Boy Scouts on a Long Hike; Or, To the Rescue in the Black Water Swamps
Copyright 1913 M. A. DONOHUE & CO. CHICAGO
They all think, fellows, that the Beaver Patrol can't do it!
We'll show 'em how we've climbed up out of the tenderfoot class; hey, boys?
Just watch our smoke, that's all. Why, it's only a measly little twenty-five miles per day, and what d'ye think?
Sure Seth, and what's that to a husky lot of Boy Scouts, who've been through the mill, and wear merit badges all around? Huh! consider it as good as done right now!
Half a dozen boys who wore khaki uniforms, were chattering like so many magpies as they stood in a little group on an elevation overlooking the bustling Indiana town of Beverly.
Apparently they must have been practicing some of the many clever things Boy Scouts delight to learn, for several of the number carried signal flags; two had pieces of a broken looking-glass in their possession; while the tall lad, Seth Carpenter, had a rather sadly stained blanket coiled soldier fashion about his person, that gave off a scent of smoke, proving that he must have used it in communicating with distant comrades, by means of the smoke code of signals.
Besides Seth there were in the group Jotham Hale, Eben Newcomb, Andy Mullane, Fritz Hendricks, and a merry, red-faced boy who, because of his German extraction, went by the name of Noodles Krafft.
The reader who has not made the acquaintance of these wide-awake scouts in previous volumes of this Series will naturally want to know something about them, and hence it might be wise to introduce the members of the Beaver Patrol right here.
Eben was the official bugler of Beverly Troop. He had been made to take this office much against his will, and for a long time had the greatest difficulty in getting the hang of his instrument, so that his comrades guyed him most unmercifully over the strange medleys he used to bring forth when meaning to sound the various calls. But of late Eben seemed to have mastered his silver-plated bugle, and was really doing very well, with an occasional lapse excepted.
Archibald Lee Fletcher
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Boy Scouts on a Long Hike
Or, To the Rescue in the Black Water Swamps
Chapter I
THE BOYS OF THE BEAVER PATROL
Chapter II
HELPING NOODLES
Chapter III
THE GENTLE COW
Chapter IV
IN ALABAMA CAMP
Chapter V
A HELPING HAND
Chapter VI
THE HOME-COMING OF JO DAVIES
Chapter VII
INNOCENT OR GUILTY?
Chapter VIII
"WELL, OF ALL THINGS!"
Chapter IX
THE RUNAWAY BALLOON
Chapter X
DUTY ABOVE ALL THINGS
Chapter XI
THE TRAIL IN THE SWAMP
Chapter XII
WHERE NO FOOT HAS EVER TROD
CHAPTER XIII
THE OASIS IN THE SWAMP
Chapter XIV
JUST IN THE NICK OF TIME
Chapter XV
ON THE HOME-STRETCH
Chapter XVI
"WELL DONE, BEAVER PATROL!"
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Transcriber's Notes