Edward Stratemeyer

The Rover Boys at School
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THE ROVER BOYS AT SCHOOL

Or

THE CADETS OF PUTNAM HALL

By Arthur M. Winfield
(Edward Stratemeyer)




INTRODUCTION


My Dear Boys:

"The Rover Boys at School" has been written that those of you who
have never put in a term or more at an American military academy
for boys may gain some insight into the workings of such an
institution.

While Putnam Hall is not the real name of the particular place of
learning I had in  mind while penning this tale for your amusement
and instruction, there is really such a school, and dear Captain
Putnam is a living person, as are also the lively, wide-awake,
fun-loving Rover brothers, Dick, Tom, and Sam, and their
schoolfellows, Larry, Fred, and Frank.  The same can be said, to a
certain degree, of the bully Dan Baxter, and his toady, the sneak,
commonly known as "Mumps."

The present story is complete in itself, but it is written as the
first of a series, to be followed by "The Rover Boys on the Ocean"
and "The Rover Boys in the Jungle," in both of which volumes we
will again meet many of our former characters.

Trusting that this tale will find as much favor in your hands as
have my previous stories, I remain,

Affectionately and sincerely yours,

EDWARD STRATEMEYER




CHAPTER I

INTRODUCING THE ROVER BOYS


"Hurrah, Sam, it is settled at last that we are to go to boarding
school!"

"Are you certain, Tom?  Don't let me raise any false hopes."

"Yes, I am certain, for I heard Uncle Randolph tell Aunt Martha
that he wouldn't keep us in the house another week.  He said he
would rather put up with the Central Park menagerie--think of
that!" and Tom Rover began  to laugh.

"That's rather rough on us, but I don't know but what we deserve
it," answered Sam Rover, Tom's younger brother.  "We have been
giving it pretty strong lately, with playing tricks on Sarah the
cook, Jack the hired man, and Uncle Randolph's pet dog Alexander.
But then we had to do something--or go into a dry rot.  Life in
the country is all well enough, but it's mighty slow for me."

"I guess it is slow for anybody brought up in New York, Sam.  Why,
the first week I spent here I thought the stillness would kill me.
I couldn't actually go to sleep because it was so quiet.  I wish
uncle and aunt would move to the city.  They have money enough."

"Aunt Martha likes to be quiet, and uncle is too much wrapped up in
the art of scientific farming, as he calls it. I'll wager he'll stay
on this farm experimenting and writing works on agriculture until he
dies. Well, it's a good enough way to do, I suppose, but it wouldn't
suit me. I want to see something of life--as father did."

"So do I.  Perhaps we'll see something when we get to boarding
school."

"Where are we to go?"

"I don't know. Some strict institution, you can be sure of that. Uncle
Randolph told aunty it was time the three of us were taken in hand. He
said Dick wasn't so bad, but you and I--"

"Were the bother of his life, eh?"

"Something about like that.  He doesn't see any fun in tricks.  He
expects us to just walk around the farm, or study, and, above all
things, keep quiet, so that his scientific investigations are not
disturbed.  Why doesn't he let us go out riding, or boating on the
river, or down to the village to play baseball with the rest of
the fellows?  A real live American boy can't be still all the time,
and he ought to know it," and, with a decided shake of his curly
head, Tom Rover took a baseball from his pocket and began to throw
it up against the side of the farmhouse, catching it each time as
it came down.

Tom had thrown the ball up just four times when a pair of blinds
to an upper window flew open with a crash, and the head of a
stern-looking elderly gentleman appeared.  The gentleman had gray
hair, very much tumbled, and wore big spectacles.

"Hi! hi! boys, what does this mean?" came in a high-pitched voice.
"What are you hammering on the house for, when I am just in the
midst of a deep problem concerning the rotation of crops on a
hillside with northern exposure?"

"Excuse me, Uncle Randolph, I didn't think to disturb you,"
answered Tom meekly.  "I'll put the ball away."

"You never stop to think, Thomas.  Give me that ball."

"Oh, let me keep it, Uncle Randolph!  I won't throw it against the
house again, honor bright."

"You'll forget that promise in ten minutes, Thomas; I know you
well.  Throw the ball up," and Mr. Randolph Rover held out his hands.

"All right, then; here you go," answered Tom, somewhat put out to
thus lose a ball which had cost him his week's spending, money;
and he sent the sphere flying upward at a smart speed.  Mr. Rover
made a clutch for it, but the ball slipped through his hands and
landed plump on his nose.

"Oh!" he cried, and disappeared from sight, but reappeared a
moment later, to shake his fist at Tom.

"You young rascal!  You did that on purpose!" he spluttered, and
brought forth his handkerchief, for his nose had begun to bleed.
"Was anyone ever tormented so by three boys?"

"Now you are in for it again, Tom," whispered Sam.

"I didn't mean to hit you, Uncle Randolph.  Why didn't you catch
it on the fly?"

"On the fly?" repeated the uncle.  "Do you suppose I am accustomed
to catching cannon balls?"

"Didn't you ever play baseball?"

"Never.  I spent my time in some useful study."  The elderly
gentleman continued to keep his handkerchief to his nose, and
adjusted his glasses.

"Thank fortune, you are all going to go to boarding school next
week, and we will once more have a little peace and quietness
around Valley Brook!"

"Where are we to go, Uncle Randolph?" asked Sam.

"You will learn that Monday morning, when you start off."

"It wouldn't hurt to tell us now," grumbled Tom.

"You must learn to be patient, Thomas.  My one hope is that life
at boarding school makes a real man of you."

"Of course we are all to go together?"

"Yes, you are to go together, although I can get along with
Richard very well, he is so much more quiet and studious than you
or Samuel."

