenings; "and besides, what hobo would think
of wandering away up here so far from a base of supplies?  But we
can settle all that easy enough, Bud."

"By going on and breaking in on him, you mean?" questioned the other
eagerly.

"Yes, though perhaps first of all we'd do well to creep up and take
a look in at that opening.  A scout should be sure of his ground
before he takes a leap.  It isn't always so easy to go back again."

"All right, Hugh, let's start right in and have a squint at him.
Seems to me I get a whiff of cooking, don't you?"

"Yes, I noticed that, Bud; and also that he's got a fire burning in
there.  You can see it flicker, and that wouldn't happen if the
light came from a lantern, or even from a torch."

"Smells good, too.  That fellow knows how to cook, whoever he is,"
remarked the other scout, sniffing eagerly at the air as he spoke.
Hours had passed since dinner-time and they had had a hard tramp.

They advanced quickly though cautiously.  Their hearts were beating
faster than usual, perhaps because they had been carrying heavy
loads.  Then again there was a chance that the moment's excitement
had considerable to do with the quickening of their pulses.

Arriving alongside the wall of the lonely cabin that had been built
many years before by a man who meant to start a farm up in this
region, the boys hastened to glue their eyes to the opening.

What they saw astonished them and at the same time relieved their
feelings.  There was but a single occupant of the cabin, and he a boy
about their own age, also dressed in the khaki uniform of a scout.
He was busily engaged in cooking some supper, and apparently did not
suspect the presence of any one near by.

"Why, it's Ralph Kenyon!" gasped Bud. "Whatever can he be doing all
by himself up here?"

Hugh could give a guess.  He knew that in times past the young chap
in question had made it a practice to trap the little wild animals
that might still be found in the woods and swamps of that region,
for the sake of the money he could get for their fine furry pelts.
This was before he joined the scouts, which was soon after valuable
ore had been discovered on the Kenyon farm and a strip of land sold
to the railroad, these transactions placing the family on a secure
financial foundation.

Evidently as the cold weather came on, Ralph had been tempted to
wander over to his old stamping-grounds, not to set traps as of
yore or shoot any of the timid woods' animals for the sake of their
warm coats, but just to revive old recollections.

He had evidently fetched his double-barrel shotgun along with him,
since it stood in a corner; and he was evidently cooking a brace
of fat quail which he must have managed to knock down on his trip
up here.

From the way he cocked his head just then it seemed as though
Ralph must have thought he had heard some strange sound.  Perhaps
Bud had spoken louder than he had meant to do.  But then there
was no need of further holding back.  Ralph was a member of the
same troop as themselves, and while perhaps Bud would have preferred
not increasing the number of witnesses to his own triumph or rank
failure, he saw that it could not be helped.  And Bud was one
of those who can make the best of a bad bargain.  Besides, Ralph
was a good fellow, and generally well liked by his companions.

Instead of calling out and telling the boy inside the shack that
a couple of weary wayfarers had arrived and meant to join him,
Hugh saw fit to give the recognized signal of the Wolves: "_How-oo-oo_!"
twice repeated.

Then as Ralph sprang to the door to take away the prop with which he
had secured it, Hugh and Bud pushed into the interior of the cabin.

Ralph stared at them but seemed decidedly pleased, for he instantly
thrust out his hand in friendly greeting.

"Well, well, who'd think you would drop in on me as if you came from
the skies?" he was saying as he worked Hugh's arm like a milkman's
pump handle.  "You see, I've been coming out here for several years
every Thanksgiving afternoon to set my first traps of the season;
and while I don't expect ever to do it again, I just couldn't keep
from spending one night in the woods to revive old recollections.
But I'm tickled to death at the idea of having company, for it does
get mighty lonesome sometimes.  Whatever are you doing up here, Hugh
and Bud?"

So, as Hugh waited for his companion to explain, Bud began to tell
how he had been up to his old tricks again and believed that he had
invented something that was going to be a stunning success; also,
that he had coaxed accommodating Hugh to go off with him in order
to try it out in secret.

"Of course, since we find you in possession of the shanty where we
meant to put up for one or two nights," Bud continued, with a grin,
"why, I'll have to let you share my secret tomorrow when we start
to try it out.  Till then don't ask questions and I'll tell you no
lies.  And I want to inform you right now that what you're cooking
for supper sets my nerves on edge, it smells so good."

"That's lucky," remarked Ralph, "for I have just four more fat juicy
quail on hand.  I made a double shot into a covey that got up in
the brush.  If you fellows say the word, I'll start right away to
get them ready for the pan."

"You'll do nothing of the kind," chuckled Hugh, who, like Bud, had
deposited his burden in a corner, "we're only too glad of a chance
to help pluck a few feathers ourselves.  It's enough that you make
us a present of what you meant probably to take home to your mother."

"Oh! I can get others later on," observed Ralph, as he pointed
to the little heap of brown and black feathers which marked the
spot where the unused birds lay.  "You see, she's not feeling
very well, my mother, I mean, and somehow quail on toast always
appeals to her.  But while you're working there, let me make more
coffee.  Have you got cups and such things along in your packs, boys?"

"We have," declared the overjoyed Bud; "and this bird is just prime;
never saw a fatter one, I declare.  Say, Hugh, we didn't expect such
a bully treat as this, did we, when we aimed to get here in time to
cook supper?"

Preparations progressed rapidly.  As Ralph had already stowed away
quite a large quantity of wood for use during the night, that labor
was spared the two late arrivals, which fact pleased Bud very much.
He could work as hard as the next one when interested in what he was
doing, but gathering fuel had never appealed to him in the same way
it did to Billy Worth, who was all the time figuring out what
splendid things the wood could be used to cook.

As the three boys sat around eating the evening meal, they chatted in
a lively manner.  Hugh told how he and Bud had had a fine lift by
means of the farmer's wagon, and then continued:

"I suppose you started this morning, and on that account missed your
Thanksgiving turkey, Ralph?  But you said your mother was not
feeling well; and so perhaps the feast has been postponed at your
house to a more convenient time?"

"Just what it has," replied the other.  "You see my married sisters
are expected home on Saturday night, and so mother decided to let
the big dinner go until Sunday, when we'll all be together again.
I just took a snack to munch on at noon, and brought some things to
cook.  I got here two hours back, and had plenty of time to fix
things as I wanted them for my one night out."

"Perhaps you'll make it two, if we decide to stay that long, eh,
Ralph?" asked Bud, who was feeling much more warmly toward the other
since partaking of the delicious quail.  "You see, we've got plenty
of rations along for three, and you'd be as welcome to share with us
as a shower in June."

"I'll see about that to-morrow afternoon, Bud," replied the other.
"But before I forget it, I want to tell you boys about a couple of
queer men I happened to see while coming through the woods not more
than a mile or so away from here."

"P'raps timber prospectors" suggested Hugh; "I've known of such men
to come up in this region trying to spy out new fields for operating
their destructive saw-mills.  Somehow I hate to see the forest
wiped out that way.  A tree takes some hundreds of years to mature,
and then it goes down in a heap, to be sawed up into boards.  It
seems like a shame to me every time I think of how the timber is
disappearing.  I believe in the work of the Forest Reserve Board.
It's high time this country began to think of keeping what it's got
before everything is lost.  But tell us about these men that you saw.
They were not tramps, Ralph?"

"Oh, no, they were dressed too well for that," replied the other
quickly.  "I happened to sight them in time to duck behind a tree,
and they never once suspected that anybody was near.  One was a tall,
thin man, a German, I thought, while the other was dark and
short,---fact is, I took him for a Chinese, a Japanese or a Korean
from the color of his skin and his black bristling hair."

"That sounds interesting, anyway!" commented Bud.  Then he added with
a little amused laugh, "P'raps they've heard in some mysterious way,
Hugh, how a celebrated young inventor named Bud Morgan means to try
out his latest wonderful stunt, and they hope to steal the concrete
result of his budding genius.  But go on, Ralph.  What did they do
that looked suspicious?"

"Oh! their every action struck me as queer," Ralph continued.
"You see they talked in a low voice, put their heads close together,
looked all around as if they were afraid some one might be watching
them, and then moved off, always turning to the right and to the left.
You know when valuable iron ore was discovered on our farm, for a
long time afterward strange men came prowling around there.  It struck
me these fellows might be looking for something like that."

"Perhaps they're really civil engineers, meaning to run a line across
here in order to straighten the railroad and save time on through
trains," Hugh suggested, leaning back after finishing his meal.

"That might account for it," Ralph admitted, "though they acted
mighty strange to me.  I never let out a peep till they'd disappeared
from sight; and even then I thought it best to change my line of
advance for fear that I might stumble on the precious pair again.
Really now, I'd give a cooky to know just who and what they are,
and why they've come away up here where only charcoal burners can
be met as a rule."

Bud had opened his mouth to make some remark, sighing to think how
he was utterly unable to eat another bite, when there was a sudden
vivid flash as of lightning without that startled all the scouts;
and immediately following came a tremendous roar similar to a clap
of nearby thunder!



CHAPTER III

THE MYSTERIOUS EXPLOSION


"Wow! that was a stunner all right!" exclaimed Bud.  "Why, honest,
I could feel the ground shake under me when that thunder clap came!
And as I happened to be looking over there where the opening lies,
the flash nearly blinded me."

"Lightning and thunder in November is something you don't often meet,"
was the comment of Ralph, turning a perplexed face toward Hugh, as
though depending on the leader of the Wolf patrol to solve the puzzle.

Without saying a word, Hugh jumped to his feet and went outside to
take a look around.  He came back almost immediately, and his face
told them that his investigation instead of clearing up the mystery
had only added to it.

"What did you find out, Hugh?" questioned Bud.

"Not a single cloud to be seen in all the sky!" said the other
impressively.

"Whew! that seems queer, doesn't it?" faltered Bud.

"And it must be almost down to freezing, into the bargain," added
the patrol leader.  "I've seen lightning before, in February even,
but always during a thaw.  Fact is, boys, I can't believe that it was
either lightning or thunder we saw and heard."

"But, Hugh, what could it have been then?" demanded Ralph.

"If we were nearer the granite quarries, I'd say they had set off an
extra big blast.  You know we sometimes hear a faraway boom over home.
Sound travels many miles when there's a sub-strata of rock like a
ledge to act as a conductor."

"Yes, but then I understood work had stopped there for the season
the Saturday before Thanksgiving," volunteered Bud.  "Still, they
may be doing some blasting, just to keep things moving as long
as the snow holds off.  If that was a blast of dynamite, it must
have been a stunner to make the earth quiver so much."

Hugh made no reply.  Plainly he was deeply impressed with the
mysterious nature of the unannounced explosion.  And when once Hugh
started to find out what things meant, he seldom let the matter
drop until he had accomplished his purpose.

Bud also went to the door and looked out, his curiosity having been
duly aroused.  Hence he did not hear Ralph make a significant
admission.

"Now that I come to think of it," the other remarked, "for the last
two nights I can remember hearing a distant, dull sound that I
thought was a heavy blast off in this quarter.  I chanced to be
outdoors each night about ten o'clock.  It's come much earlier
this time, it seems; but, anyhow, that is getting to be a regular
nightly performance I wonder if they are working over in the granite
quarries?  I'm something of a sticker when anything bothers me like
this, and for three cents I'd take a turn over that way to-morrow
just to satisfy my mind."

"I was wondering whether those two men you saw could have had
anything to do with that queer crash and flash?" suggested Hugh
slowly.

"Ginger! I wonder now!" exclaimed Ralph, who apparently had not
thought to connect the pair of strangers with the mysterious goings-on.
"But they didn't seem to have anything along with them at that
time.  I remember seeing the taller man take something out of his
pocket and examine it, Hugh; and at the time it struck me the shiny
object looked mighty like one of these modern automatic pistols."

Hugh shook his head as though, try as he would, as yet he could see
no way of solving the puzzle.  Just then Bud came back, having fixed
the door the same way he had found it, with the loose board used as
a prop to keep it in position.

"Just as you said, Hugh," he announced, "it's clear as a bell, with
a young moon hanging low in the western sky and the stars shining
like all get-out.  No siree, thunder never yet was heard on a night
like this.  So I guess it must have been a blast.  They do say
dynamite shakes the ground a heap more than powder, because its
force is always directed downward.  If you put a cartridge on top
of a big rock and fire it, the boulder is shattered to pieces.
Powder you've got to put underneath every time."

"Correct, Bud, you go up to the head of the class," laughed Hugh.

"I wanted to ask Ralph if when he used to camp around here last
winter he ever knew the air to be clear enough to hear the noise
of the mill over at town?"

"Why, it's a good many miles away," returned Ralph, "and I don't
know that I ever did hear what you say.  But what makes you ask
that, Bud?"

"Oh! the atmosphere must be doing its prettiest then, to-night,"
came the answer.  "While I was standing just outside the door I
could hear the plain rattle of the machinery, though it died away
quick enough.  I understand that business is so good that they're
running a night shift at the mills.  And sounds can be heard a
long way off after sunset, can't they, Hugh?"

"That's all as true as anything, Bud, though if you'd asked me my
opinion before you spoke, I would have said it was foolish to think
we could hear the mills so far away as this, no matter how clear
the frosty air might be."

"Well, that may be," remarked the other boy doggedly; "but I did hear
machinery pounding away at a right merry pace, give you my word on
that.  I even stepped out further and looked around, but there
wasn't a thing in sight, only the stars shining up there and the
little horned moon dropping down close to the horizon."

"We came up here thinking we'd be all alone and could do what we'd
planned without being interrupted," observed Hugh, "but seems as
though we've dropped on the queerest sort of a mystery the very
first thing.  And as scouts always stand to investigate what they
don't understand, I reckon we'll have our hands full prying into
this thing."

"But don't let it make my affairs take second place, Hugh," pleaded
Bud.  "What if some fellow does happen to be using up explosives by
the cartload, that oughtn't to interfere with the trying out of the
little invention which the brain of a Morgan has conjured up, and
which, if successful, will be a blessing to science, as well as to
aviators in particular."

Ralph pricked up his ears at hearing these last few words.  No doubt
they set him to wondering what Bud had invented now; but the latter
did not take the time or trouble to let him into the secret, so
Ralph just had to possess his soul in patience.

"You needn't think that I'll let anything drag me away from the first
object of our trip up here, Bud," soothed the patrol leader, who knew
how deeply in earnest his chum was.  "But it may be that we'll find
the time to look into this other business, too.  If more shocks come
that are as bad as that one was, we're not apt to get much sleep
to-night, boys."

