While the boys told him of their interest in the strange conversations, he stood listening, his long arms dangling at his sides, his big eyes blinking and his half-open mouth gulping spasmodically until Tom became absolutely fascinated watching him.

Mentally, Frank and Tom had dubbed him a “freak,” a “simp,” a “bookworm” and half a dozen far from complimentary names and they had expected to hear him speak “like a professor,” as Tom would have expressed it. Instead he uttered a yell like a wild Indian, danced an impromptu jig and to the boys’ amazement exclaimed:

“Hully Gee! So youse’s onto that boid too! Say, fellers, isn’t he the candy kid though? Spielin’ on that flapper wave an’ cannin’ his gab if youse ask his call. Say, that boid oughter be up to the flooey ward—he’s bughouse I’ll say, with all his ship talk and numbers jazzed up an’ chinnin’

to himself. Say, did youse ever hear a bloke talkin’ to him?”

“No, we never did,” replied Tom. “Did you?”

“Nix!” answered Jim. “That’s why I say he’s got rats in his garret—flooey I’ll say—” Then, suddenly dropping his slangy East Side expressions, he continued: “Say, he’s had me guessing, too. But I can tell you one thing. He’s west of my place—I’m over at Bellevue, you know—Dad’s stationed there—and that’ll bring him somewhere between East 27th St. and Gramercy Square.”

“But, how on earth do you know that?” queried Tom in surprise.

Jim grinned and blinked.

“Same way you found out he was east of here,” he replied. “You needn’t think you fellows have got any patent on a loop, I’ve been usin’ one for six months. Ed—he’s my brother—is ‘Sparks’ on a big liner and showed me about it. But honest, if that fellow isn’t crazy an’ talkin’ to himself, why don’t we get the other guy sometimes?”

“That’s the mystery to us,” said Frank. “We decided just before you came in that the other fellow must be sending on a different wave length