"I reckon he takes after you, Uncle Randolph."

"If so, he might do worse.  By the way, what were both of you
doing here?"

"Nothing," came from Sam.

"We haven't anything to do.  This farm is the slowest place on
earth," added Tom.

"Why do you not study the scientific and agricultural works that I
mentioned to you?  See what I have done for scientific farming."

"I don't want to be a farmer," said Tom.  "I'd rather be a
sailor."

"A sailor!" gasped Randolph Rover.  "Of all things!  Why, a sailor
is the merest nobody on earth!"

"I guess you mean on the sea, uncle," said Sam with a grin.

"Don't joke me, Samuel.  Yes, Thomas--the calling of a sailor
amounts to absolutely nothing.  Scientific farming is the thing!
Nothing more noble on the face of the earth than to till the
soil."

"I never saw you behind a plow, Uncle Randolph," answered Tom,
with a twinkle in his blue eyes.  "Besides, I heard you say that
the farm ran behind last year."

"Tut, tut, boy!  You know nothing about it.  I made a slight
miscalculation in crops, that was all.  But this year we shall do
better."

"You lost money year before last, too," commented Sam.

"Who told you that?"

"Mr. Woddie, the storekeeper at the Corners."

"Mr. Woddie may understand storekeeping, but he knows nothing of
farming, scientific or otherwise.  I spent several thousands of
dollars in experimenting, but the money was not lost.  We shall
soon have grand results.  I shall astonish the whole of New York
State at the next meeting of our agricultural society," and Mr.
Randolph Rover waved his hand grandiloquently.  It was easy to see
that scientific farming was his hobby.

"Randolph!"  It was the voice of Mrs. Rover, who now appeared
beside her husband.  "What is the matter with your nose?"

"Tom hit me with his ball.  It is all right now, although it did
bleed some."

"The bad boy!  But it is just like him.  Sarah has given notice
that she will leave at the end of her month.  She says she can't
stand the pranks Tom and Sam play on her."

"She need not go--for the boys are going to boarding school, you
know."

"She says you promised to send them off before."

"Well, they shall go this time, rest assured of that.  I cannot
stand their racing up and down stairs, and their noise, any
longer.  They go Monday morning."

"Better send them off tomorrow."

"Well--er--that is rather sudden."

"Sarah's month is up Friday.  She will surely go unless the boys
are out of the house.  And she is the best cook I have ever had."

"Excepting when she burnt the custard pies," put in Tom.

"And when she salted the rice pudding!" added Sam.

"Silence, both of you.  Randolph, do send them off."

"Very well, I will.  Boys, you must go away from the house for an
hour or two."

"Can we go fishing or swimming?" asked Tom.

"No, I don't want you to go near the river, you may get drowned."

"We can both swim," ventured Sam.

"Never mind--it is not safe--and your poor father left you in
my, care."

"Can we go down to the village?"

"No, you might get into bad company there."

"Then where shall we go?" came from both boys simultaneously.

Randolph Rover scratched his head in perplexity.  He had never had
any children of his own, and to manage his brother's offspring was
clearly beyond him.  "You might go down to the cornfield, and
study the formation of the ears--"

"Send them blackberrying," suggested Mrs. Rover.  "We want the
berries for pies tomorrow, and it will give them something to do."

"Very well; boys, you may go blackberrying.  And mind you keep out
of mischief."

"We'll mind," answered Tom.  "But you might let me have that
ball."

"I will give it to you in the morning," answered Randolph Rover, and
turned away from the window with his wife.

As soon as they were out of sight, Tom threw up both, hands in
mock tragedy, "Alack, Horatio, this excitement killeth me!" he
cried in a stage whisper.  "Sent blackberrying to keep us out of
mischief!  Sam, what are we coming to?"

"Well, it's better than moping around doing nothing.  For my part,
I am glad we are to go to boarding school, and the sooner the
better.  But I would like to know where to?"

"If only we were going to a military academy!"

"Hurrah!  Just the thing!  But no such luck.  Get the berry
baskets and let us be off.  By the way, where is Dick?"

"Gone to the village for the mail.  There he comes down the road
now," and Tom pointed to a distant path back of the meadows.

The two boys hurried into a woodshed behind the large farmhouse
and procured a basket and two tin pails.  With these in hand they
set off in the direction of the berry patch, situated along the
path that Dick Rover was pursuing, their intention being to head
off their brother and see if he had any letters for them.

Of the three Rover boys, Richard, commonly called Dick, was the
eldest.  He was sixteen, tall, slender, and had dark eyes and dark
hair.  He was a rather quiet boy, one who loved to read and study,
although he was not above having a good time now and then, when
he felt like "breaking loose," as Tom expressed it.

Next to Richard came Tom, a year younger, as merry a lad as there
was ever to be found, full of life and "go," not above playing all
sorts of tricks on people, but with a heart of gold, as even his
uncle and aunt felt bound to admit.

Sam was the youngest.  He was but fourteen, but of the same height
and general appearance as Tom, and the pair might readily have
been taken for twins.  He was not as full of pranks as Tom, but
excelled his brothers in many outdoor sports.

The history of the three Rover boys was a curious one.  They were
the only children of one Anderson Rover, a gentleman who had been
widely known as a mineral expert, gold mine proprietor, and
traveler.  Mr. Anderson Rover had gone to California a poor young
man and had there made a fortune in the mines.  Returning to the
East, he had married and settled down in New York City, and there,
the three boys had been born.

An epidemic of fever had taken off Mrs. Rover when Richard was but
ten years of age.  The shock had come so suddenly that Anderson
Rover was dazed, and for several weeks the man knew not what to
do.  "Take all of the money I made in the West, but give me back
my wife!" he said broken-heartedly, but this could not be, and
soon after he left his three boys in charge of a housekeeper and
set off to tour Europe, thinking that a change of scene would
prove a benefit.