"Then here's hoping they'll stay away," wished Bud.  "Why, a few
more shocks like that would start all my joints loose, I do believe!
Could that have been a meteor bursting, do you think, Hugh?"

"Well, that's a new idea," admitted the other, "and one that didn't
come to me, I'll own up.  A meteor can fall at any old time, day
or night, though we only see them shooting after dark sets in.
When one of these fragments of fused metal and slag does rush
toward the earth and bury itself in the ground, it makes just
such a brilliant flash.  Some say there is a fearful crash when
it strikes.  Stranger things have happened, I take it, Bud, than
to believe that was a falling meteor of a pretty good size."

"But don't shooting stars generally fall in the summer time, Hugh?"
questioned Bud.

It had become a habit with most of the scouts to ask the Wolf
leader any and all sorts of questions, as though he might be looked
upon as a walking encyclopedia or dictionary; and it kept Hugh
pretty busy accumulating information in order to be well posted for
these constant demands on his time and patience.

"Yes, I believe the earth does pass through the greatest showers
of meteors in August, but then there are lots of them loose at any
time.  I've read of some remarkable ones being dug out of the earth
in various places.  If this should prove to be a big meteor and we
could find where it struck, it would be a feather in the caps of
the scouts.  Some old professor would be hustling up this way as
soon as we let them know at Yale or Harvard."

"Then we'll try to find where it struck!" declared Ralph.

"It would be as bad as hunting for a needle in a haystack in all
this big wilderness," ventured Bud; "though there'd be no harm in
our trying,---that is, if I'm in any shape to go with you after I've
had my little innings."

Again did Ralph wear a puzzled frown as he heard Bud make this
significant remark.  He must have wondered more than ever what it
could possibly be that the other had conceived this time.  On other
occasions his efforts, while ambitious, had ended in smoke, and the
rest of the boys often quizzed poor Bud most unmercifully on account
of his shortcomings.  But then, all great inventors must make a
beginning.  It is not expected that genius can take the saddle at
one bound.  Persistence counts more in such cases than anything else.

The fellow who has faith in himself is apt to get there in the end,
no matter what grievous disappointments waylay him on his course;
that is, if he really amounts to more than a flash in the pan.  Bud
sometimes comforted himself with reflections along this order.  He
was not easily cast down, and that counted for a good deal.

The three scouts sat in the shack crosslegged, like so many Turks,
and chatted busily as time passed on.  Ralph was easily induced
to speak of his various experiences when he used to trap in this
same neighborhood during past winters.  He had run across a number
of strange things that were well worth telling; and Hugh especially
showed the keenest kind of interest in all he had to say.

Bud, like most promising candidates among those destined to become
truly great, had a habit of forgetting that there were others
present besides himself.  He would fall into a reflective mood and
knit his brow as though wrestling with grave problems, upon the
solving of which the fate of nations depended.

Ralph knew all about the habits of foxes, mink, otter, weasels,
muskrats, raccoons, 'possums and divers other small fur-bearing
animals such as give up their warm coats for the purpose of keeping
ladies' hands and necks comfortable during wintry blasts.  He had
had many amusing experiences with some of them, and as the scout
patrol leader never wearied of learning interesting facts at first
hand, Ralph was kept busy talking and answering questions, until
considerable time had slipped by and there was Bud yawning as
though threatening to dislocate his jaws.

"Guess we'd better be thinking of bunking down for the night,"
suggested Hugh.  "Did you fetch a blanket along with you, Ralph?"

"Well, I'm too old a hand to be caught napping in the woods without
thinking of the night that is coming," replied the other, laughing
at the same time.  "Over in the corner you'll see the bully red
blanket that's hugged me tight on many a cold night when I was
tending my line of traps.  I feel that it is like an old friend
when I get it tucked around me, and you'd think I was an Esquimo
lying there, or one of those mummies they get out of Mexican catacombs."

"That's all right," Hugh declared; "I thought you were too sensible
to come up here and spend a night at this time of year without
something to keep you from freezing.  Why, even on a summer night
that starts in hot, it's apt to feel chilly along about three in
the morning.  I've seen the time when I'd have given a heap to have
my blanket along; and the only thing I could do was to get up and
start the fire booming again."

The three boys started to pick out the best spots for making their
beds, each one being governed by some idea of his own.  It was lucky
they did not all think alike, or they must have drawn straws for
first choice.

Hugh was carefully laying his blanket down so that he could crawl
into it as if it were a bag, after he had taken his shoes and some
of his outer clothing off, when he felt a gentle tug at his sleeve.

"Hugh!" said a soft voice in a whisper.

"What is it, Ralph?" questioned the other, going right along with what
he was doing in order not to show that there was anything amiss.

"Don't act as if I was saying anything out of the common, Hugh," said
the other; "but first chance you get, peep out of the tail of your
eye at the broken window, and you'll find that we're being watched!"



CHAPTER IV

READING A "SIGN" BY TORCHLIGHT


Of course it gave the leader of the Wolf patrol a thrill when he
heard this low warning from Ralph.  You never would have known it,
though, from any uneasy movement on his part.

He knew that the boy who had spent so much of his time in the woods,
trapping the cunning little furry inhabitants in seasons gone by,
would not alarm him needlessly.  And so, watching his chance, Hugh
managed to shoot a glance toward the opening without betraying the
fact that he was particularly interested in that quarter.

As he did so, he was just in time to see a face vanish from view.
In fact, he barely caught a fleeting glimpse of it, and yet Hugh felt
perfectly sure that he had not alarmed the watcher in any way.

The cause of the unknown party's sudden withdrawal was speedily made
plain.  Bud seemed to be gasping, and immediately whispered hoarsely:

"Great guns! did you see that, fellows?  As sure as my name's Bud
Morgan there was a man peeking in at the window there!  Honest Injun,
there was!"

Undoubtedly the unknown visitor must have discovered Bud staring
straight at him, and thought it high time to disappear.

"Yes, we both saw him, Bud," said Hugh, rather disappointed that, after
all, the fellow had been chased away before they could find out his
identity or what he wanted, prowling around in such a suspicious way.

"Who in the dickens was it?" exclaimed Bud, evidently growing angry
now that his astonishment had worn away.  "The nerve of him, poking
his nose in where it isn't wanted!  Why don't we get a move on and
chase after him?  Ralph, remember that you've got your scatter-gun
handy.  Don't forget to take that, will you?"

"Did you recognize that face, Ralph?" asked the practical scout leader,
turning to the young trapper of the past.

"I think---yes, I'm nearly dead sure it was one of the two men I saw
acting in such a suspicious way this afternoon," came the answer.

"Which one, would you say?" continued Hugh.

"The taller one," came from Ralph without hesitation.  "I think you
said he looked a little like the German type, wasn't that about it,
Ralph?"

"Yes, that was what I believed at the time I saw him," replied the
other.

He had already stepped over and picked up his gun.  There was a
gleam in his eyes that told of a spirit aroused.  Ralph had become
a scout and was to the best of his ability trying to live up to the
duties of one belonging to the organization; but of course there were
times when the old spirit would come to the surface.  The present
occasion was one of these moments.

"Let's go outside and look around," Hugh suggested.

"Bully idea!" muttered the impatient Bud; and having no gun to grasp,
he made a lunge for the stout stick which Ralph had been using as a
sort of poker when the fire needed attention.

Hugh did something still more practical.  He stooped down and calmly
selected a certain blazing brand from the fire.  This was of such a
nature that when properly handled it could be made to serve as a
pretty fair torch.

When Bud saw what the patrol leader was doing, he grunted and
nodded his head as though comprehending things.  Bud always could
"see through a mill-stone that had a hole in it," as he was accustomed
to say; in so many words, he was quick to grasp things after some
smarter fellow had blazed the way.  A "hint was as good as a nod"
to Bud.

"Fine thing, Hugh!" he commented admiringly.  He realized how valuable
such a light might prove under the circumstances.

Ralph removed the piece of board that served to hold the door shut,
and boldly led the way outside.  The others pressed closely at his
heels, Hugh holding the spluttering torch above his head and Bud
gripping his club with the full intention of using it should the
occasion warrant such action.

All was dark and still without.  The night wind moaned in the branches
of the trees where the leaves had fallen, or rustled the brown foliage
of the oaks; but they could see no hostile form.

"Oh! he skipped out, all right, sure he did!" declared Bud, with
something like a sneer in his voice.  "He knew I had glimpsed him,
and he didn't have the nerve to hold over and meet us face to face.
Wonder if it would make him run any faster if you banged away a
couple of times with your gun, Ralph?"

The idea did not seem to appeal to Ralph, however, for he made not
the slightest effort to act upon it.  Standing there, he stared around
at the gloomy woods and waited to see what Hugh would so.

The latter had also taken a fair survey of the singular picture as
seen by the weird light of the torch.  Presently he stepped forward
and turned the corner of the shack.  Ralph followed him closely,
while Bud, still holding his cudgel in an aggressive manner, posted
himself at the corner, where he could not only watch what the other
fellows did but at the same time keep an eye on the door.  He did
not mean to leave the way open for anybody to sneak into the shack
while their attention was directed elsewhere,---not if he knew his
duty, and he believed he did.

Now Hugh, being an experienced scout, first of all thought to make
sure that they had really been spied upon.  This he knew could be
readily ascertained by examining the ground under the opening called
a window.  Men can hardly stand on ordinary soil without leaving
some sort of impression there.  And those boys who have spent many
a vacation in the woods, studying Indian tactics as applied to the
life of a scout, know how to read such signs almost as easily as
they might the printed page of a book.

Bending down therefore at the suspected spot, Hugh quickly pointed out
the imprint of feet to Ralph.

"That proves it!" exclaimed the other as he flung a hasty glance over
his shoulder, apparently half suspecting that the object of their
conversation might suddenly burst upon his vision.

"Yes, it's easy to see he was standing here after creeping on his
hands and knees," Hugh remarked, still studying the marks.  "And
he's wearing a pretty fine pair of modern shoes into the bargain;
which shows that the men you saw were _not_ tramps.  At the same
time, Ralph, I can't believe they were timber-cruisers, either,
looking for new belts of forest that could be bought up.  Whenever
I've seen one of those men, he wore laced hunting shoes that came
half way to the knee, so as to protect his legs against snake-bites
and thorns while pushing through the scrub.  No, this man has rather
a dainty foot, and it strikes me as mighty queer he should be
wandering around here."

"What are we going to do next?" asked Ralph, looking as though he
stood ready to carry out any suggestion Hugh might make, even to
chasing around and trying to follow the trail of the fleeing spy.

"Nothing, that I can see," answered Hugh; "and so let's go in again.
We can talk it over better there than out here, you know."

Two minutes later and they were once more indoors.  Seated before
the fire, they canvassed the matter thoroughly.  From every angle
they tried to penetrate the mystery, but it seemed to baffle them.

"I had an experience once that makes me sort of think they may be
keepers from some asylum looking for an escaped lunatic," Hugh
finally remarked; "though if that were the case, they'd be apt to
wear some sort of gray uniform, and you didn't say anything about
that, Ralph."

"Yes," added the other, quickly, "but if that's what they were, why
should they act so queer?  Wouldn't two such men want to scrape an
acquaintance with us scouts, so as to get a few pointers?  I don't
think that covers the bill, Hugh."

"And I didn't, either, when I spoke of it," the patrol leader said,
as he smiled and nodded his head.  "But perhaps Bud may set us right.
I can see from the look on his face that he has a brilliant idea."

"Oh, shucks!  I don't know how brilliant it is," the party mentioned
hastened to remark, "but you're welcome to my thought.  Suppose there
happened to be some desperate men hiding up here in these woods, say
counterfeiters, for instance?  I've heard that such fellows always
try to pick a lonely place to do their work in. Well, the Government
always sends out smart men belonging to the Secret Service to round
these chaps up.  I was speculating on whether those two strangers
Ralph saw mightn't be detectives.  I reckon they looked as if they
wanted to detect, all right; and let me tell you, p'raps we're
under the ban of suspicion right now."

Bud ended his remarks in a rather awed voice, but neither of the others
seemed to be at all worried.  Indeed, Hugh chuckled as though amused.

"It may be that you've guessed the right answer, Bud," he said, "but
all the same I don't believe it.  There's something deeper about
those men than that.  And unless I miss my guess, we'll find in the
end, if we learn anything at all, that they've got some sort of
connection with that queer flash and crash that gave us such a scare
earlier in the night."

Bud stared at Hugh on hearing this.

"Whee! do you really think so, Hugh?" he muttered, as though trying
to grasp what all this might stand for, and yet hardly able to
comprehend its full significance.

After all their talk, however, they were really no nearer a solution
of the matter in the end than when they started to discuss it.  Hugh
said they would have to wait and see what turned up next, before
settling on any one explanation and both the other scouts agreed
with him.

So they finally prepared to lie down and get what sleep was possible,
which under the conditions could hardly be expected to amount to a
great deal.

Their blankets were folded in such fashion as to give them the best
results.  This wrinkle they had learned in the field of practical
experience, than which there is no better guide.  Theory is all very
well, but the book-taught scout has a great many ideas to change
when he gets out into the open, with the stars shining down on him
from the blue vault of heaven and the voices of Nature surrounding
him on every side, instead of the bare ceiling and walls of his
bedroom at home.

That night certainly dragged along fearfully.  Every now and then one
of the boys would turn over and grunt, or else raise his head to look
around him at the flickering light of the fire on the walls of the
lonely woods' shack.

As many as six times did Hugh crawl out from the warm folds of his
blanket to replenish the fire, for the night air was chill; and after
one has slept, his body is apt to feel cold, as the heart beats
less rapidly, and the blood circulates with more difficulty.

But thank goodness, these things must all have an end, and Bud heaved
a sigh of profound thanksgiving when finally he saw signs of dawn
appear through the open window.

"Day's coming on, and we're all on deck with nothing gone wrong!" he
observed loud enough for the others to hear him.  This chanced to be
one of Bud's ways of informing his chums that he thought it high
time they turned out for "reveille."

As there was no use in trying to sleep any longer with the anxious Bud
on deck, since this was to be looked upon as his particular day, Hugh
and Ralph followed the other's example, and were soon hustling out to
wash in water that nearly froze their fingers it was so cold.

