Navy Boys Behind the Big Guns
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Halsey Davidson, Illustrated by R. Emmett Owen
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Title: Navy Boys Behind the Big Guns Sinking the German U-Boats
Author: Halsey Davidson
Release Date: March 11, 2006 [eBook #17967]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NAVY
BOYS BEHIND THE BIG GUNS***
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NAVY BOYS BEHIND THE BIG GUNS
Or
Sinking the German U-Boats
by
HALSEY DAVIDSON
Author of "Navy Boys after the Submarines," "Navy Boys Chasing a
Sea Raider," Etc.
Illustrated
New York George Sully & Company Publishers
[Illustration: The gunners were literally "stripped for action," their
glistening supple bodies alert as panthers.]
* * * * *
BOOKS FOR BOYS
NAVY BOYS SERIES
BY HALSEY DAVIDSON
12mo. Cloth. Illustrated
NAVY BOYS AFTER THE SUBMARINES Or Protecting the Giant
Convoy
NAVY BOYS CHASING A SEA RAIDER Or Landing a Million
Dollar Prize
NAVY BOYS BEHIND THE BIG GUNS Or Sinking the German
U-Boats
NAVY BOYS TO THE RESCUE Or Answering the Wireless Call for
Help
NAVY BOYS AT THE BIG SURRENDER Or Rounding Up the
German Fleet
THE NAVY BOYS ON SPECIAL SERVICE Or Guarding the
Floating Treasury
GEORGE SULLY & COMPANY PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY GEORGE SULLY & COMPANY
Navy Boys Chasing a Sea Raider
PRINTED IN U.S.A.
* * * * *
NAVY BOYS BEHIND THE BIG GUNS
CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE
I A RUN TO ELMVALE 1
II THE STRANGER 11
III THE WATER WHEEL 19
IV S. P. 888 27
V THE STREAK ON THE WATER 38
VI AN OLD FRIEND 44
VII FOG HAUNTED 54
VIII PUZZLED 64
IX JUST TOO LATE 74
X AHEAD OF THE FLOOD 81
XI UNEXPECTED PERIL 90
XII COURAGE 100
XIII THE KENNEBUNK SAILS 106
XIV AN UNEXPECTED TARGET 115
XV THE BIG GUN SPEAKS 127
XVI AN ACCIDENT 135
XVII BLOWN UP 144
XVIII MORE TROUBLE 155
XIX COINCIDENCE 162
XX THE WITCH'S WARNING 173
XXI THE EXPLANATION 180
XXII THE RACE 190
XXIII UNDER SPECIAL ORDERS 196
XXIV TICK-TOCK! TICK-TOCK! 204
XXV IN THE THICK OF THE FIGHT 211
NAVY BOYS BEHIND THE BIG GUNS
CHAPTER I
A RUN TO ELMVALE
When Philip Morgan announced his approach by an unusually cheerful
strain, Al Torrance was already behind the steering wheel of his father's
car, with the engine purring smoothly.
"'Lo, Whistler," Al said. "Thought you had forgotten where we planned
to go this morning. What made you so late?"
"'Lo, Torry. Never hit the hay till after one. Just talking. My jaws
ache," Morgan broke off his whistling long enough to say.
"Sure it isn't whistling that's made your jaws ache?" queried his chum
slyly. "Not having had much chance to pipe up while we were aboard
ship, I guess you are making up for lost time."
"Talking, I tell you," returned Morgan. "Thought the girls never would
let me stop. And father, too. Mother won't own up she's reconciled to
my being in the Navy," and Whistler grinned suddenly. "But she
listened to all I told them, too. She was just as eager to hear about it as
Phoebe and Alice."
"Guess you made yourself out to be some tough garby," chuckled
Torrance, using the term the seamen themselves employ to designate a
sailor.
"Oh, I gave 'em an earful," Whistler agreed, and puckered his lips
again.
"Come on and get in," ordered Torry impatiently. "Pa's got to use the
car this afternoon. But he says we can have it to run over to Elmvale in,
if we want."
"Where are Frenchy and Ikey?" Whistler broke off in his tune again to
ask.
"Going to wait for us down on High Street--and Seven Knott, too."
"Did Hansie say he'd go?" cried the other sailor boy. "Bet he's sore as
he can be because he's not with the Colodia and Lieutenant Lang."
"He'd never 've taken this furlough, he says, if his mother hadn't begged
so hard. Did you ever see a garby so stuck on a gold stripe as Seven
Knott is on Lieutenant Commander Lang?" said Torry, rather
scornfully.
"I don't know. Mr. Lang has been a good friend to Hans Hertig. This is
his second hitch under Mr. Lang," Whistler said.
"Wonder if
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