When he came back he seemed a changed man.  He was restless, and
could not remain at home for more than a few weeks at a time.  He
placed the boys at a boarding school in New York and returned to
the West, where he made another strike in the gold mines; and when
he came back once more he was reported to be worth between two and
three hundred thousand dollars.

But now a new idea had came into his head.  He had been reading up
on Africa, and had reached the conclusion that there must be gold
in the great unexplored regions of that country.  He determined to
go to Africa, fit out an exploration, and try his luck.

"It will not cost me over ten to twenty thousand dollars," he said
to his brother Randolph.  "And it may make me a millionaire."

"If you are bound to go, I will not stop you," had been Randolph
Rover's reply.  "But what of your boys in the meanwhile?"

This was a serious question, for Anderson Rover knew well the risk
he was running, knew  well that many a white man had gone into the
interior of Africa never to return.  At last it was settled that
Randolph Rover should become Dick, Tom, and Sam's temporary
guardian.  This accomplished, Anderson Rover set off and that was
the last any of his family had ever heard of him.

Was he dead or alive?  Hundreds of times had the boys and their
uncle pondered that question.  Each mail was watched with anxiety,
but day after day brought no news, until the waiting became an old
story, and all settled down to the dismal conviction that the
daring explorer must be dead.  He had landed and gone into the
interior with three white men and twenty natives, and that was all
that could be ascertained concerning him.

At the time of Anderson Rover's departure Randolph had been on the
point of purchasing a farm of two hundred acres in the Mohawk
Valley of New York State.  The land had not changed hands until a
year later, however, and then Dick, Tom, and Sam were called upon
to give up their life in the metropolis and settle down in the
country, a mile away from the village of Dexter Corners.

For a month things had gone very well, for all was new, and it
seemed like a "picnic," to use Tom's way of expressing it.  They
had run over the farm from end to end, climbed to the roof of the
barn, explored the brook, and Sam had broken his arm by falling
from the top of a cherry tree.  But after that the novelty wore
away, and the boys began to fret.

"They want something to do," thought Randolph Rover, and set them
to work studying scientific farming, as he called it.  At this
Dick made some progress, but the uncle could do nothing with Tom
and Sam.  Then the last two broke loose and began to play pranks
on everybody that came along, and life became little short of a
burden to the studious Randolph and, his quiet-minded spouse.

"I must send them off to a boarding school, or somewhere,"
Randolph Rover would say, but he kept putting the matter off,
hoping against hope that he might soon hear from his lost brother.




CHAPTER II

AN ENCOUNTER ON THE ROAD


"I'll race you to the path," said Sam, when the woodshed was left
behind.

"All right," answered Tom, who was always ready to run.  "Toe the
mark here.  Now then--one, two, three!  Go!"

And away they went across the meadow, leaping two ditches with the
agility of a pair of deer, and tearing through the small brush
beyond regardless of the briers and the rents their nether
garments might sustain.  At first Tom took the lead, but Sam
speedily overhauled and then passed him.

"It's no use--you always could outrun me," panted Tom, as he
came to a stop when Sam crossed the footpath ten yards ahead of
him.  "I can't understand it either.  My legs are just as long as
yours, and my lungs just as big, too, I think."

"You want to do your running scientifically, Tom.  That athletic
instructor in New York--"

"Oh, bother your scientific things, Sam!  Uncle gives us enough of
that, so don't you start in.  I wonder if Dick has got a letter
from Larry Colby?  He promised to write last week.  He is going to
a boarding school soon."

"We'll know in a few minutes.  I wonder where Larry--Gracious,
listen!"

Sam broke off short, as a loud cry for help reached their ears.
It came from the footpath, at a point where it ran through a grove
of beech trees.

"It's Dick's voice!  He wants help!" burst from Tom's lips.  "Come
on!" and he set off as rapidly as his exhausted condition would
permit.  As before, Sam readily outdistanced him, and soon came
upon the scene of a most brutal encounter.

A burly tramp, all of six feet in height, had attacked Dick Rover
and thrown him upon his back.  The tramp was now kneeling upon the
prostrate boy's chest, at the same time trying to wrench a watch
from Dick's vest pocket.

"Keep still there, or I'll knock you on the head!" cried the
tramp, as, letting go of the watch chain, he clapped a dirty hand
over Dick's mouth.

"I--won't--kee--keep still!" spluttered Dick.  "Let--me--up!"

"You will keep still--if you know what is best for you.  I have
your pocketbook, and now I am bound to have that watch and that
ring."

"No! Don't rob me of the watch!  It belonged to my father!" panted
Dick, and as the watch came out of the pocket he made a clutch at
it.  "Help! help!"

"Will you shut up!" burst out the tramp fiercely, and struck at
the youth with his fist.

It was at this juncture that Sam put in an appearance.  A glance
told him how matters stood, and without waiting an instant he came
up behind the tramp, and, catching him by the shoulders, hurled
him backward.

"Sam!  Good for you!" burst out Dick joyfully.  "Don't let him get
away!"

"What do you mean, boy?" demanded the ruffian, as he turned over
and leaped to his feet.

"You let my brother alone--that's what I mean," was the answer.

"Give me my pocketbook and that watch!" went on Dick, for the
tramp held both articles, one in each hand.

"Yes, I will--not," was the ready reply, turning, suddenly, the
tramp started through the grove of trees on a run.

Without waiting, Sam ran after him followed by Tom, who had now
arrived.  Dick came behind, too much winded by being thrown on his
back to keep up with them.

"He is making for the river!" cried Tom, after running for several
minutes without gaining on the thief.  "If he has a boat he'll get
away!