The sun was nearing the horizon, and from all indications it promised
to be just such a day as the one before had proved; which fact
delighted Bud immensely.

"Because," he explained after giving an exhibition of a Highland Fling
to allow some of his pent-up enthusiasm to escape, "this is the day
a Morgan is going to win fame or else make the grandest foozle you
ever saw."



CHAPTER V

THE "FOOL-PROOF" AEROPLANE


"That was a good breakfast, all right, but I'm glad it's over," Bud
remarked some time later.

Ralph, of course, did not exactly understand what this meant, but
Hugh knew.  He was in the confidence of the young inventor far enough
to appreciate his eagerness to be at work.  He knew what had brought
Bud all the way up to this lonely spot, in order that none of the
town boys might spy upon him while trying out his latest wonderful
invention.

Truth to tell, Bud had taken a most intense interest in aviation of
late.  Everything that bore upon the subject fascinated the boy, and
he dreamed of making the name of Morgan famous through some
remarkable invention connected with the work of the daring airmen.

He had confessed to Hugh in strict confidence that he had managed to
fashion a little model aeroplane that he believed to be uncapsizable.
Many more mature minds than that of Bud Morgan had been wrestling with
this important question for years, because it was pretty generally
understood that when this condition had been really attained, the
sport of aviation would advance with great bounds.  Make navigating
the upper air currents practically safe, and thousands would take up
flying just as they had the driving of automobiles when the road
racers had been perfected as they are to-day.

The huge packages which the two scouts had staggered under during
their weary hike from the road where the accommodating farmer had
dropped them, really contained the said model.  It was not of very
large size, and the little engine which was to drive it really
weighed as much as the rest of the thing; but Bud declared that it
would answer all his purposes, and prove whether he had been wasting
his time and spending money uselessly of late or not.

Once the breakfast had been disposed of, Bud was trembling with
eagerness to get started.  He could not understand why the others
should delay so, when time was slipping away.

Presently they left the cabin, closing the door behind them.  All of
the blankets, as well as their food supplies, had been left inside,
and they did not want any wandering wild animal like a 'coon or a fox
to make way with the latter during their absence at the proving
grounds.  It was this same caution that urged Hugh to cover up the
aperture through which they had obtained fresh air during the night
just past, and which went by the name of a window.

The open field which Bud had once before mentioned as the very place
for the trial spins with his aeroplane model was not very far distant.
The man who had originally started to make a farm away up here had
diligently cut down trees for a space of several acres.  He had also
grubbed the ground so thoroughly that it had remained clear all these
years, save for an annual crop of grass, now withered and dead.

"If we can help any, Bud, just tell us what to do," Hugh said to the
inventor, after the three boys had come to a halt on the border of
this open space.

"That's the kind of talk I like to hear, Hugh," the other replied,
looking up with a smile on his anxious face.  "Just wait till I get
these covers off, and then you'll see what I've been doing all these
months when some of the fellows were kidding me on being a regular
old book worm and not wanting to come out and play even football
with them.  It was the hardest kind of work, but if she even goes a
little, I'll think it wasn't time wasted.  All I want is encouragement;
I've got the bull-dog grit to carry it on all right."

"I reckon you have, Bud," was the only comment Hugh made; and he ought
to know, because Bud was a member of the Wolf patrol and the leader
had watched him work many a time as though there were no such word as
"fail" in his lexicon.

So Bud busied himself in undoing stout cords and opening both bundles.
When Hugh saw the nature of the load he had been packing up the side
of Stormberg Mountain, he shook his head and laughed.

"What did you think I was, Bud, a mule, or a Chinese porter used to
carrying as much as half a ton on his back?" he demanded.  "Why,
that engine would have given me a bad scare if I'd seen it beforehand.
And I toted that all the way up here from the road, did I?  Well,
anyway, I've earned the right to boast after this.  A motor is no
light load, I don't care how small it may be.  Don't you agree with
me, Ralph?"

Ralph was chuckling to himself, seemingly much amused.

"I should say yes," he replied; "and I don't wonder you complained of
feeling a touch of pain in the muscles of your back last night, Hugh.
But really the load Bud took himself was larger and just about as
heavy as yours, you see."

"Oh! he gave me my choice.  I saw it was six of one and half a dozen
of the other, so I took the smaller one.  I reckon I'll be ready to
tackle a house next time, after having a motor on my back."

Bud set to work assembling the various parts of his model.  In some
respects it was rather a crude imitation of a monoplane, but for
practical purposes no doubt it would answer just as well as the most
elegant model.  What Bud wanted to find out most of all was whether
he had been working on the right principle.  If that turned out to
be correct he could afford to have a better model made; then he
could take up the idea with some of those capitalists who were
interested in building airships of all kinds.

For once Bud was supreme.  He gave his orders and the others obeyed.
Even Hugh, accustomed to being the leader, willingly assumed the air
of a novice, though Bud knew very well that the other had studied
the subject of aviation very thoroughly and was competent to advise
in a pinch.

By slow degrees Bud managed to get his planes adjusted and the tiny
motor installed.  Hugh, in a quiet and unostentatious way, often
assisted him to overcome some difficulty that arose; so that Bud
declared he did not know how he could have managed without the
other's help in tightening wire stays and installing the motor.

At last the work seemed to have been accomplished.  Bud said he could
fix the rudder of the model so that when once it was in the air, it
would continue to make revolutions for a certain time.  He declared
it would actually fly around the field slowly until the measured
stock of gasoline had been exhausted, when of course it would drop
to the ground as the engine ceased to work.

"You see I expect to manage by means of this cord," he explained.
"I'll chase along below, and every once in so often try to upset the
thing by giving a savage jerk.  Then you'll discover whether my
device is going to work.  If it does half way decently in this
clumsy model, it'll pay to install it on a real aeroplane and
either go up myself or else have an air pilot do it for me.  But
say, let me tell you right now that I'm shivering all over as if I
had the ague!  'Cause why?  In half an hour or so I'm going to know
whether I'm IT, or else a lunkhead that ought to be smothered before
his fool notions get him into a peck of trouble."

"Oh! I wouldn't put it that way, Bud," advised Hugh.  "You mustn't
call yourself hard names, even if this invention fails to work.  They
say Edison has lots of rank failures that the public never hears
about; only his brilliant successes become known.  Suppose this
scheme doesn't do all that you expect it to, why, perhaps you'll see
where it falls short and be able to remedy the fault.  If you have
faith in yourself, it's going to turn out all right every time.  Try
seventy times seven, and never give up as long as life lasts."

"_Nil desperandum_!" quoted Ralph; "or, as we Americans have it, 'if at
first you don't succeed, try, try again!'"

"You just bet I will, fellows," said Bud firmly; "and now let's make
the first trial spin."

He had elevated the model so that it would start in the air without
the necessity of leaving the ground.  This was a minor matter, and
only intended to hurry things along.

When the little motor got to work there was an immediate movement of
the rough miniature monoplane.

"Hurrah! there she goes!" cried Ralph, really excited when he saw the
object of Bud's recent labors actually moving through space, sustained
by the extended pair of planes.

Hugh, too, felt a thrill of delight.  He was very fond of Bud, and
anything that promised to repay the other scout for his weeks of
arduous labor pleased the leader of the Wolf patrol more than he
could express in words.

Bud was about the busiest boy any one had ever known.  To run along
and keep, up with that hurrying model, hanging on to the long stout
cord, was no easy task.  The rudder had certainly been fixed properly
to insure a circuit of the field; but as the ground was very rough in
places, Bud had great difficulty in keeping from falling many times.
This was partly on account of the fact that he had to fasten his eyes
on the scurrying monoplane model pretty much all the time, and could
therefore not pay much attention to where he was going, or see the
traps lying in the way of his feet.

He stuck to his task heroically, with grim determination to see it
through to the bitter end.  Every once in a while he would give the
cord a savage jerk.  In this way he managed to make the little flier
take sudden lurches; but in every instance the model instantly resumed
its upright position as soon as the pull was past.  It reminded Hugh
of prank-loving swimmers attempting to sink a boat built with air
chambers, which would bob to the surface triumphantly every time.

So far as one could tell from watching these rather clumsy operations
on the part of the inventor, his apparatus for steadying an aeroplane
was surely showing signs of being a success.  It consisted of a small
iron bar weighing an ounce or so, which was hung as a pendulum from
an arm projecting from under the operator's seat.  This pendulum was
so delicately set that it seemed to respond to the slightest
deviation of the aeroplane from the horizontal.

As the excited inventor explained to his chums, after he had allowed
the craft to come to earth again, not without some little damage
which precluded another flight that day, it was a very simple thing
after all.  If the craft was thrown from its balance in any way,
the movement of this pendulum would cause two little valves to open.
This would make the compression from the engine force a piston back
and forth, which communicated with the warping levers and
automatically accomplished what had up to that time, Bud went on to
say, been done by the hand of the busy aviator.  Thus a mechanical
balancer had been arranged, so that the pilot need never bother
himself as to whether a stiff gale were blowing or not, since
practically nothing could upset his craft.

"It looks to me as if you had a good idea there, Bud," said Hugh;
"and unless somebody's been ahead of you in the field, it ought to
make you famous as an inventor.  Perhaps when you try it again
to-morrow, after mending your planes, you'll discover a few ways
in which it can be improved.  Never believe anything is perfect the
first time.  And now, shall we gather it up again and carry it to
the cabin?"

"You're awfully kind, Hugh!" declared the happy Bud, whose face was
rosy from his recent tremendous exertions and from the glow of
satisfied ambition.  "I am convinced that I haven't been wasting
my time, even if I'm only harrowing in a field some other fellow may
have plowed before me."

They managed to get the miniature aeroplane over to the shack, though
it was no light burden, taken all in all.  Bud, however, was feeling
so pleased that he could have done the work of an ox himself.  There
is nothing like satisfaction to bring out unsuspected powers in a boy;
and just then Bud believed he could have carried as great a load as
any Turkish _hamel_ or porter.

Leaving the queer looking contrivance outside the door, Bud hurried in
as though something that he had suddenly thought of was bothering him.
A minute later he burst into view again, a row of wrinkles across his
forehead and words of alarm sounding from his lips.

"I can't find it anywhere," he lamented, "and I'm dead sure I left it
there on the pile of blankets.  Hugh, somebody's been in the shack
while we were away, and cribbed the plan for my aeroplane stability
device!"



CHAPTER VI

A RED LETTER DAY IN THE WOODS


Both Hugh and Ralph looked serious when their comrade made this
announcement.

"That's a tough deal on you, old fellow!" said the latter, feeling
that it must mean considerable to Bud to have his idea stolen just
when it was giving promise of being a signal success.

"Sure you left them there on the pile of blankets, are you?" asked
ever practical Hugh.

"That's right, he did," Ralph volunteered.  "I remember seeing some
papers there when I went out, and I was the last to leave, you know.
And you say that they've clean disappeared, have they, Bud?"

"Come on in and see if either of you have sharper eyes than I seem to
have," the other scout demanded.

Accepting the invitation, Hugh and Ralph bustled about for several
minutes, hunting all through the interior of the shack, but without
any success.

"Nothing here, that's sure," admitted the patrol leader.  "It was
careless of you to leave your precious plan behind when you went to
try the model out."

Bud scratched his tousled head as though endeavoring to collect his
wits.

"Let me see," he started to say, slowly; "don't blame me if I'm all
mixed up over this business.  I've waited so long for this time to
come that I'm sure rattled, that's what's the matter.  What did I
lay down here?  Some parts of the plans for the model, that goes
without saying; but seems like I've got a paper in my pocket right
now.  Let's see, I honestly believe that it's the key to the
invention.  Just what it is, boys; and without this, nobody'd ever
know what all those markings on the other papers were meant for."

"Then it's all right, after all?" asked Hugh, smiling again when he
saw that suggestive grin on his comrade's face.

"It seems that I can make an aeroplane fool proof, when all the
time the fool killer ought to get hold of me," Bud confessed contritely.
"It was certainly careless of me to leave any part of my precious
papers floating around, and only good luck has saved me from being
left high and dry.  But perhaps those fellows will think they've
got hold of some remarkable design.  They might crack their brains
trying to make it out, and then not learn a single thing.  When
a fellow laughs last, he's going to laugh best, believe me."

"Well, next time be more careful, that's all," advised Ralph.  "You
can't always count on being so lucky.  An inventor ought to keep his
secrets locked up, and not let them lie around loose.  You'll find
that there are plenty of sly thieves ready to steal ideas, as well
as money and jewels.  An idea that's worth a fortune can be cribbed
a heap easier than the coin itself."

"Only a part of the morning's gone," announced Hugh.  "How shall we
put in the rest of the day?"

"Oh! I'll be pretty busy making repairs to my model," Bud replied.
"You two fellows can find plenty to interest you both.  Only don't
roam too far afield in looking up interesting things.  With that
mysterious pair hanging out around here, I won't feel any too easy
in my mind.  My idea may be worth a cool million, you know."

While Bud was working diligently, the other two amused themselves
first of all by closely examining the ground just before the door of
the cabin.

"Here you can see several imprints of that fine pair of shoes," Ralph
said almost immediately; "and that makes it look as though the man
who wore them really did slip inside while we were away.  Chances are,
he wonders what boys wearing khaki suits like the regular soldiers of
the army are up here for.  You agree with me, don't you, Hugh?"

"It looks that way," admitted the other.  "Here you see one of the
impressions has stopped short only a few inches from the door, as if
the man stood here listening before stepping in, after carefully
removing the piece of rope we fixed to hold the door shut from the
outside."

"But how do you know that that impression wasn't made twenty-four
hours ago?" asked Bud, who was sitting cross-legged close by and
listening to their talk, even while he worked at his broken wing tip.

"Nothing could be easier," replied Hugh.  "Here's the foot mark I
purposely made when I came out of the cabin last, and you can see
that he stepped into the same place.  That tells us he was here
_afterward_.  Get that, don't you, Bud?"

"I'd be a donkey if I didn't, and not worthy of being called a scout,"
the other boy remarked with scathing emphasis.  "Fact is, if my mind
wasn't so much wrapped up with this aeroplane stability device, I
couldn't have missed seeing that little trick myself if I'd looked
the ground over; because that happens to be one of the first things
I ever learned about tracking and trailing."

