The High School Boys' Training Hike
E-text prepared by Jim Ludwig
The High School Boys' Training Hike or Making Themselves Hard as Nails
By H. Irving Hancock
CHAPTERS I. Mr. Titmouse Doesn't Know Dick II. The Deed of a Hero III. The Peddler and the Lawyer's Half IV. Peddler Hinman's Next Appearance V. Dave Does Some Good Work VI. The No-Breakfast Plan VII. Making the Tramps Squirm VIII. When the Peddler Was Frisked IX. Dick Imitates a Tame Indian X. Reuben Hinman Proves His Mettle XI. Tom Idealizes Working Clothes XII. Trouble With the Rah-Rah-Rahs XIII. A Snub and the Quick Retort XIV. Dick & Co Make an Apple Pie XV. Making Port in a Storm XVI. Home, Hospital and Almshouse XVII. Two Kinds of Hobo XVIII. Dick Prescott, Knight Errant XIX. I'll Fight Him for This Man! XX. In the Milksop Class? XXI. The Revenge Talk at Miller's XXII. Under the Sting of the Lash XXIII. Timmy, the Gentleman, at Home XXIV. Conclusion
We thought ten dollars would be about right, Dick Prescott announced.
Per week? inquired Mr. Titmouse, as though he doubted his hearing.
Oh, dear, no! For the month of August, sir.
Mr. Newbegin Titmouse surveyed his young caller through half-closed eyelids.
Ten dollars for the use of that fine wagon for a whole month? cried Mr. Titmouse in astonishment. Absurd!
Very likely I am looking at it from the wrong point of view, admitted Prescott, who fingered a ten dollar bill and was slowly smoothing it out so that Mr. Titmouse might see it.
That wagon was put together especially for the purpose, Mr. Titmouse resumed. It has seats that run lengthwise, and eight small cupboards and lockers under the seats. There is a place to secure the cook stove at the rear end of the wagon, and the stove rests on zinc. Though the wagon is light enough for one horse to draw it, it will hold all that several people could require for camping or for leading a regular gipsy life. There is a special awning that covers the wagon when needed, so that on a rainy day you can travel without using umbrellas or getting wet. You can cook equally well on the stove whether in camp or on the road. There are not many vehicles in which you can cook a full meal when traveling from one point to another.