"I don't think he has a boat, Tom.  He looks like a regular
tramp."

"We'll soon find out."

They could not see the ruffian, but they could hear him quite
plainly as he crashed through the brush beyond the grove of trees.
Then came a crash and a yell of pain.

"He has stumbled and fallen!" said Sam, and redoubled his speed.
Soon he reached the spot where the tramp had gone down.  He was
about to proceed further when a well-known object caught his eye.

"Here is the pocketbook!" he burst out, and picked the article up.
A hasty examination showed that the contents were intact; and the
two boys continued the pursuit, with Dick still following.

They were now going downhill toward the river, and presently
struck a patch of wet meadow.

"We must be careful here," observed Tom, and just then sank up to
his ankles in water and mud.  But the tramp could now be seen
heading directly for the river, and they continued to follow him.

They were still fifty yards from the shore when Sam uttered a cry
of dismay.  "He's got a boat!"

"So he has.  Stop there, you thief!"

"Stop yourself, or I'll shoot one of you!" growled the tramp, as
he leaped into a flat bottom craft moored beside a fallen tree.
He had no pistol, but thought he might scare the boys.

They came to a halt, and an instant later the flat-bottom craft
shot away from the river bank.  By this time Dick came up, all out
of breath.

"So he has gotten away!" he cried in dismay.

"Yes," answered Sam, "but here is your pocketbook."

"And what of my watch--the one father gave to me before he left
for Africa?"

"He's got that yet, I suppose," said Tom.

At this Dick gave a groan, for the watch was a fine gold one which
Mr. Rover had worn for years.  Dick had begged for the timepiece,
and it had been entrusted to him at the last moment.

"We must get that watch back somehow!" he said.  "Isn't there
another boat around here?"

"There is one up to Harrison's farm."

"That is quarter of a mile away."

"I don't think there is any nearer."

"And the river is all of two hundred feet wide here!  What shall
we do?"

It was a puzzling question, and all three of the boys stared
blankly at each other.  In the meantime, the thief had picked up a
pair of oars and was using them in a clumsy fashion which showed
plainly that he was not used to handling them.

"If we had a boat we could catch him easily," observed Tom.  Then
his eyes fell upon the fallen tree.  "I have an idea!  Let us try
to get across on that!  I won't mind a wetting if only we can get
Dick's watch back."

"Yes, yes; just the thing!" put in his elder brother quickly.

All hands ran down to the fallen tree, which was about a foot in
diameter and not over twenty-five or thirty feet in length.  It
lay half in the water already, and it was an easy matter to shove
it off.

"We can't do much without oars or a pole," said Tom.  "Wait a
moment," and he ran back to where he had seen another fallen tree,
a tall, slender maple sapling.  He soon had this in hand; and,
cleared of its branches, it made a capital pole.  Dick and Sam sat
astride of the tree in the water, and Tom stood against an upright
branch and shoved off.  The river was not deep, and he kept on
reaching bottom without difficulty.

By this time the tramp was halfway across the stream, which was
flowing, rapidly and carrying both boat and tree down toward a
bend quarter of a mile below.

"Go on back, unless you want to be shot!" cried the man savagely,
but they paid no attention to the threat as no pistol appeared;
and, seeing this, the thief redoubled his efforts to get away.

He was still a quarter of the distance from the opposite shore,
and the boys on the tree were in midstream, when Sam uttered a
shout.  "There goes one of his oars!  We can catch him now--if
we try hard!"

It was true that the oar was gone, and in his anxiety to regain
the blade the tramp nearly lost the second oar.  But his efforts
were unavailing, and he started to paddle himself to the bank,
meanwhile watching his pursuers anxiously.

"We'll get him," said Dick encouragingly, when, splash! Tom went
overboard like a flash, the lower end of his pole having slipped
on a smooth rock of the river bottom.  There was a grand splutter,
and it was fully a minute before Tom reappeared--twenty feet
away and minus his pole.

"Hi! help me on board, somebody!" he spluttered, for he had gone
overboard so quickly that he had swallowed a large quantity of
water.

Both Sam and Dick tried to reach him, but could not.  Then the
current caught the tree and whirled it around and around until
both boys began to grow dizzy.

Seeing they could not aid him, and getting back a little of his
wind, Tom struck out for the tree.  But the water running over his
face blinded him, and ere he knew he was so close the tree came
circling around and struck him on the side of the head.

"Oh!" he moaned, and sank from sight.

"Tom's hit!" gasped Sam.  "He'll be drowned sure now!"

"Not if I can help him!" burst out Dick, and leaped overboard to
his brother's assistance.  But Tom was still out of sight, and for
several seconds could not be located.

Sam waited anxiously, half of a mind to jump into the river
himself.  The tramp was now forgotten, and landed on the opposite
bank unnoticed.  He immediately dove into the bushes, and
disappeared from view.

At last Dick caught sight of Tom's arm and made a clutch for it.
Hardly had he taken hold than Tom swung around and caught him by
the throat in a deathlike grip, for he was too bewildered to know
what he was doing.

"Save me!" he groaned.  "Oh, my head!  Save me!"

"I will, Tom; only don't hold me so tight," answered Dick. "I--can't
get any air."

"I can't swim--I'm all upset," was the reply; and Tom clutched
his elder brother tighter than ever.

Seeing there was no help for it, Dick caught hold of the fingers
around his throat and forced them loose by main force.  Then he
swung himself behind Tom and caught him under the arms, in the
meantime treading water to keep both of them afloat.

"Sam, can't you bring that tree closer?" he called out.

There was no reply, and, looking around, he saw that the tree and
his younger brother were a hundred yards away, and sailing down
the river as rapidly as the increasing current could, carry them
for quarter of a mile below were what were known as the Humpback
Falls--a series of dangerous rapids through which but few boats
had ever passed without serious mishap.