"Even if the sneak didn't get anything worth while," Ralph continued
indignantly, "the fact that they seem to be hanging out around here
seems to tell that they must have a good reason for it all.  The more
I get to thinking about it, the less I feel like saying we'd better
let the thing alone because it doesn't concern us.  When things come
to such a pass that unknown persons even sneak into your cabin in
your absence and steal what they believe to be valuable papers, it's
high time to take a hand in the business.  And if while we're
wandering around here we happen to run across those two men, I'll
feel like asking what they mean by poking their noses into Bud's
private business."

"Hear! hear!" said Bud, pretending to clap his hands; "that's the
sort of a chum to stack up with.  Ralph's the kind to stick to a
fellow through thick and thin.  And please inform that taller
walking mystery for me, Ralph, that I feel like telling him to
his face that he's a thief.  Will, too, if ever I get half a chance."

Pretty soon Hugh and Ralph changed the subject of conversation and
wandered off together, talking earnestly about the habits of
muskrats and mink and otter.  It was pretty late in the year to do
much in the way of tracking, but Ralph knew several places along a
nearby stream where he had often caught mink that were using the
burrows; and he was anxious to show his friend certain things in
connection with the habits of the sleek animals, the skins of which
were always in such good demand for furs.

They had a joyous time together, because both were animated by the
same sort of desire to know all that could be learned of wild animal
life.  Hugh's scout education had given him a pretty good insight
into these things; but he knew the relative value of book learning
and practical experience, and never let an opportunity to see for
himself slip past.

At no time did they wander far afield.  And as certain signals had
been arranged with Bud, whereby he could summon them to his assistance
in case there was any symptom of impending trouble, there did not seem
to be any need of worry.

Once in so often they would walk back to the near vicinity of the
shack; and on discovering Bud there, busily engaged in mending his
disabled aeroplane model, they considered that they could saunter
off again to investigate further into the secrets of wood and swamp,
the latter now half frozen over in the cold late November atmosphere.

That was a day Hugh Hardin would long remember.  He picked up a stack
of practical information on topics that had always interested him
greatly.  Ralph was the best kind of a chum with whom to be wandering
through the forest.  He knew many things in connection with these
subjects and was always ready to impart information to others, as
well as to demonstrate what he was discussing.

At noontime they cooked dinner.  Bud was not nearly through his
repairs, though he declared that he was making satisfactory progress
and would have the model in as good shape as ever long before
evening set in.

"To-morrow we'll have another and convincing test!" he declared
positively, with something of the air of a conqueror about him.  Hugh
noticed this with a smile, though he thought there was some excuse
for Bud's displaying a disposition to "crow."

All of the boys showed that they had their appetites along with them
on this trip, to judge by the rapid way in which the great heap of
splendid flapjacks made by Ralph disappeared, until only the empty
platter remained.  But then, they were up here to enjoy themselves,
and what better way could they find of doing this than by feasting
on real camp cooking?

During the afternoon, Ralph and Hugh spent some more of their time
in making discoveries.  The former young trapper had a host of
reminiscences to fall back on, now that he was located close to the
scenes of many of his previous excursions in search of fur and feather.

"See that tree lying there chopped down?" he asked Hugh, as they came
upon a pretty fairsized specimen of the forest monarch, which, after
being put to the ax, had broken many limbs off when it crashed down.
"Well, I did that little job all by myself.  Want to know why?"

"I might give a guess, as I see traces of old honeycomb around here.
I'll warrant you discovered a hive of bees in this tree and meant to
get gallons and gallons of their fine stores.  How about that, Ralph?"

"You struck the right nail on the head," laughed the other, "just as
I felt certain you would when I saw you look around that way.  Yes, I
felt amply repaid for all my work after cutting through the tree,
because two years ago times were a bit hard with the Kenyons, and
all that nice honey proved a treat in our family circle, you'd
better believe."

"How did you find the honey tree,---by tracking the bees up the usual
way?" Hugh asked.

"That was how I did it," Ralph replied.  "I once saw a regular bee
hunter do the stunt, and so I knew how; and it worked right well,
too.  I started out with a little honey and coaxed a wandering bee
to fill himself up.  Then with a pair of old opera glasses, I watched
his flight just as far as I could see him.  Going over to that point,
I repeated the experiment.  After doing it for about six times I saw
my loaded bee rise, and make for this tree.  Then, as it was a warm
noon, I discovered a swarm of young bees trying their wings away up
in the air, and I knew I had located the tree hive.  It is an easy
job, once you get on to it, Hugh."

"Some time I'd like to come out with you and try for another hive,"
observed the other scout.  "But it's too late this year, because,
unless a very warm day happens to come along, the bees will stick
close to their hives."

In this sort of fashion the afternoon did not hang heavy on the hands
of the two boys.  It never does with scouts who are alive to their
opportunities along the line of investigation.  Time passed so
quickly and pleasantly that, almost before either of them suspected
it, the sun started to go down.  And about the same moment they
heard Bud giving the Wolf signal, not in a fashion to indicate any
pressing necessity for their presence at the shack, but just to tell
them he was getting lonely and that they had better come home.

They found that Bud had started supper, being in a joyous frame of
mind because of the glittering prospects for success in connection
with his new invention.  Bud was a novice in the business.  He would
doubtless learn in due time how many bitter disappointments attend
the fortunes of all those who spend their waking hours in trying to
conjure up startling innovations.

After the evening meal had been enjoyed to its limit and everything
cooked by Bud had vanished, the three chums again sat around and
talked on all sorts of interesting subjects.

Bud, however, seemed to be uneasy.  Perhaps it was on account of his
anxiety to have the morrow come, when he could improve on the trial
of his model aeroplane.  Then again it might have been that the
attempted larceny of his precious plan wore upon his mind.

Be that as it may, every little while he would go to the door and
step outside.

It might have been the fourth time he did this that he thrust his
head inside again and called to the others to join him.

"That clatter of machinery is hanging around again, Hugh!" he said,
excitedly.  "Perhaps you'll be able to tell me whatever it means,
and if we could really hear the working of the mills all these miles
away!"



CHAPTER VII

BUD'S METEOR


Both scouts hurried out to join Bud.  They found him standing there
with his head cocked on one side, apparently listening as hard as
he could.

Indeed it did not require any especial gift of hearing to catch the
strange noises spoken of by the ambitious inventor.  They seemed to
be close at hand and constantly growing louder all the time.  Just
as Bud had declared, the racket was undoubtedly caused by some sort
of machinery.

Hugh immediately made an important discovery.  It rather startled him,
too, as well it might, for he had not been dreaming of anything so
unusual.

"Why, it's in the air!" he exclaimed involuntarily.

"Sure it is," agreed the excited Bud; "in the air and everywhere else.
Seems to me I might be listening to a dozen shuttles working with a
rush."

"But I mean that it comes from _above our heads_!" Hugh quickly added;
at which both the others gasped in wonder, though realizing that what
the patrol leader had said was actually true.

"Whatever can it mean?" stammered Bud.

"Say, do you know it makes me think of something I heard over at
Bellville during county fair week!" burst out Ralph.

"Meaning an aeroplane?" declared Hugh.

"Just what it was, Hugh," returned Ralph.  "But what would a flier
be doing away up here, going around and around in the dark of night?"

"I don't know, and that's all I can say," replied the other; "but
perhaps we may be able to find out.  There it comes again, swinging
around in a circle.  If we all look sharp, we may be able to glimpse
something up against the sky."

"My stars!  An _aeroplane_!" Bud was muttering to himself, as he
hastened to follow his companions away from the door in order to have
a better range of observation.  "Of all the things that we could meet
up here, an aeroplane!  And me just pining away with yearning to see
one in action!  Oh! don't I hope it turns out that way, though?  Do
you see it yet, boys?  When you do, please put me wise, won't you?"

All of them were straining their eyes to make a discovery, and as it
was possible to follow the course of the swiftly circling though as
yet unseen object by listening to the rattle of its engine or
propeller, they kept their attention directed to one particular quarter.

"Oh! I think I can see it now!" cried Bud excitedly.

"Yes, we all do," added Ralph.

They continued to stare up at the moving object, which, as seen in
that uncertain light, looked not unlike a monstrous bat with extended
wings.  The sound of the busily working machinery grew louder
constantly.  No wonder Bud had been so perplexed when he heard all
this, though more faintly, on the previous night and asked whether
it could be possible to catch the sound of the mills many miles away.

As the three scouts continued to stand there gaping at the dimly seen
flier, a sudden terrific crash and vivid flash almost stunned them.
Indeed, Bud crumpled up and might have fallen to the ground, only
that he came in contact with Hugh and received the support of his
firm footing.

The very ground shivered under them.  It seemed as though some
subterranean mine must have been exploded, causing the rockribbed
earth to quiver in a sickening fashion.

When they dared look up again, the queer bat-like object had vanished
entirely from sight.  Voices were heard, however, close at hand.
They told of more or less excitement; and coming with them was the
sound of one or more persons pushing recklessly through the thickets
that grew in many places as a second growth.

Presently even these noises died away and a dead silence reigned.  By
then, Bud managed to regain possession of his voice.

"Oh, another terrible meteor!  Why, we must be right in the middle
of a shower of shooting stars!  And let me tell you, that one hit the
earth not a great way off, too!  I'm going to take a look in the
morning and see if I can find it.  They say that college professors
often pay big sums for being set on the track of these meteors that
bury themselves in the ground.  What if she had dropped right down
on top of this shanty, boys?  I'm glad we got off as well as we did,
aren't you, Hugh?"

Hugh did not answer.  Evidently he was thinking deeply at that
particular moment.  There was indeed plenty to concern him in
connection with the mysterious aeroplane that nightly circled the
region, always accompanied by that strange explosion.

"Seems to me I can smell something queer like burnt powder," Bud
presently remarked.  "Do meteors explode when they hit the earth,
Hugh?"  And would they send out a rank odor like that?"

"I don't happen to be up in the doings of meteors, Bud," answered
the other, "but I should think it might be something like that.
We'll all take a look after breakfast, and see what we can find.
Perhaps it may surprise us.  This seems to be a general all-around
surprise party for the lot of us.  We were taken aback to find
Ralph here in the old shack; he had his surprise when he watched
those two men carry on so queerly; then we had the shock last
night of hearing thunder and seeing lightning when the sky was
clear; after that, the fellow looking in at the window startled
us.  You were a little surprised your self, I reckon, Bud, at
your success in trying out your stability device as applied to
aeroplanes.  And now comes the discovery that one of the air craft
is skimming around here nightly, doing some stunt that we can't
understand yet."

"We ought to call this Camp Surprise, then," announced Ralph.

"That's what," echoed Bud.

"Now let us go in again," suggested Hugh.  "It seems as if the
fireworks might be all over for this particular night.  Even the
aeroplane has gone off where none of us can hear the motor working
any longer."

"Perhaps she dropped to the ground," remarked Bud.  "There might be
another open place not far away, like the old field where we tried
out my little model this morning.  And say, doesn't it strike you
as funny that just one solitary meteor should take a notion to
explode each night?"

No one answered this question, though Bud was too busy pondering on
the run of strange events that had fallen to their share of late to
notice the lack of interest his comrades seemed to take in the matter.

Once inside, they again sat around talking.  It was Ralph this time
who gave utterance to a certain fact that had been in his mind, which
interested both his chums as soon as they heard it.

"I don't know," he started to say soberly, "whether either of you
happened to notice it, but there seemed to be something foreign
about the voices we heard after the big noise.  Not a single word
could I understand, either, and yet they seemed to be pretty near
by."

"I didn't happen to notice that, Ralph," Hugh observed seriously;
"but if the men who spoke were your mysterious friends of the other
day, one thing is sure---they weren't the ones who sat in that
speeding monoplane."

"Eh? How do you know that?" queried Bud, becoming deeply interested.

"Well, in the first place," suggested Ralph, not waiting for Hugh's
reply, "the sound of voices came from the same level as our own
location.  I'm dead sure of that fact.  Then again we could hear the
swish of brush, and I even caught the sound of men crashing through
thickets and falling over logs."

"Yes," added Hugh, "and it struck me that they were in something like
a blue fright, as though the nearness of that explosion had given
them a bad scare.  Only a sudden panic could make men rush through
thickets as recklessly as they were going."

"Everybody may not like meteors to drop all around 'em," Bud muttered;
"and I can't blame the fellows much, either.  I came near being
knocked flat on my back, myself, when that one let go with a bang.
My ears are ringing yet, and I'm afraid I'll go deaf if I have to
hear much more of that sort of cannonading."

Although they continued to sit up for some little time and talk, Hugh
did not see fit to mention certain suspicions that had taken root in
his own mind.  He believed he was on the track of the truth, but
until he had a little more positive evidence he hesitated to speak
out boldly.

They finally settled down and tried to sleep.  Bud seemed to find
little difficulty in forgetting all his troubles and triumphs, for
his heavy breathing quickly announced that he was dead to the world.
With the other two it was a more protracted task, and possibly they
turned over as many as half a dozen times before surrendering
drowsily to the god of slumber.

There was no further trouble during the balance of that night, the
second they had spent in the old shack.  Saturday morning dawned
with a clear sky, and it looked as though the day might be a
repetition of the two previous ones.  This gratified the scouts
very much, for no matter how seasoned a camper may be, the weather
has considerable to do with his enjoyment.  If rain continues to
pour down, there is very little pleasure to be found in spending
hours or days under canvas or the leaking roof of a cabin, wishing
in vain for a break in the weeping clouds.  And so the three lads
expressed themselves as contented when they broke out from the
shelter of the shack on that morning and found the conditions so
favorable.

Bud hoped to make another try with his model before noon, since they
expected to be on the move shortly afterward.  There was a long hike
before them ere they could expect to reach the road leading home,
where possibly a wagon might be hired to help get them into town
again.

One thing pleased them, and this was the fact that for the most part
the return journey would be down-grade.  In consequence they expected
to make the distance separating them from the road in about half the
time it had taken in coming.

Bud hurried through the morning meal.  Indeed, Ralph even joked him
on his seeming lack of appetite; for as a rule Bud was a good feeder
and came second only to Billy Worth, long recognized as champion in
the troop.

"Well, you see," Bud explained, "there are a whole lot of important
things I mean to do to-day, and the sooner I get busy the better
chance I'll have to go through the list.  First thing of all is to
take a little tramp around toward the west of the camp, to see if I
can stumble on the place where that last old shooting star struck us.
I'm going to look sharp for a hole, because it seems to me such a big
lump of iron and other ore would smash into our earth at a pretty
lively clip."

