Boy Scouts in Mexico | Page 3

G. Harvey Ralphson
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BOY SCOUTS IN MEXICO Or On Guard with Uncle Sam
By: Scout Master, G. Harvey Ralphson

CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.
Planning a Vacation II. A Member of the Wolf Patrol III. The Wolf Advises Flight IV. The Wolf Talks in Code V. The Wolf in the Bear's Bed VI. Two Black Bears in Trouble VII. Signals on the Mountain VIII. A Strange Disappearance IX. About the Third Suspect X. The Wolf Meets a Panther XI. Black Bear and Diplomat XII. Wolf and Panther after Bear XIII. Captured the Wrong Boy XIV. The Case is Well Stated XV. Accusing Each Other XVI. Wolves on the Mountain XVII. Plenty of Black Bears XVIII. Fremont and the Renegade XIX. What was Found Underground XX. Black Bears to the Rescue XXI. Wolves Becoming Dangerous XXII. The Call in the Rain XXIII. Some Unexpected Arrivals XXIV. The Story of the Crime XXV. Ready for the Canal Zone
DEDICATION. This book is dedicated to the Boys and Girls of America, in the fond hope that herein they will find pleasure, instruction and inspiration; that they may increase and grow in usefulness, self-reliance, patriotism and unselfishness, and ever become fonder and fonder of their country and its institutions, of Nature and her ways, is the cherished hope and wish of the author. G. Harvey Ralphson, Scout Master

BOY SCOUTS IN MEXICO; OR, ON GUARD WITH UNCLE SAM.
CHAPTER I.
PLANNING A VACATION.
"After all, it is what's in a fellow's head, and not what's in his pocket, that counts in the long run."
"That's true enough! At least it proved so in our case. That time in the South we had nothing worth mentioning in our pockets, and yet we had the time of our lives."
"I don't think you ever told us about that."
"That was the time we went broke at Nashville, Tennessee. We missed our checks, in some unaccountable way, yet we had our heads with us, and we rode the Cumberland and Ohio rivers down to the Mississippi at Cairo, in a houseboat of our own construction."
The speaker, George Fremont, a slender boy of seventeen, with spirited black eyes and a resolute face, sat back in his chair and laughed at the memory of that impecunious time, while the others gathered closer about him.
Fremont was ostensibly in the employ of James Cameron, the wealthy speculator, but was regarded by that worthy gentleman as an adopted son rather than merely as a worker in his office force. Seven years before, Mr. Cameron had become interested in the bright-faced newsboy, and had taken him into his own home, where he had since been treated as a member of the family.
"Went broke in the South, did you?" asked one of the group gathered before an open grate fire in the luxuriously furnished clubroom of the Black Bear Patrol, in the upper portion of a handsome uptown residence, in the city of New York. "Go on and tell us about it! What's the matter with the Tennessee river, or the Rio Grande?"
"If you had no money, how did you get your houseboat?" asked another member of the group. "Houseboats don't grow on bushes down there, do they?"
"Oh, we had a little money," George Fremont replied, "but not enough to take us to Chicago in Pullman coaches. The joint purse was somewhere about $10. We built the houseboat ourselves, of course."
"Must have been a strange experience, going broke like that!" one
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