"I reckon Sam is having his hands full," he thought.  "I must get
Tom to the shore alone.  But it is going to be a tough job, I can
see that."

"Oh, Dick!" came from Tom.  "My head is spinning like a top!"

"The tree hit you, Tom.  But do keep quiet, and I'll take care of
you."

"I can't swim--I feel like a wet rag through and through."

"Never mind about swimming.  Only don't catch me by the throat
again, and we'll be all right," was Dick's reassuring reply, and
as his brother became more passive he struck out for the bank upon
which the thief had landed.

The current carried them on and on, but not so swiftly as it was
carrying the tree.  Soon they were approaching the bend.  Dick was
swimming manfully, but was
now all but exhausted.

"You can't make it, Dick," groaned Tom.  "Better save yourself."

"And let you go?  No indeed, Tom.  I have a little strength left
and--Hurrah, I've struck bottom!"

Dick was right: his feet had landed on a sandbar; and, standing
up, both boys found the water only to their armpits.  Under such
circumstances they waded ashore with care, and here threw
themselves down to rest.

"That thief is gone," said Dick dismally.

"And my watch too!"

"But where is Sam?" questioned Tom, then looked at his brother
meaningfully.

"The Humpback Fall!" came from Dick.  "Sam!  Sam!" he yelled;
"look out where you are going!"

But no answer came back to his cry, for Sam had long since floated
out of hearing.




CHAPTER III

SAMS ADVENTURE AT HUMPBACK FALLS


For several minutes after Dick leaped overboard to Tom's
assistance, Sam's one thought was of his two brothers.  Would they
reach the tree or the shore in safety?  Fervently he prayed they
would.

The tree went around and around, as a side current caught it, and
presently the whirlings became so rapid that Sam grew dizzy, and
had to hold tight to keep from falling off.

He saw Dick catch Tom from the back and start for shore, and then
like a flash the realization of his own situation dawned upon him.
He was on the tree with no means of guiding his improvised craft,
and sweeping nearer and nearer to the rapids of which he had heard
so much but really knew so little.

"I must get this tree to the river bank," he, said to himself, and
looked around for some limb which might be cut off and used for a
pole.

But no such limb was handy, and even had there been there would
have been no time in which to prepare it for use, for the rapids
were now in plain sight, the water boiling and foaming as it
darted over one rock and another, in a descent of thirty feet in
forty yards.

"This won't do!" muttered the boy, and wondered if it would not be
best to leap overboard and try to swim to safety.  But one look at
that swirling current made
him draw back.

"I reckon I had best stick to the tree and trust to luck to pass
the rocks in safety," he muttered, and clutched the tree with a
firmer hold than ever.

The strange craft had now stopped circling, and was shooting
straight ahead for a rock that stood several feet above water.  On
it went, and Sam closed his eyes in expectancy of an awful shock
which would pitch him headlong, he knew not to where.

But then came a swerve to the left, and the tree grated along the
edge of the rock.  Before Sam could recover his breath, down it
went over the first line of rapids.  Here it stuck fast for a
moment, then turned over and went on, throwing Sam on the under
side.

The boy's feet struck bottom, and he bobbed up like a cork.  Again
he clutched the tree, and on the two went a distance of ten feet
further.  But now the tree became jammed between two other rocks,
and there it stuck, with Sam clutching one end and the water
rushing in, a torrent over the other.

For the moment the boy could do little but hold fast, but as his
breath came back to him he climbed on top of the tree and took a
look at the situation.

It was truly a dismaying one.  He was in the very center of the
rapids, and the shore on either side of him was fifty to sixty
feet away.

"How am I ever to get to the bank?" he asked himself.  "I can't
wade or swim, for the current is far too strong.  I'm in a pickle,
and no mistake.  I wonder if Dick and Tom are on solid earth yet?"

He raised his voice into a shout, not once, but several times.  At
first only the echoes answered him, but presently came a reply
from a distance.

"Sam!  Sam!  Where are your?"  It was Dick calling, and he was
running along the bank alone, Tom being too exhausted to accompany
him.

"Here I am--in the middle of the falls!"

"Where?"

"Out here--in the middle of the falls!"

"Great Caesar, Sam!  Can't you wade ashore?"

"No; the current is so strong I am afraid to."

In a minute more Dick reached a spot opposite to where the tree
rested.  As he took in the situation his face clouded in
perplexity.

"You are right--don't try wading," he, said.  "If you do, you'll
have your skull cracked open on the rocks.  I'll have to get a
rope and haul you off."

"All right; but do hurry, for this tree may start on again at any
instant!"

To procure a rope was no easy matter, for nothing of that sort was
at hand, and the nearest farmhouse was some distance away.  Yet,
without thinking twice, Dick set off for the farmhouse, arriving
there inside of five minutes.

"I need a rope, quick, Mr. Darrel," he said.  "My brother is in
the middle of the Humpback Falls on a tree, and I want to save
him."

"Why, Dick Rover, you don't tell me!" cried Joel Darrel, a farmer
who had often worked for Randolph Rover.  "Sure I'll get a wash
line this minute!" and he ran for the kitchen shed.

Luckily the line was just where the farmer supposed it would be,
and away went man and boy, Dick leading, until the river bank was
again reached.

"There he is, Mr. Darrel.  How can we best help him, do you
think?"

The farmer scratched his head in perplexity.

"Hang me if I jess know, Dick," he said slowly.

"If we try to pull him straight to shore the current will carry
him over the rocks in spite of the line."

"How long do you suppose the line is?"

"It is fifty yards, and all good and strong, for I bought it of
Woddie only last week."