"Hold on a minute and let's start fair!" called out Ralph.  "We're
just as anxious as you are to make some sort of discovery, eh, Hugh?"

"Some sort, yes," the patrol leader admitted, with a queer little
smile that Bud noticed, but could not understand just then.

So the three boys started to comb the immediate vicinity of the shack,
spreading out in something like a fan formation.  They took to the
west, because all of them seemed to be of one opinion: that the
dreadful crash had come from that particular quarter.

Now and then one of them would call out or give the Wolf signal, just
to inform the others where he happened to be.  In this manner some
ten minutes went by and Hugh was thinking that the explosion must
have been much further away than any of them had suspected at the
time, when Bud was heard giving tongue.

Bud, when excited, always broke loose and allowed himself free rein.

"Come this way, boys!" he was shouting gleefully.  "I've run the
old meteor to earth.  My stars!  what a terrible hole she did make!
Must be as big as a house!"



CHAPTER VIII

UNCLE SAM'S FLYING SQUADRON


"_How---oo---ooo_!"

Ralph gave the long-drawn cry of the timber wolf as he hurried in the
direction of Bud's shouts.  Hugh speedily joined him, coming from
some side quarter, and the pair were soon closing in on the other scout.

They found Bud clinging to a shattered sapling and staring down into
a gaping aperture that looked big enough for the excavation of a church
cellar.  All around were evidences of a most tremendous explosion or
upheaval, some trees being actually shattered and others leaning over
as though ready to fall.

"Talk to me about your meteors," burst out the wondering Bud as he
saw the others coming along, "I hope to goodness one of them never
drops down on our roof at home.  Just looky here what it did to the
poor old earth! That sky traveler's as big as the parsonage, I
should think."

Hugh turned to Ralph.

"No doubt about what happened now, is there?" he asked.

"Well, I should say not," came the answer, as Ralph stared down
into the hole.

"Must be some new sort of explosive they're experimenting with,"
added the patrol leader seriously; "and to look at that gap you'd
believe it beats dynamite all hollow.  Drop a bomb made of that stuff
on a fort, and goodby to the whole business."

"W---what's that?" exclaimed the wondering Bud.  "Do you mean to
tell me that it wasn't a meteor that made all that racket the last
two nights?"

"So far as I know," Hugh told him, "when a meteor drops down, it
buries itself in the earth and gradually cools off, for it's been
made almost red-hot by passing so swiftly through space.  But it
doesn't, as a rule, burst and tear a horrible slash in the ground
like this."

"Then what made it, Hugh?" asked the other, evidently puzzled.

"A dropped bomb!"

"A bomb, you say?  Oh, Hugh, that was why the old aeroplane kept
circling all around, wasn't it?  They were picking out some place
to make a big hole!  Whee!  No wonder then they came up here to
this lonely place to try things out.  A farmer'd be apt to kick
like a steer if he waked up some fine morning and found holes like
this in his garden or field.  It's good we didn't happen to be
standing here when they dropped the bomb, as you call it."

"I had an idea of something like this last night," Hugh said; "but
thought best not to mention it until I could see my way clearer.
But now the last doubt has gone, and I know the truth."

"But Hugh, who could it be trying out this awful explosive, and
wanting to do it where no curious eyes could watch the operation?"

"I don't know that, Bud, but we can guess.  It must be either some
company in the market with explosives, or else the Government itself
trying to see how the Flying Squadron, as they call their aerial arm
of the service, could work in time of actual war."

"Say, if they could drop bombs like that just, where they wanted,"
remarked Bud admiringly, "I'd pity the enemy, whether Japanese
or German or anything else.  Just think of a great big bat circling
around in the darkness of night, sending down a searchlight, maybe,
to pick out the right spot, and then, bang!  Good-by to your old fort
or battleship!  It would be all over before you could wink twice.
And let me tell you, fellows, we've got the bully boys in the army
to do this same stunt, if anybody on earth can!"

"Thank you for the compliment, my boy!"

A quiet voice said this, and the three scouts looked up hastily to
discover that a man clad in a faded suit of khaki was standing close
by, watching them with an expression of amusement on his clear-cut
face.

There was something about his make-up that instantly convinced Hugh
of his connection with the aviation corps of the Government service.
This, then, would seem to prove that it was the army engaged in
making these secret experiments with the new explosive, perhaps from
a war aeroplane that may have been given over into the charge of the
Flying Corps for trial.

Hugh immediately advanced toward the officer and gave the regular
salute, as every scout is taught to do when he meets one who is above
him in rank.  To his delight, the other acknowledged the salute
immediately.

"We are Boy Scouts belonging to a town some miles away from here,"
Hugh started to explain.

"And what are you doing here?" inquired the officer pleasantly.

"We came up to watch one of my chums experiment with a device he
believes he has discovered," replied Hugh.  "For the last two nights
we have been puzzled to understand what that terrible roar and flash
meant.  At first, we thought a meteor had fallen; but when it came
again last night and we saw the aeroplane swinging around up there
in the sky, I began to believe there was some connection between
them.  And now that we've found this hole in the ground, I know
it shows where your bomb struck, Lieutenant."

"Yes, that is what happened," remarked the officer.  "I came here
this morning to take notes, so that I could make a full report of
our practice.  We have not thought it necessary to make use of our
searchlight so far when dropping a bomb; but now that we know
others besides ourselves are up here, we must be more careful.
Perhaps I would hesitate to say all this to most people whom I
happened to meet by accident, but I know what Boy Scouts are and how
devoted they have always proved to patriotic motives.  I'm positively
certain that nothing could tempt one of you lads to betray any
confidence I placed in you."

"Thank you, sir," said Hugh, flushing with keen pleasure at hearing
such words of praise from an army officer.  "And perhaps you may
not know that there are others up here who seem to be deeply
interested in all that you are doing."

"What is that, my boy?" exclaimed the other, showing sudden interest.

"Why, by chance my friend here, Ralph Kenyon, who has trapped all
through this section in years gone by, saw two men talking and acting
in a strange way.  They've been spying on us, too, while we've
occupied the old shack close by.  They even crept in while we were
off yesterday, to steal some plans of an aeroplane improvement which
this other scout, Bud Morgan, had carelessly left there."

"Two men, you say," the officer commented, knitting his brows with
sudden suspicion and uneasiness.  "Could you tell whether they seemed
to look like natives or foreigners, son and he wheeled so as to face
Ralph as he asked this.

"I had an idea that one looked like a Japanese and the other a
German," the boy answered promptly.

At this, the army man rubbed his chin and seemed to consider.

"I've taken you into my confidence so far already, boys," he observed
presently, "that I suppose I might as well go right along and tell
you everything.  We are up here, representing the Flying Squadron
of the army, to experiment with a new war aeroplane much more
powerful than anything before devised; also to ascertain whether
there is any truth in the wild claims put forth by the inventor of
the latest explosive, that his discovery must make war so horrible
that nations would be compelled to keep the peace after this.  And,
judging from what that one small bomb did here, I fancy he was not
mistaken in his estimate.  We could destroy the largest battleship
afloat as easy as to snap our fingers.  Of course there are secret
agents of numerous Great Powers constantly floating around in
Washington, trying to learn what Uncle Sam has up his sleeve in the
way of new inventions calculated to destroy the enemy in time of war.
And we have feared all along that one or more of these spies may
have gotten on our track.  I'm very much gratified with what you
have told me, for now we know what to expect, and can avoid taking
any unnecessary risk."

"Would these foreign spies dare attempt to ruin your war aeroplane,
or try to blow you all up with some of your own explosive?" asked
Ralph.

"I wouldn't put it past them," replied the other.  "They are playing
a desperate game, you understand, and have their orders from the home
Governments to keep us from forging ahead too fast.  But I haven't
introduced myself as yet.  I am Lieutenant Fosdick, and I have had
some little experience in army aviation."

"I wonder if you can be the same Lieutenant Fosdick I've heard so
much about from our Scout Master, a retired army officer named
Lieutenant Denmead?" Hugh ventured to say eagerly.

"Well, this _is_ a pleasure to be sure!" remarked the other smilingly.
"To be sure I know Denmead.  I saw a great deal of him several years
ago.  And so he is spending his spare time in teaching the young
idea how to shoot, but with the arms of peace rather than those of
bloody war?  He was always crazy over boys, and must be a cracking
good Scout Master, because he knows so much of Western life among
the Indians.  He was with Miles in the Sioux War long ago, as you
may know.  But what was this you said about one of your mates
inventing something in connection with the management of aeroplanes?
That would seem to be right in my line, and if he has no serious
objections, I'd like to hear about it."

At that, Bud turned fiery red, but with pleasure more than
embarrassment.  It was a crowning triumph in his career to find
himself an object of interest in the eyes of so famous an aviator
as Lieutenant Fosdick, of whom he remembered reading quite
frequently as the most fearless air pilot in the Flying Squadron of
Uncle Sam.

Encouraged by the winning smile on the bronzed face of the army
officer, Bud only too gladly started to explain what his hopes were.

"I'd like to see this wonderful little model of yours in action,
son," the experienced air pilot remarked afterwards.  "Suppose all
of you come over to our headquarters, which happen to be not more
than half a mile away from here.  We have a fine open spot where we
can ascend and alight with ease, day or night.  You will be welcome,
I assure you.  We have a dozen men there besides those connected
with the war aviation corps, simply to guard against any spies giving
us trouble.  If you can go now, I'd be pleased to wait for you, so
as to pass you through the lines."

"How long will it take you to get your little machine dismantled,
so we can handle it, Bud?" asked Hugh.

"Oh! I can do it in a jiffy, because, you see, it's fixed for taking
apart," the inventor of the party hastened to declare.

So Lieutenant Fosdick accompanied them to the shack.  While Bud
busied himself with his model, Ralph and Hugh chatted with the army
officer.  He asked more questions concerning Bud and the idea he had
been trying out.

"It would seem as though your friend might have a touch of genius
about him somewhere," the aviator said with a smile, "though I'm
afraid that he's too late with that wonderful stability device,
because it is very similar to one the Wright Brothers got out some
time ago.  That's the way it often happens, and many a man has
studied some clever thing out only to find that he has been
anticipated by some earlier inventor.  But say nothing about this
for the present.  Your friend surely deserves to have a little
glory out of the game before the blow falls.  And I shall be curious
to see how he manages with this model of his, for it looks good to me."

Evidently Bud had found favor with the army man.  Even though doomed
to disappointment with regard to his wonderful invention, the boy
might derive satisfaction in knowing that his work had not been
entirely in vain.

When half an hour had passed, Bud declared everything in readiness
for the change of base; and soon the boys were accompanying the
skilled aviator through the woods headed for the camp of the Flying
Squadron.



CHAPTER IX

FRIENDS IN KHAKI


While they were pushing laboriously onward through the woods,
overcoming all manner of obstacles, Lieutenant Fosdick gave the
scouts a pleasant surprise.

"One reason why I asked you to visit our camp," he remarked, "was
because I fancied all of you might be glad of a chance to take a
spin aloft in an aeroplane.  You may like that, if it happens that
you've never enjoyed the experience up to now."

Hugh immediately turned to the army man and expressed his pleasure.

"I've often hoped to have a chance to go up," he said, "but hardly
thought it would happen so soon.  And we'll all be only too glad
to accept your invitation."

"I should say so," added Ralph.

Bud did not say a single word, and turning to ascertain why, the
officer found a smile of the "kind that won't come off" spreading
all the way across his face.  It was evident that Bud was too happy
for words.  He had long dreamed of spinning through the upper
currents in one of those bustling airships that are becoming more
common every day; but, like Hugh, he had not expected the golden
opportunity to be sprung upon him so soon.

As they walked along, the officer once more started to question them
regarding the two strange men who seemed to be hanging about without
any known business to keep them up in this unsettled region.

"I think you said that one of them looked in through the window of
your shack night before last, and then fled when you let him see
that he had been discovered?" he remarked to Hugh.

"Yes, and we made sure that he had been there by examining the soil
under the window.  It is a part of a scout's education, you know,
sir, looking for signs.  We found them, too, marks of a long narrow
shoe, that told us the man could never be a hobo but must be a
gentleman.  After they had rummaged through our cabin while we were
away, we found the same marks before the door, and indenting tracks
of our own, so that proved just when the fellows must have been around."

The army officer nodded his head and laughed softly.

"I understand what you mean, son," he remarked, "and it quite tickles
me to know how clever our boys are getting under the influence of
this new scout movement.  It is bound to wake up most lads and set
them to thinking for themselves, years before they would have been
aroused under the old way.  And I must say I'm heartily in sympathy
with the work of the association.  It's the finest thing that ever
happened for the boys of America.  If I had sons, they should everyone
of them join one of your troops as soon as they were old enough."

"We forgot to tell you, sir, about hearing those two men rushing
through the dense woods and thickets just after the explosion last
night.  They seemed to act as if more or less frightened; and I
guessed that they may have had a narrow escape from being struck by
your bomb."

At that, the other burst into a laugh.

"That is a rich joke," he declared.  "Possibly in the excitement of
the moment, after being knocked down by the shock, they may have
suspected that we knew of their presence and were trying to
encompass their destruction.  But I am glad it happened that way.
Perhaps they may have more respect for Uncle Sam's Flying Squadron
after this, and fight shy of running their heads into trouble.  I'll
have the guards at the camp doubled at night time, and any straggler
will be apt to find it pretty warm around there: I'd advise all
persons who have no business at our headquarters to give the camp a
wide berth, or something not down on the bills might happen, to their
surprise and consternation as well."

"If you haven't run across these men, sir," Hugh remarked, "of course
you could hardly say who they might be."

"I can give a pretty good guess, though," came the prompt reply.  "We
have been dogged by a pair of spies on former occasions, the one a
short Jap, and the other, much taller, undoubtedly a German.  Both of
them happen to be famous aviators in their own countries, which was
doubtless why they were sent out to discover what the Flying Squadron
was doing up here in secret."

"I suppose their main objects would be to learn the composition of
this latest thing in explosives, and to take note of your war aeroplane,
so as to steal the improvements," Hugh went on to say, being desirous
of learning all he could while the other was in this communicative
frame of mind.

"They would actually have to examine the flier before they could learn
what it represents to the army aviation corps; and we keep it closely
guarded all the time we are not in the air.  So much of a secret are
several things connected with this monoplane, that I cannot mention
them, even to such patriotic chaps as you are."