"Fifty yards--that is a hundred and fifty feet.  Do you see that
spur of rock just above there?"

"I do."

"Is it more than a hundred and fifty feet from that rock to the
tree?"

"Hardly; but it's close figuring."

"Let us try the line and see."

Both walked up to the spur of rock they had in view.  It jutted
out into the river for several yards, and was rather wet and
slippery.

"Take care, or you'll go in too," cautioned Joel Darrel.  "Shall I
throw the rope out?"

"You might try it," answered Dick.  "I'll hold fast to your leg,"
and he squatted down for that purpose.

The line was uncoiled and thrown three times, but each time it
fell short and drifted inshore again.

"Hurry up!" suddenly yelled Sam.  "The tree is beginning to turn,
and it will break loose before long."

"Let me try a throw," said Dick, and took the wash line.  As he
made the cast, Tom came up on a walk, his head tied up in a
handkerchief.

"Where is Sam?"

"Out there," said Joel Darrel, and watched the casting of the line
with interest.  Again it fell short, but Dick's second throw was a
complete success, and soon Sam held the outer end of the line
fast.

"It reaches, and we have about fifteen feet to spare," said Dick
joyfully.  "Sam, tie it around you."  Scarcely had the word left
the younger brother's lips than the tree upon which he rested
wobbled and went over, and he found himself thrown into the
foaming water.

"Pull away, all hands!" cried Dick, and hauled in desperately,
while Joel Darrel did the same.  Tom was not equal to the task,
but contented himself with holding fast to Dick's coat, that his
elder brother might not slip from the rock.

It was no light work to get Sam up the first rise of the rapids,
but once this rise was passed the rest was easy by comparison.
They pulled in steadily, and presently the boy reached the rock
and came up, looking very much like a dripping seal as he
clambered to safety.

"Thank fortune, you are safe!" cried Dick when it was all over;
and Tom said "Amen," under his breath.  Joel Darrel looked well
satisfied as he coiled up the wash line.

"It was a narrow escape," he remarked presently.  "You want to be
careful how you try to cross the river at this point.  What were
you doing on the tree?"

"I was after a thief," answered Sam, and then he looked at Dick
and Tom.  "Where is he?"

"Gone," returned Dick.

"A thief!" ejaculated Joel Darrel.  "Whom did he rob?"

"He robbed me."

"Do tell, Dick!  When?"

"About half an hour ago. I was coming from the Corners with the
mail, when he pounced on me near our berry patch and knocked me
down.  He took my pocketbook and my watch, but Sam and Tom came
up, and we chased the fellow and got the pocketbook back."

"But he kept the watch?"

"Yes."

"Was it a good one?"

"It was a gold watch that my father paid sixty-five dollars for--and
the chain was worth ten; and, what is more, the watch was one my
father used to wear; and as he is gone now, I thought a good deal of
it on that account."

"That's natural, my boy.  But where did the thief go?"

"Came across the river about quarter of a mile above here."

"Then he had a boat?"

"Yes--a craft painted brown, with a white stripe around her."

"That's Jerry Rodman's boat.  He must have stolen her in the first
place to cross to your side."

"More than likely."

"But where did he go after he crossed the river?"

"Into the bushes, I guess.  You see, Tom went overboard from the
tree and got struck, and I went to his assistance, so I didn't
notice exactly.  I want to get back now and follow the rascal."

"I'll go along."

"I wish you would."

"In that case I won't try to keep up with you," put in Tom.  "My
head is aching fit to split."

"Yes, you may as well take it easy," answered Dick.  "But, say,
why not, walk up to the river road and see if the rascal heads in
this direction?"

"So I will, Dick.  Will you go too, Sam?"

It was arranged that Sam should accompany and they set off
immediately, while Dick and Joel Darrel ran along the river bank
to where the rowboat had been abandoned.

Down where it was muddy it was easy to trace the tramp's
footprints, and they led through a meadow and across a cornfield,
coming out at a side road leading to the town of Oak Run.

"Well, where to next?" questioned the farmer, as he and Dick came
to a halt.

The youth shook his head.  "It's so dry here the footprints are
lost," he returned slowly.

"That's true, Dick.  But I reckon he went to Oak Run."

"Why?"

"Because he could catch a train from there which would take him
miles away--and I guess that is what he wants to do just about
now."

"There is something in that."

"Besides, you know, the other end of the road ends up in the
woods.  He wouldn't go there."

"I had best start for Oak Run, then."

"I'll go along."

The distance was a mile and a half, and they thought they would
have to walk it, but hardly had a dozen rods been covered than
they heard the sound of wagon wheels, and a grocery turnout and
came into sight driven by a boy Joel Darrel knew well.

"This comes in just right," observed Darrel to Dick.  "Hi there,
Harry Oswald.  Give us a lift to Oak Run, will you?"

"Certainly, Mr. Darrel," answered the grocery boy, and brought his
store wagon to a stop.  The farmer leaped to the seat, and Dick
followed.

On the way Harry Oswald was made acquainted with the situation,
and he drove along with all possible speed.  They were just
entering the outskirts of Oak Run when the whistle of a locomotive
was heard.

"That's the down train for Middletown" cried Joel Darrel.  "Hurry
up!"

The horse was whipped up, and they swept along to the depot at a
speed which made the constable of the town shake his fist at Harry
and threaten to arrest him for fast driving.

"Too late!"

The words came from Dick, and he was right.  Before the depot was
reached the long train had pulled out.  Soon it was lost to sight
in the distance.

The thief was on it; and his escape, for the time being, was now
assured.




CHAPTER IV

THE LAST DAY AT THE FARM


"What does this mean?"

It was Gilbert Ponsberry, the chief constable of Oak Run, who
spoke, as he strode up to the grocery wagon, all out of breath.

"Hullo, Ponsberry, you are just the man we want to see!" cried
Joel Darrel.  "Did you notice who boarded that train?"

"No; I wasn't at the depot.  Anything wrong?"

"I have been robbed of a gold watch and chain," answered Dick, and
related the particulars.

"Gee shoo!  No wonder you drove fast," ejaculated the constable.
"I would have done so myself.  How did that fellow look?"

As well as he was able, Dick gave a description of the thief.

"I saw that tramp yesterday," said the constable, when he had
finished.  "He was in the depot, talking to a tall, thin man.  I
remember him well, for he and the other fellow were quarreling.  I
hung around rather expecting a fight.  But it didn't come."

"You haven't seen the thief since yesterday?"

"No."

"You remember the tall, thin man he was with?"

"Oh, sure, for he had a scar on his chin that looked like a knife
cut."

"Is he anywhere around?"

"I haven't seen him since.  Let us take a walk around, and we can
ask Ricks the station master about this."

"We had better ask Mr. Ricks first," said Dick.

All hands, even to the grocery boy, hunted up the station master,
an elderly fellow who was well known for his unsociable
disposition.

"Don't know anything about any thief," he snapped, after hearing
the story. "I mind my own business."

"But he may have taken the train," pleaded Dick.  It made his
heart sink to think that the watch, that precious memento from
his father, might be gone forever.

"Well, if he did, you had better go after him--or telegraph to
Middletown," was the short answer, and then the station master
turned away.

"You telegraph for me," said Dick to the constable.  "I will pay
the costs."

"All right, Dick. My, but old Ricks is getting more grumpy every
day!  If this railroad knows its business it will soon get another
manager here," was Gilbert Ponsberry's comment, as he led the way
to the telegraph office.

Here a telegram was prepared, addressed to the police officer on
duty at the Middletown station, and giving a fair description of
the thief.

The train would reach the city in exactly forty-five minutes; and
as soon as the message had been sent, Dick, Darrel, and the
constable went off on a tour of Oak Run and the vicinity.

Of course nothing was seen of the thief, and in an hour word came
back from Middletown that he was not on the cars.

This was true, for the train had stopped at a way station, having
broken something on the engine, and the thief had left, to walk
the remainder of the distance to Middletown on foot.

It was not until nightfall that Dick returned to his uncle's
farmhouse.

Here he found that Sam and Tom had already arrived.  Tom was lying
on the sofa in the sitting room, being cared for by his Aunt
Martha, who was the best of nurses whenever occasion required.

"Didn't find any trace of the villain?" queried Randolph Rover,
with a sad shake of his head.  "Too bad!  Too bad!  And it was
your father's watch, too!"

"I never wanted to see Dick wear it," put in Mrs. Rover.  "It was
too fine for a boy."

"Father told me to wear it, aunty.  He said it would remind me of
him," answered Dick, and he turned away, for something like a tear
had welled up in his eye.

"There, there, Dick, I didn't mean to hurt your feelings," cried
his aunt hastily.  "I would give a good deal if you had your watch
back."

Supper was waiting, but Dick had no appetite, and ate but little.
Tom braced up sufficiently to take some toast and tea, and
declared that he would be all right by morning and so he was.

"Here is a letter for Tom from Larry Colby," cried Dick during the
course, of the evening.

"I declare, I forgot all about it, Tom, until this minute."

"I don't blame you, Dick," was the reply, with a sickly smile.
"You read it for me.  The light hurts my head," and Tom closed his
eyes to listen.

Larry Colby was a New York lad who in years gone by had been one
of Tom's chums.  The letter was just such a one as any boy might
write to another, and need have no place here.  Yet one paragraph
interested everybody in the sitting room:

"Next week I am to pack my trunk and go to Putnam Hall Military
Academy [wrote Larry Colby].  Father says it is a very fine
military, school, and he has recommended it to your uncle."

"Putnam Hall Military Academy!" mused Tom.  "I wonder where it
is?"

"It is over in Seneca County, on Cayuga Lake," replied Randolph
Rover, and something like a smile appeared on his face.

"On Cayuga Lake, uncle!" cried Sam.  "Why, that's a splendid
location, isn't it?"

"Very fine."

"And is that where we are to go?" put in Tom eagerly.

"Yes, Thomas; I might as well tell you, although I wanted to
surprise you.  You are to go to Putnam Hall, and there you will
have with you Lawrence Colby, Frank Harrington, and several other
lads with whom you are all acquainted."

"Hurrah, Uncle Randolph!" came from Sam, and rushing up, he caught
his relative around the shoulder.  "You're the best kind of uncle,
after all."

"Putnam Hall is an institution of learning that has been
established for some twenty years," went on Mr. Rover, pushing
back his spectacles and laying down the agricultural work he had
been perusing.  "It is presided over by Captain Victor Putnam, an
old army officer, who in his younger days used to be a
schoolmaster.  He is a strict disciplinarian, and will make you
toe the mark; but let me say right here, I have it from Mr. Colby
that there is no schoolmaster who is kinder or more considerate of
his pupils."

"Is it a regular military institution like West Point?" asked Tom.

"Hardly, Thomas, although the students, so I am informed, dress
like cadets and spend an hour or so each day in drilling, and in
the summer all the school march up the lake and go into an
encampment."

"That just suits me!" broke in Sam enthusiastically.  "Hurrah for
Putnam Hall!"

"Hurrah!" echoed Tom faintly, and Dick nodded to show he felt as
they did.  At the cheer, Sarah the cook stuck her head into the
door.

"Sure an' I thought Tom was out of his head, bedad," she observed.

"Sarah, I'm going away soon--to a military academy.  I won't
bother you any more," said Tom.