"And we don't blame you, sir, surely we don't!" exclaimed Bud promptly.
"Us inventors have to be pretty careful how we let people see what
we've struck!  Lots of ideas have been stolen before now.  If my
little scheme turns out what I hope it's going to, I think I'll hand
it over to the Government for use with their war aeroplanes.  Wouldn't
it be just great if a pilot could give his whole attention to the job
of dropping bombs and such like, never bothering himself about the
wind currents or anything else?   The little Morgan controller would
manage all such things automatically.  As the saying is, you press
the button and we'll do all the rest!"

Hugh did not arouse poor Bud from this happy dream.  What was the use?
Better let him have a little more pleasure out of it before
confronting him with the cold facts acts in the case.  He must learn
soon enough that he was several years too late, and that those
wonderful Fathers of Aviation in America, the Wrights, had covered
the identical ground some time previous with their Fool-proof Flier.

Luckily they did not have a great distance to go.  The boys, who were
staggering under their loads, could not have kept it up much longer,
and all of the little party rejoiced when the air pilot announced
that they were now within sight of their destination.

Presently they heard voices ahead.  Then came a sudden whirr of
machinery.

"My associate, Lieutenant Green, is going to take a little spin for
some reason or other," their escort told them.  "You see, we can
reconnoiter the ground wonderfully from several hundred feet altitude;
so that we have on several occasions indulged in a flight just in
order to scout the land.  We discovered your presence some time
yesterday, and were at first greatly puzzled on account of your
khaki suits.  We even tried to figure out how a trio of soldiers
belonging to the Home Guard could be camping out in that way.  To
tell the truth, it was not until I stood by and listened to you
talking about that hole in the forest, that I grasped the true state
of affairs."

When a large aeroplane built after the monoplane model swiftly arose
and went spinning off, Bud stared as though his whole heart was in
his gaze.  He even dropped the burden he had on his back and rubbed
his eyes, as if to make sure it could not be a dream.

"So that's what you call a war aeroplane, is it?" he asked eagerly.

"The company building them for the Government meant them for that
particular purpose," Lieutenant Fosdick told him.

"Then they are different from all others, I take it?" Hugh advanced.

"In many respects," was the frank reply.  "In the first place they
are much stronger than the ordinary monoplane.  In case an attack
is intended on the enemy's redoubts, they may be compelled to carry
heavy loads in the shape of combustibles and explosives.  Besides
that, they have the recent improvements which I mentioned before as
being secret, but which will add considerably to their effectiveness.
The wires used as guys are all heavier than customary, the motor is
stronger, and the planes better able to resist shocks.  I have never
seen a Santos Dumont or a Bleriot monoplane anything equal to this
new departure."

"It's almost gone out of sight already," declared Bud with a thrill
of awe in his ambitious voice.

"Yes, although my colleague was boring upward at the time we last saw
him; but the speed of that machine is marvelous.  No wonder these
foreign spies take the great chances they do, hoping to learn what
Uncle Sam is up to.  If they could carry back full information
concerning the new explosive and the novel features of that splendid
monoplane, it would be worth a million dollars, yes, many times that,
to their respective governments.  Germany, you know, claims to have the
best equipped corps of aviators in the world, just as she has the most
remarkable army.  And Japan, too, is jealous of being left in the mad
race, so she sends out spies to learn all that is going on."

All these things were exceedingly interesting to the three scouts.
They were patriotic boys, like all scouts.  Though studying the arts
of peace rather than those of cruel war, love of country was a
cardinal virtue held up constantly before their eyes by Lieutenant
Denmead.  Should danger of any type menace the defenders of the flag,
boys like these would be among the first to want to enlist.  The Boy
Scout movement was never intended to discourage a love of country.
And if war ever does come to the land we all love, thousands of those
who rally to her defense will be found to have once been wearers of
the khaki as Boy Scouts.

The camp of the Flying Corps was now seen ahead of them.  A challenge
from a sentry and the giving of the countersign in a whisper by the
lieutenant, told the lads that they were actually in a military camp.
Of course this was not their first experience among genuine soldiers,
though those whom they once before assisted in the yearly maneuvers as
signal corps operators had properly belonged to the State militia.
These men were seasoned regulars, serving the Government in the
capacity of aviators and members of the Flying Squadron.

Lieutenant Fosdick loaned them a pair of glasses through which they
could keep track of the distant aeroplane.  They saw it perform
several queer "stunts," as Bud called it, that caused them considerable
astonishment.

"Why, say, it turned completely over that time, just as neat as you
please!" Bud exclaimed, so interested that the others could not get
the glasses away from him again.  "There she goes a second time, as
slick as anything!  I've done the like from a springboard when in
swimming, but I never would have believed anybody'd have the nerve to
loop the loop three thousand feet up in the air.  Oh! what if it didn't
come right-side up again!  What a drop that would be!"

"Taking chances every time, and that is what our lives are made up of
mostly in the Flying Corps," the officer said grimly, with a shrug.
"Any day may see our end; but like the men who drop from balloons with
a parachute, we get so accustomed to peril that it never bothers us.
Constant rubbing up against it makes a man callous, just as working
with the hands hardens the palms."

"They seem to be heading back now," observed Ralph.

"Yes, my colleague has accomplished the object of his little flight,
which was partly to practice that turn and partly to look for any signs
of spies in the forest below.  We're always thinking of interlopers,
you see, though up to the time you gave me that information concerning
the two men, I hadn't seen a trace of any watchers around.  They must
have kept pretty well under cover all the time."

"And might have continued to do so, only that our coming bothered them,"
Ralph commented.  "They didn't know what to make of us.  We seemed to
be only boys, and yet we dressed like Uncle Sam's soldiers; and then
there was Bud trying out his aeroplane model.  That must have stirred
them up some.  Perhaps they thought, after all, that we might be the
ones from whom they could steal an idea well worth while."

"I wouldn't be surprised in the least," said Lieutenant Fosdick.  "And
at any rate we're under heavy obligations to you boys for bringing this
important information about the spies.  I'll try to make your stay here
interesting to you, in return."



CHAPTER X

UP IN A WAR MONOPLANE


"We're certainly in great luck!" Hugh said to the other two scouts, as
they stood and watched the "bug in the sky" growing larger and larger,
the monoplane being now headed for the camp.

"It nearly always happens that way, you remember," said Bud, who had
been through frequent campaigns with his leader and could look back
to many experiences that come the way of but few Boy Scouts.

Bud was probably much more excited than either of the others.  This
was natural, since he had the "flying bee" largely developed and was
wild over everything that had to do with aviation.

To him, this accidental meeting with the bold members of Uncle Sam's
Flying Squadron was the happiest event of his whole life.  If he had
been granted one wish, it would have covered just this same ground.

Consequently his eyes fairly devoured the approaching war monoplane,
as it swept down from dizzy heights, and prepared to land in the open
field.  He watched how skilfully the air pilot handled the levers, and
how gracefully the whole affair glided along on the bicycle wheels
attached under its body, when once the ground was touched.

The scouts were soon being introduced to Lieutenant Green by the
officer whose acquaintance they had already made.  The associate of
Fosdick proved to be an older man, but the boys believed that after
all their first friend must be the controlling influence of the team.
They afterwards learned that Lieutenant Fosdick was really without a
peer among army aviators; and that even abroad, where so much
attention is given to this subject, in France, Germany and England,
he was said to have no superior in his line.

As both officers expressed considerable interest in the clumsy model
of a monoplane which Bud had made, he readily consented to fly it
and to show just how his stability device worked.

This he set about doing, while the army men stood close together
and observed all his movements, now and then exchanging low words.
Of course both of them recognized the fact that poor Bud had really
hit upon the exact idea that was already being used by the Wright
firm.  Bud may never have read any description of this "fool-proof"
device emanating from the brains of the Wright brothers; he had only
been unfortunate enough to think along the same lines, with the
result that he had finally reached the same conclusion.

"Break it to Bud by slow degrees that he's arrived much too late,"
said Lieutenant Fosdick to Hugh, after the exhibition had about
concluded.  The young inventor was flushed with success, for his model
had worked splendidly, now that he had had more experience in
handling it.

"I feared as much when I heard about it," his colleague admitted.
"But the boy certainly deserves encouragement.  He has done wonders
in making that model, and it is built on right lines.  Tell him to
keep at it and not get discouraged.  If he does, he will surely arrive
some day."

"I'll do all I can to encourage him," the patrol leader of the Wolves
said in reply, though at the same time he felt sorry for Bud, who
would take his disappointment very much to heart.  He might throw up
the whole business under the impression that there was no use in a
boy trying to pit his wits against those of veterans and expecting to
win out.

When Bud heard that he might accompany Lieutenant Fosdick on a short
flight in the upper air, he looked so happy that Hugh concluded to
postpone his discouraging disclosure until another time.

Bud was an animated interrogation point, when once seated in the
monoplane, which, having been built for hard service, was easily
capable of carrying even two passengers when necessary.

He wanted to know all about the various parts, which he examined with
trembling fingers.  It seemed almost too good to be true that he was
actually going to be taken up in a Government war plane, and by so
skilful an aviator as Lieutenant Fosdick.

The army officer made sure to secure his young passenger with a safety
belt.  He might scorn such devices himself, but there was always more
or less risk to an inexperienced air traveler, and he did not wish to
take unnecessary chances.  This lad had folks at home to whom his life
must be very precious.  He was only a boy, to be sure, but ere long
he would reach man's estate.  And in this country of ours, who can
say what the future holds for any lad?  Years ago, who among his
school companions on Mt. Auburn, in Cincinnati, would have dreamed
that in the course of time clumsy, good-natured Billy Taft would for
a period of four years occupy the Presidential chair at Washington,
and be looked upon as the foremost man in all the wide world?

Hugh and Ralph kept tabs of every little thing that was done.  They
found themselves sharing Bud's enthusiasm for the subject of aviation,
and they, too, were promised a ride with the officer after his return.

At a given signal, the start was made.  The big monoplane rushed along
the ground, wobbling somewhat because of inequalities in the surface
of the field.  After it had gone a certain distance, it was seen to
leave the earth gradually, as the pilot changed the conditions in
respect to planes and rudder.

"Oh! see how she rises, for all the world like a graceful bird!"
exclaimed Ralph.  "I've never been so close to an aeroplane before,
and I tell you, Hugh, I can mighty easily see how it makes a fellow
wild to embark in the business."

"Well, there will be some years pass before anyone of us reaches an
age to decide what our future may be," Hugh replied; "and before that
time comes, even Bud, crazy as he seems now to belong to the Flying
Squadron, may change his mind a lot of times.  But one thing I do
know, and that is, I'm glad we struck up an acquaintance with the
Lieutenant; and ditto, that I'm going to have a spin with him in
the air."

They watched the monoplane mount fairly high and make several large
curves.  Apparently the pilot did not think it best to try any
difficult business while he had a novice along with him, because
there was no telling how Bud might act.  After being up some twenty
minutes, the monoplane was once more directed toward the field.

"Oh! see what he is doing now!" exclaimed Ralph, clutching the sleeve
of his companion's coat in his excitement.  "He's headed the nose of
the air craft downward, and seems to be just whooping it up for solid
ground!  I hope nothing has happened, or that they'll strike hard, for
poor Bud will be smashed, that's what!"

Hugh laughed, for he was much better informed on all aviation topics
than the other scout.

"Oh! that's what they call volplaning," he hastened to say, while he
watched the coming of the air craft with eagerness.  "The motor is shut
off, and deflecting the rudder to a certain angle, a glide is made
toward the earth.  When they get to a certain distance, you'll see a
sudden change take place.  There, what did I tell you, Ralph?"

The monoplane had abruptly ceased to shoot toward the earth as though
falling.  It made a sudden turn and proceeded almost on the level;
after which the pilot brought it so softly to the ground that Bud
could barely feel it strike, such an expert was the lieutenant in
manipulating the various levers.

Bud was almost speechless with delight.  His eyes fairly danced as he
drew a long breath and shook the hand of the army officer.

"Ralph, you come next," said the lieutenant; and somehow Hugh got the
idea into his head that he had been reserved for the last because
the officer wished to take him for a longer spin than either of his
mates, for some reason or other.

And so Ralph allowed himself to be fastened in his seat alongside the
pilot, and gravely listened to the same instructions that had been
given to Bud, since much depended on his actions while navigating
the upper air currents.

He waved his hand to his chums as the monoplane started to race along
the level field, accumulating speed as it progressed, until presently
at a given point it pointed upwards and started on its air voyage.

Ralph was given about the same experience as Bud.  Another little
volplane act was carried out for his especial benefit, so that he
might be able to boast of having experienced such a "stunt," a
favorite one among all aviators and not one-tenth as risky as it may
seem to the uninformed.

And now came Hugh's turn.

He fastened himself in, having taken pattern by what he had seen the
pilot do on the previous occasions; for a scout is expected to have
his eyes about him and to observe all that is going on, so that he
knows for himself and does not have to be shown.

Even this little act convinced the observant lieutenant that his first
conception of Hugh's character had been a true one.  He realized just
why that boy had been chosen to serve as leader of his patrol, and in
the absence of both scout master and assistant, had more than once
been given full charge of the entire troop.

It was certainly a most exhilarating sensation to Hugh when he felt
the big war aeroplane start away from solid ground and begin to climb
upward.  Looking down, he could see how fast they were really going.
Why, it seemed as though the earth could no longer be counted his
abiding place, but that he must be headed for the planet Mars, or
perhaps the moon.

The higher up they went, the more delightful the sensation became.  Hugh
soon became used to the novel feeling, so that he could enjoy looking
down upon the country over which they were passing.

It was an experience that far excelled anything he had ever gone
through before.  He told the pilot that he did not wonder men found it
hard to leave such a fascinating if dangerous business, when once they
had started to follow it.

"There is an old saying about politicians," remarked the lieutenant,
"to the effect that few die and none resign.  That can never be said
about aviators, because, while none of them ever give it up for good,
the fatalities have been very numerous.  But when that stability
device which your friend believes he has invented, but which he may
have read about somewhere and unconsciously copied, comes into
general use, we hope the deaths will become much less frequent.  I am
using a stability device right now on this monoplane.  It was
installed by the firm that patented it.  You can see how it acts
automatically to steady the machine, no matter how we move about.
And I am almost as safe up in a squally wind as on a calm day."

He took Hugh much higher than he had the others, as the barograph that
was within seeing distance from their seat told the boy, who had
learned how to read its figures.

Half an hour later they came back toward the field again, and descended
to lower currents.  The picture Hugh gazed upon as he looked down would
never be forgotten.  He could see for miles and miles in every
direction; and how different the country looked from anything he had
ever imagined!

All at once Hugh made a discovery.

"I am almost certain I saw two men hide themselves in that patch of
bushes ahead there," he hastily told the pilot; "and it seemed to me
that they must be the pair of spies who have been giving you so much
trouble.  They were creeping toward the camp as if they meant to try
and steal in the back way."

The lieutenant laughed as though pleased.

"Good for you, Hugh," he remarked.  "Those sharp eyes of yours let
nothing escape.  Now we'll just circle around a bit and give those
precious foreigners the scare of their lives.  I happen to have a
supply of small experimental bombs along, which are heavy enough to
frighten them into believing one of the new explosives may follow,
after we have the range.  Watch out for some fun, my son!"



CHAPTER XI

GOOD-BY TO THE FOREIGN SPIES


When Hugh saw the air pilot reach back and take a small black object
from a box attached to the body of the monoplane close to the gasoline
tank, he knew that those skulkers below were in for a lively time of it.

Undoubtedly they had been creeping toward the rear of the camp with
the hope either of picking up valuable information, or finding a
chance to make way with precious plans connected with this latest war
airship which Uncle Sam was trying out, and which possessed features
far in advance of anything known abroad.

At a certain second, when he judged that he could drop the bomb very
close to where the couple were secreted, the lieutenant hastened to
do this.  Almost immediately afterwards he caused the monoplane to
make a curve, so that they would be in shape to circle around that
particular spot and repeat the bombardment as long as the supply of
missiles held out.

Twisting his head so that he could watch the result, Hugh's gaze
followed the descending bomb until it struck the ground.  Instantly
there was a pretty loud racket and the dirt flew, although this
missile undoubtedly contained but a small portion of the new and
terrible explosive, being intended only for experimental purposes in
the way of gauging distances correctly.

The two spies instantly sprang into view and started to dash madly
away.  They undoubtedly labored under the impression that once the
range had been properly found, one of those fearful projectiles would
be dropped down on them.  No doubt they had before now examined the
great hole in the earth showing where aviators had dropped one of the
larger bombs, and knew what to expect in case such a missile fell
anywhere near them.

"You've given them a bad scare already, sir!" remarked Hugh, greatly
enjoying the experience, although it made him think of a fable in one
of his earlier books concerning the sport of stoning that was "fun for
the boy but death to the frogs."

"That is only a beginning," declared the lieutenant.  "This monoplane
is so well constructed that we can hover over them, no matter what
they do, just as a hawk shadows a rabbit."

Indeed, the entire performance did remind Hugh of occasions when he
had watched a red-tailed hawk chasing a frightened bunny, now slowing
up on quivering pinions, then making numerous pretended lunges in
order to frighten the quarry still more, and finally ending the
pursuit by a well-directed swoop that gave the bird of prey its
fine dinner.

The two men were bewildered as well as alarmed.  Another bomb
exploded close behind them, and started them off on a new tack.
Run which way they might, it seemed as though that terrible enemy
in the air kept hovering above them, sending a little black object
shooting earthward every half dozen seconds, to be followed by a
sudden crash, many times magnified in their excited imaginations.

Once the taller man started to fire his automatic revolver upwards,
as though in sheer desperation he hoped to cause the air pilot to
give over the chase.  The reports sounded like the detonation of
toy fire-crackers to Hugh; and if the bullets came as far as the
monoplane, he heard nothing that sounded like their passing.

Dodging this way and that as though almost panic-stricken, the
spies finally betook themselves into the sheltering forest.  Before
they could hide under the branches of the oaks, the tall man was
seen to stumble at the top of a rather steep declivity and roll all
the way to the bottom, as though he might be a barrel that some
mischievous lad had started downhill for the fun of seeing it jump.

Some seven of the little bombs had been used by the time both men
vanished into the shelter of the woods a mile or so away from camp.
The Lieutenant was laughing heartily as though he had enjoyed the
diversion greatly.

"I imagine that will settle them, all right, Hugh," he remarked, as
he once more turned the aeroplane back toward home.

At the same time he mounted higher for the final volplane downward.
Since the other boys had enjoyed this novel sensation, it would be
too bad if the patrol leader did not have the same chance to
experience it.

"Do you think after that bombardment that they'll be apt to clear out
and give over trying to learn what Uncle Sam is up to?" Hugh asked.

"That is my impression," replied the other.  "All they can have
learned is that we have a new explosive that excels all known
destructive forces as five to one; and that our latest model of
a war aeroplane bids fair to eclipse anything known in foreign
parts.  After all is said and done, son, you can trust the inventive
ability of the Yankee to see anything done by others and go them
one better.  That is because we are the melting pot for all nations,
and rewards for genius are so much greater here than abroad, that
it spurs us all on to achieve wonderful things.  It's a great
privilege, Hugh, just to know that you are a nativeborn American.
Never forget to be thankful for it."

Apparently this daring aeronaut was intensely patriotic.  Hugh felt
drawn toward him more than ever on this account, because he had his
own ideas on this subject, and they coincided with those of
Lieutenant Fosdick.

That volplane, started from a much higher altitude than either Bud or
Ralph had reached, would never be forgotten by the patrol leader.
His breath seemed actually to be taken away as he felt himself
shooting toward the earth, which, in fact, appeared to be rising
swiftly to meet him.  That is the sensation that a novice always
feels under the circumstances.  But at the proper second, the pilot
shifted his rudder and the planes took on a new position that
instantly stayed their downward plunge.  This caused the monoplane
to sail along gently, parallel with the field, to which it descended
immediately afterwards in safety.

Of course the other scouts wondered what all that racket meant,
although Ralph had guessed something close to the truth.  They
started to ask questions at such a rate that Hugh laughingly cried
for quarter.

"Here, hold up a little," he interrupted, "and I'll tell you all about
it.  You see we happened to discover those two sneaking spies in the
bushes, and the Lieutenant said it would be a fine chance to give
them such a scare that they'd be only too glad to skip out and let
things go for keeps.  He had a lot of small experimental bombs along,
and every time one dropped near where they were trying to hide, you'd
have nearly taken a fit laughing to see how they skipped out and ran
like mad."

"Guess they thought you'd drop one of the big ones after you got the
range," suggested Ralph.

"That was what was scaring them," Hugh agreed.  "And after seeing
what had happened when one of those exploded, you could hardly blame
them for being panic-stricken.  They were a mile away when last seen,
and I reckon they're still on the full run.  Lieutenant Fosdick says
he doesn't think either of them will ever have the nerve to come
back again."

"Huh! good riddance of bad rubbish," grunted Bud.  "I'd give something
to see how they make out with the figuring I did on that paper they
hooked from our shanty.  They couldn't make head or tail of it in a
year; so they are not likely to steal the idea of my wonderful
stability device, which is luck enough for me for one day."

Hugh gave Ralph a suggestive look, as though begging him not to say
anything just then to hurt poor Bud's dream of fame.  Later on, when
they were back home again, they could break the sad news to him gently,
as the officer had suggested.  What was the use of spoiling his
pleasure for that glorious day?  They might never have another chance
to be with the brave fellows of Uncle Sam's Flying Squadron; so it
was just as well to make the most of their opportunity while it lasted.

The Lieutenant tried to coax them to stay longer, but Hugh knew they
must be on their way home shortly after noon, much as he wanted to
remain.  Their folks might be anxious if they did not show up some
time that evening; and the next day would be Sunday, which was pretty
strictly observed in their home town.

The balance of their stay in the experimental camp was passed in
trying to learn all they possibly could about things connected with
aviation.

"Those who observe the trend of events closely," Lieutenant Green told
them, as he only too gladly showed them many clever devices calculated
to increase the efficiency of aeroplanes when in action, "are firmly
convinced that should we ever get embroiled in a war with any
first-class power, which we all hope will never happen, aeroplanes
are bound to occupy a very important place in the field."

"But I'm sure I read lately that there has been talk of limiting the
activities of air craft in war times?" Hugh questioned.

"Yes, and already it has been settled that bombs shall not be dropped
into besieged cities where civilians may be killed, but only into
forts and on war vessels," the army officer told them.  "But, after
all, that is only a small fraction of the uses to which a war
aeroplane may be put.  For scouting and learning the movements of
troops, it is a wonder.  No matter how skilful a general may be,
his plans are all apt to go amiss if the quick movements of his
forces are discovered by the airman from a mile above.  The aviator
may be well out of reach of any missiles modern guns can throw upward,
but with his glasses he can watch every movement and signal the news
to headquarters."

The scouts were astonished to hear all this.

"Where would the genius of a Napoleon have been," remarked Lieutenant
Fosdick in turn, "if aeroplanes had been in common use as far back as
Waterloo?  You may remember that the secret of his great success in
battle was the mobility of his troops.  He would divide his army and
hurl a part of it so as to strike the enemy unexpectedly on the flank,
timing his own frontal attack so as to complete the confusion.  Well,
if the enemy had known what was coming they could easily have whipped
the divided force of the great French leader in detail.  The coming
of man's mastery over the air will cause new and strange happenings
in case of war.  By degrees, fighting will become so terrible that
all nations must unite in a bond to keep the peace forever."

Much more along these same lines did the three Boy Scouts hear from
the two venturesome air pilots during the balance of their stay in
the experimental camp.  It was an experience they could never forget.
Ralph fairly hugged himself with satisfaction because he had obeyed
the spirit that tempted him to pay a visit to his old camping grounds
during the short Thanksgiving holiday season.

"Think what I would have missed if I'd told myself it was foolish to
waste my time out here, when I never expected to set a single trap
again!" he declared, as the signal was given to tell them that dinner
was ready and they prepared to join the two officers at their mess.

"It's been one of the greatest times of my whole life," admitted Bud,
a happy grin on his face as he looked over at his crude but effective
model of a monoplane, all done up, waiting transportation again; and
Hugh could easily guess what delightful dreams must be crowding
through his chum's mind, which later on it must be his painful duty
to dissolve.

They certainly did enjoy that meal, eating heartily of the camp fare.
At least Uncle Sam provided bountifully for those whom he employed in
his new Flying Squadron, the boys told each other; for one of the men
in camp was a real _chef_, and could get some mighty appetizing
dishes together on occasion.

As there were several pack animals available, Lieutenant Fosdick
proposed that they load the model upon one of these.  A soldier
would accompany them as far as the nearest farm house on the road
to town, where they could hire a vehicle, and then bring the animal
back.

When the time came to say good-by to the aviators, the boys all
expressed their gratitude on account of the kindnesses they had
received.

"Don't mention it," Lieutenant Fosdick replied, shaking each of the
scouts by the hand; "the pleasure has all been on our side.  And
besides, you did us a great favor by warning us about those foreign
spies.  Some time I hope we'll meet again.  Until then, the best of
luck attend you, Hugh, Ralph and Bud!  Goodby, lads!"



CHAPTER XII

HOME AGAIN


The three scouts intended stopping long enough at the lonely shack in
the woods to look about, and see that they had forgotten nothing.  All
of them declared they had had the time of their lives, and would
certainly never be apt to forget the remarkable experiences that had
come their way.

"There she is!" exclaimed Bud, pointing ahead.

"The cabin, you mean," Ralph added, as he, too, caught a glimpse of
the familiar shack which had given them such friendly shelter.  "And
it looks as quiet and peaceful as can be, too."

"Why, what else would you expect?" Bud asked him.  "Hugh, didn't we
close that door when we came away; seems to me I can remember doing
the same, after you told me it was best?"

"You certainly did pull it shut after you," Hugh quickly replied.

"Well, it's part way open right now, you can see for yourself if it
isn't," Bud asserted strenuously.

"That's right, it is, Bud."

"I wonder if the wind could have done it," the other mused.  "It
does play some queer pranks, I happen to know from past experiences.
Guess that fastening is a bad one, and don't hold worth a cent."

"It's too late for us to bother fixing anything now, Bud," said
Ralph; "though to tell you the truth I always thought the door held
as tight as anything."

"Then what opened it, do you think?" demanded Bud, as they continued
to approach the shack, the soldier who was accompanying them to take
back the horse interested in what they were saying.

"I don't know, if you ask me point blank," Ralph admitted, frankly.
"It might have been that you didn't fasten it the right way.  Then
again p'raps some one has passed along here, and stepped in to see
if there was anything worth taking."

"Whee! I hope that last isn't the right answer," was what Bud
hastened to observe; "I've got a few little things there I'd hate
to lose, let me tell you.  Now, if you come right down to---oh!  Hugh!"

"What's the matter with you?" demanded the one whose name had been
uttered so wildly.

"Didn't you see that---where were your eyes that you didn't see what
poked out of the open door just then?" cried Bud, coming to a complete
standstill in his astonishment and perplexity.

"I'm sorry to say that I didn't happen to be looking that way just
when you spoke," Hugh admitted.  "But tell us what it was you saw,
Bud!"

"A head!  A bear's head!" exclaimed Bud.

"That begins to sound interesting," said Ralph, as his face lighted up.

"But Ralph, you said there were no bears around here any more, so how
could that be?" Hugh asked, as he turned on the other.

"Hardly that, Hugh; I told you I had never happened to run across
one while trapping up here; but there was a time when they were said
to be thick around this section; and who knows but what one may have
wandered back, to see what the country promised him in the way of food."

Bud began dancing up and down in new excitement.

"We did leave a lot of grub in there, fellows," he told them; "and
chances are that the old black sinner has gone and spoiled what he
couldn't eat.  That's a habit with bears, I'm told; they're about as
bad as hogs that way."

"Well, what are we going to do about it?" asked Hugh, looking
around at his two chums.

"We've got a gun!" suggested Bud.

"But we didn't come up here to do any hunting, and besides, scouts
as a rule don't go around gunning for game," said Ralph.

"Hugh," said Bud, trying to appear cool and collected, "you've got to
decide this for us, because I look at it one way, and here's Ralph
saying it wouldn't be right for us to try and plug this old bear.
Will we just try to shoo him away, or give him a few cold chunks \
of lead?"

Hugh smiled and nodded to Ralph.