"Won't yez now?  That will be foine."  Then the cook stopped
short, thinking she had hurt the boy's feelings.  "Oh, Master
Tom, don't moind me.  You're not such an--an awful bother as we
think," and then at a wave of Mrs. Rover's hand she disappeared.

After this the evening passed quickly enough, for the boys wanted
to know all there was to be learned about their future boarding
school.  Mr. Rover had a circular of the institution, and they
pored over this.

"Captain Victor Putnam is the head master," said Dick, as he read.
"He has two assistants, Josiah Crabtree and George Strong, besides
two teacher's who come in to give instructions in French and
German if desired, also in music.  Uncle Randolph, are we to take
up these branches?"

"I am going to leave you to select your own studies outside of the
regular course, Richard.  What would be the use of taking up
music, for instance, if you were not musically inclined."

"I'd like to play a banjo," said Tom, and grinned as well as the
bandage on his head, would permit.

"I doubt if the professor of music teaches that plantation
instrument," smiled Mrs. Rover.  Then she patted Tom's shoulder
affectionately.

Now the boys were really to leave her, she was sorry to think of
their going.

"They will not take more than a hundred pupils," said Dick,
referring to the circular again.  "I should say that was enough.
The pupils are divided into two companies, A and B, of about fifty
soldiers each; and the soldiers elect their own officers, to serve
during the school term.  Tom, perhaps you may turn out captain of
Company B."

"And you may be Major Dick Rover of the first battalion," returned
Tom.  "Say, but this suits me to death, Uncle Randolph."

"I am glad to hear it, Thomas.  But I want you to promise me to
attend to your studies.  Military matters are all well enough in
their way, but I want you to have the benefits of a good
education."

"Oh, I fancy Captain Victor Putnam will attend to that," put in
Sam.

The circular was read from end to end, and it was after ten
o'clock before the boys got done talking about it and went to bed.
Certainly the prospect was a bright one, and if poor Dick had only
had his watch the three would have been in high feather.  Little
did they dream, of all the startling adventures in store  for them
during their term at Putnam Hall.

It must not be supposed that Mr. Randolph Rover intended to allow
the theft of Dick's watch to pass without a strong effort being
made to recover the article. Early in the morning he drove to the
Corners, and to Oak Run and another village called Bender's, and
at each place had a notice posted, mentioning the loss and
offering a reward of fifty dollars for the recovery of the
property and of one hundred dollars if the thief was captured in
addition.  This offer, however, proved of no avail, and Dick had
to leave for Putnam Hall wearing his old silver watch, which he
had put aside upon the receipt of the gold timepiece.

It was a clear, sun-shiny morning when the boys started off. They had
paid a last visit to the various points of interest about the place
and bid good-by to Sarah, who shook hands warmly, and said farewell to
the hired men, both of whom hated them to leave, for they had made
matters pleasant as well as lively. Their three trunks were loaded in
a farm wagon, and now Jack, one of the men-of-all-work, drove up with
the two seated carriage to drive them over to Oak Run by way of the
river bridge, half a mile up the stream.

"Good-by, Uncle Randolph!" cried one after another, as they shook
hands.  "Good-by, Aunt Martha!" and each gave Mrs. Rover a hug and
a kiss, something which brought the tears to the lady's eyes.

"Good-by, boys, and take good care of yourselves," said Randolph
Rover.

"And if you can't stand it at boarding school, write, and we will
send for you to come back here," added his wife; and then, with a
crack of the whip, the carriage rolled off, and the farm was left
behind.  It was to be many a day before the boys would see the
place again.




CHAPTER V

ON THE WAY TO PUTNAM HALL


"I don't think we'll want to send word to Aunt Martha to be taken
back," observed Sam, who sat on the driver's seat with the hired
man.

"Neither do I," returned Tom. "To be sure, we have a nice enough
home here, but it's dreadfully slow."

"There is no telling what may be in store for us," joined in Dick.
"Don't you remember how Fred Garrison fared at Holly School?  That
institution sent out a splendid circular, and when Fred got there
they almost starved him to death."

"That is true.  Where is Fred now?"

"I don't know."

"Mr. Colby wouldn't recommend Putnam Hall if it wasn't all right,"
remarked Tom.  "Jack, whip up the team, or we'll miss that train."

"They are going putty well now, Master Tom," replied the driver.

The trunks had gone on ahead, and when they reached the depot at
Oak Run they found old Ricks grumbling because no one was there to
check them.

"Do you reckon I'm going to be responsible for everybody's
baggage?" he snarled as Dick approached him.

"I'll check them as soon as I can get tickets," answered Dick
curtly.  "What an old bear he is!" he whispered to Tom.  "He
didn't treat me half decently when I was over here about the
watch."

"If only we had a little time I would fix him," whispered Tom in
return.  He had sobered down for several days now and was dying to
play a trick on somebody.

They went into the station and procured tickets, and then found
the time for the train had been changed, and it would not be along
for nearly half an hour.

"Good!  Just wait till I get back," said Tom.

He had noticed Ricks gathering up some waste paper around the
depot, and felt tolerably certain the old fellow was about to
build a bonfire of it.  Walking over to one of the stores, he
entered, and asked the proprietor if he had any large firecrackers
on hand.

"Just two, sir," said the storekeeper, and brought them forth.
Each was six inches long and thick in proportion.

"How much?" asked the boy.

"Seeing as they are the last I have, I'll let you have them for
fifteen cents each."

"I'll give you a quarter for the two."

"Very well; here you are," and the transfer was made on the spot.
Slipping the firecrackers into his coat pocket, Tom sauntered up
to old Ricks, while Sam and Dick looked on, sure that something
was in the wind.
                
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