"You lose this time, Bud," he said, "because I'm siding with Ralph
here.  If we were really hungry and in need of food, of course I'd
say we had a right to get fresh meat; but we're on our way home now,
and seems to me it would be a shame to spoil all our splendid sport
by being cruel to a poor old bear that doesn't know any better than
to gobble flour and anything else he finds lying around loose."

Now Bud was a good loser.  Perhaps after all he did not really feel
as ferocious as he pretended; and to tell the truth might have been
sorry if Hugh had sided with him, so that war was declared upon the
hairy invader of the shack.

"How'll we get him out of there?" he proceeded to ask.  "If he knows
a good thing when he tastes it you bet he won't be in any hurry to
leave."

"How about you going in and telling him his room is better than his
company?" asked Hugh.

"You'll have to excuse me this time, I'm afraid," Bud quickly announced.
"I pass it up to Ralph here; he knows more about the way of animals in
a minute than I do in a year."

"Can you fix him up, Ralph?" questioned Hugh, turning to the boy who
had studied animals so long that he might be looked on as an authority.

Ralph was always willing to oblige.

"To be sure I can, and will, Hugh," he hastened to say, with one of
his rare smiles.  "The rest of you stay back here, and when he once
gets clear of the door start to shouting as loud as you can."

"Which is to add to his alarm, I suppose?" suggested Hugh.

"Just about what it is," and saying no more, Ralph started for the
cabin.

They noticed that he did not approach from the front, and this
explained that Ralph had no intention of trying to enter the place
while it had a hairy occupant.

He had first gathered up something and made a bundle of it under one
of his arms.

Bud, looking closely, believed that he knew what the other scout had
collected.

"Dead weeds, as sure as anything!  Bears don't eat dried weeds, do
they?  If he had 'em dripping with wild honey p'raps it might do the
business, because they say bears go crazy when they get sniff of
honeycomb."

"All of which is true enough, Bud," Hugh told him; "but when you think
Ralph expects to coax the bear to come out, you're barking up the
wrong tree.  It's my opinion force would be a much better word,
because he means to compel him to vacate."

"Now you have got me guessing, Hugh; If you know, please take me
into the game.  There, Ralph's climbing up where the roof is lowest.
It wasn't much of a boost for a fellow as active as he is.  What
d'ye think he'll do next?"

"Make for the chimney, unless I'm away off, which I don't think I am.
There, you see he's up already.  What does he seem to be doing now,
Bud?"

"Why, I declare if he isn't crunching all that dry stuff down the
old chimney!  Oh!  now I've got it, Hugh!  He's going to smoke the
bear out!"

"I shouldn't wonder but what that is just what he expects to do,"
chuckled Hugh; "and let's watch and see how it works.  Ralph knows
how much alarmed a bear will always get after smelling smoke.  It
seems to be a part of his nature to dread anything that has to do
with fire.  And in case he has had to hustle at some time in the
past to save his bacon from a raging forest fire, of course it's
all the worse.  But Ralph is getting ready to put a match to the
dry stuff he has in the chimney.  After he has it smouldering good
I reckon he'll give the same a kick, and send it down into the
fireplace.  Then watch him clap that short piece of board on top
of the clay chimney, forcing all the smoke to ooze out into the
cabin, filling it full."

Both boys, and the soldier as well, kept their eyes glued upon
the figure of the scout on the roof of the cabin.  Ralph was taking
his time.  He usually did his work very systematically, and could
be depended on to make a complete job of anything he undertook.

"There, it's beginning to come out of the door, the smoke, I mean!"
exclaimed the anxious Bud.

"I want to get a snap-shot of the event when the bear rushes out,"
said Hugh; "because there are a lot of fellows these days who want
to see the proof every time you tell them a story that seems out
of the common run.  The light is good right now, and I believe I
can make a fair picture, with Ralph pressing his board down on the
chimney-top, and the smoke oozing out around him.  Now to see how
much the prowler can stand for."

"He peeked out just then, and must have seen us, Hugh, because he
pulled in again," Bud shrilly cried.  "Guess he don't think much
of human beings.  He must have had some experience with the little
shooting sticks they seem to just point straight at him, and then
with the cough he feels an awful pain.  P'raps he's a better
smoker than you think.  What if he just declined to run the
gauntlet as long as we stand here."

"It's only a question of time," Hugh assured him.  "He can only
stand for so much, and then he'll make the rush, no matter what
happens."

"The smoke's coming out thicker and thicker, let me tell you,"
Bud continued, fairly dancing in his nervous excitement.  "If
he can stand that much longer I'll believe he's a regular old
salamander."

"He won't," Hugh assured him.  "He's pretty nearly all in right
now.  Twice we've seen him peek out as if he wanted to get the lay
of the land, so he could make his rush.  The third time he's apt
to come.  So everybody get your breath ready to let out a whoop
that'll make him think the end of the world has arrived for keeps."

"Look! there he comes, Hugh!"

Even as Bud said this a bulky object rushed headlong out of the
cabin door.  It was the bear, doubtless already half-blinded with
the bitter smoke that smarted his eyes and created a panic in his
mind.

Immediately the two boys and the soldier set up a series of whoops
that made the forest ring.  Ralph, too, joined in, and waved his
hat from the roof of the cabin, even as Hugh pressed the button, and
snapped off the lively scene, with the frightened bear in full retreat.

Bud outdid himself in shouting, he was so tickled over the success
of Ralph's plan.  Twice he raised the double-barrel shotgun belonging
to Ralph, which the other had placed in his hands for safe-keeping
before starting to evict the unwelcome guest who had taken to using
their shack during their temporary absence.  Of course after what
Hugh had said, about not wanting to injure the bear, backed up as
he had been by the third scout, it was far from Bud's intention to
pull either trigger, and wound the poor beast.  But just like most
boys he wanted to boast afterwards as to what "terrible things" he
could have done had he cared to take the trouble.

The bear must have received more or less of a shock, what with the
smoke, and that volley of shouts greeting his appearance outside
the cabin; for the way he galloped away was indeed comical.

Hugh laughed heartily, and then as Ralph jumped off the low roof of
the shack to join them, he complimented the one-time trapper on his
knowledge of Bruin's weak spots.

"Oh! that's an old story," Ralph declared.  "You never want to
forget that all savage animals, except, perhaps the two-horned
rhinoceros, which of course we don't have in this country, are
afraid of fire.  With a blazing torch you can pass safely through
a woods where half a dozen hungry panthers are jumping about through
the trees following you, but nine times out of ten not daring to
make a leap as long as you swing that fire stick around your head."

"Is that so?" Bud remarked; and then quickly added: "But how about
the tenth time, Ralph?"

"Oh! well," said the other, with a chuckle, "I guess they might take
chances of the fire, and get you the tenth time, Bud.  But it's the
best thing you can ever do if you're besieged by wolves, or any
wild animals."

"Well," Hugh interrupted, "now that our unwelcome visitor has
taken his departure, and the cabin can be entered, let's get what
truck we have left there together, and be heading for the road."

They found that the bear had made inroads with regard to some of
their provisions, but as they happened to be homeward bound it did
not matter much.  The rest of the things they gathered up, and were
again ready for a continuance of their journey home.

Once more they were on the tramp.  Having nothing to carry, made
things very easy for all hands.  The miles they had to cover before
reaching the road that would take them back to town did not appall
them in the least, for they were used to making long hikes; besides,
they had so much to talk about that almost before realizing it
they had arrived at the first sign of civilization in the shape
of the turnpike.

Half a mile down this road was a farmhouse, where Hugh fancied they
might hire some sort of conveyance to take them home.  If this
could not be had, possibly the up-to-date farmer had telephone
connections with town, and over the wire they might influence the
owner of the livery stable to send out a rig to take care of them.

They were spared this long wait, however, because luckily enough
the farmer happened to be going in town for supplies and readily
made terms with the scouts to carry them and their bundles.

So they said good-by to the soldier in khaki belonging to Uncle Sam's
Flying Corps, and were soon passing along the homeward road.

No doubt that farmer pricked up his ears and did considerable eager
listening, when he began to hear what his three passengers were
talking about.  Never having seen an aeroplane in all his life,
and having only a faint conception of the wonderful uses to which
the fliers could be put, the tiller of the soil gasped many times
when he heard these mere lads tell of their feelings when half a
mile up in the air.

And when later on he chanced to discover from words let fall by
Bud, that the several packages in the back of the wagon contained
a miniature aeroplane, the old man cast more respectful glances
back at them.  He also changed his manner toward the scouts, and
even addressed Hugh once as "Mister Hardin."

In good time, long before the sun gave token of setting, they
arrived in town; and Bud was made happy in seeing his precious
miniature flier safely deposited at his own door.  He still had the
look of one whose mind was soaring away up in the clouds and Hugh
did not have the heart to disillusion him just then.  There would
be no harm done in letting poor Bud dream a little longer before
giving him that rude if necessary jolt.

Hugh was more than satisfied with the result of their latest expedition.
Neither he nor Bud, at the time they started out, could possibly have
dreamed of the remarkable experiences that were fated to come their
way.  It had only been to enjoy one more little outing before winter
came along in earnest and to learn what the scout inventor had
accomplished, that had induced Hugh to go forth immediately after
eating his turkey at the Thanksgiving feast.

And there was Ralph, who also had obeyed an inward mentor urging him
to spend a day or so with his gun in the region where he had in
times past trapped many a little fur-bearing animal, whose glossy
coat he covet coveted as a means of eventually paying for his tuition
in the School of Mines.  He had only expected to wander in some of
his familiar nooks, and perhaps to knock over a few quail to tempt
his sick mother's fickle appetite; but see what had come out of such
humble beginnings!

When the scouts had their next weekly meeting, Hugh thought it worth
while to give the troop some description of the events that had come
the way of himself and his two chums.  He purposely avoided more
than casual mention of Bud's invention, because he had found a
chance to bring the other down from the heights where he had been
sailing, and Bud now knew that he had made his bright discovery
"a mile too late," as he himself expressed it, looking exceedingly
downcast at the time.

Of course the three were looked upon as the luckiest fellows ever
known by the rest of the troop present.  Others among the boys had
experienced some notable things since joining the troop and assisting
the rival armies in the field of maneuvers as signal corps operators;
but nothing that had come their way as half as wonderful as being
taken up in a genuine war aeroplane and being given a wild ride
through the clouds.

What Hugh had to tell about the two foreign spies also excited the
delighted interest of Billy Worth, Arthur Cameron, Walter Osborne,
Blake Merton, Don Miller, Cooper Fennimore, "Spike" Welling, Alec
Sands, Sam Winter, Dick Bellamy, Tom Sherwood, Ned Toyford and Jack
Durham, all of whom were present.  They asked him many questions,
and seemed never to tire of hearing about how the army air pilot
had fired those volleys of small bombs down at the skulkers, actually
driving them from the field for good.

A week later when Hugh met Bud Morgan on the way to school, he saw
from the way in which the other looked at him that in some sense
the die had been cast.

"What's doing now, Bud?" asked the patrol leader, possibly guessing
what the answer would turn out to be.

"Smashed her into flinders this A.M.," replied Bud, firmly.

"I reckon you must mean that aeroplane model of yours," ventured
Hugh.

"And you hit the bull's-eye plumb center when you say that, Hugh.
I just made up my mind that I was too young to bother my brains
over a man's work and go to high school at the same time.  My
lessons aren't any too good as it is, and they'd get so rotten bad
soon I'd be sent home with a note to my dad.  I've been trying to
find out where I got that idea of the stability device, and finally
discovered an article about the Wright invention tucked away in one
of my books.  Must have read it once and then forgotten all about
it, so there's how I fooled myself into believing the idea was
original with me.  Served me right, too, but, anyhow, she worked,
Hugh, didn't she?"

He grinned as he made this last triumphant observation, and Hugh
shook him by the hand to show how sorry he felt for the disappointed
inventor.

"Worked like a charm, Bud," he remarked; "and if the famous Wright
brothers could have seen what you did, after only glimpsing the
article long ago, they would have said, just as I do, that you
deserve a heap of credit, that's what."

"Well, I'm done with the whole business right now," Bud continued
firmly.  "Find that it gets too much of a hold on my mind to bother
with while I'm still going to school.  Day and night I couldn't
think of anything but monoplanes, cylinders, drag brakes, propellers,
guy wires, wing-tips, levers, barographs, barometers, searchlights,
volplaning and all such stuff.  It was wearing on my mind, you see.
I even dreamed of flying, and came near taking a header out of my
bedroom window that would have given me a broken leg, or twisted my
neck so I could see both ways to Sunday.  So I called it off, and
threw up the sponge for keeps."

"I think you were wise to do it, if you kept worrying over things
like that," Hugh told him, as they walked along together to school.

Lieutenant Fosdick continued to show considerable interest in the
young leader of the Wolf patrol.  He had even asked Hugh to write to
him occasionally, and promised that as opportunities arose he would
reply to each and every communication.  He knew that he could
describe plenty of adventures, which of course always come thick
and fast to the men in the Army Flying Squadron, even during times
of piping peace.

When Lieutenant Denmead came back from his trip and heard that his
old friend had been in the vicinity, he declared himself very much
disappointed not to have had a chance to see Fosdick again.  Of course
what Hugh had to relate concerning the warmth of the greeting given
himself and two chums in the aviation camp pleased the Scout Master
considerably, also.

"I can see that you met some exciting times up there in the woods,
son," he remarked, "and so please begin right at the start and tell
me everything, no matter how small and insignificant it may seem in
your eyes.  I'm just in the humor to enjoy a rattling tale of
adventure."

He admitted, after Hugh had finished his recital, that he got it, too;
for there was much to thrill the nerves of even such an experienced
army man as he, in the narrative which the boy spun, every word of
it absolutely true.

Winter set in soon afterwards, so that the scouts were not able to
take other outings.  They had to content themselves with their weekly
meetings in the club rooms, but they laid out a vigorous campaign for
the next season.  That is always considered the proper thing for
scouts to do, to map out their plans ahead of time.  To tell the
truth, often there is more real enjoyment in planning than in
executing, for one does not get tired to death with long dusty tramps
while sitting in a comfortable easy-chair and mapping out a
future course!

Some of these plans would of course come to naught; but others might
be expected to arrive at the stage of reality, when once the spring
advanced.  That new and unexpected developments were apt to step
in, however, and demand a share of their attention, may be seen from
the character of the next volume in this series, which bears the title:
"The Boy Scouts and the Prize Pennant."

THE END





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