The Boy Scout Camera Club | Page 2

G. Harvey Ralphson

follow in the footsteps of his father in the matter of learning-- after he
had first climbed to all the high spots of the world and descended into
all the low ones! He insisted on exploring the earth before he learned
by rote what others had written about it!
"All right!" Ned grinned. "We'll need an Eagle!"
"And a Bull Moose!" yelled Oliver Yentsch, of the Moose Patrol.
"You've got to have a Moose along with you!"

Oliver was the son of a ship builder, and had a launch and a yacht of his
own. He was liked by all his associates in spite of his tendency to
grumble at trifles. However, if he complained at small things, he met
large troubles with a smile on his bright face. He now seized Teddy
about the waist and waltzed around the room with him.
"And that's all!" Ned decided, closing the book. "We can't take more
than six."
A wail went up from the others, but they were promised a chance at the
next "hike" into the hills, and soon departed, leaving the six members
of the Camera Club to perfect arrangements for their departure. It was a
warm May night, still Ned closed the door leading out into the wide
corridor which ran through the house on that floor.
"We can't afford to take others into our plans," he said, "for this is to be
another Secret Service expedition."
"For the Government?" demanded Frank Shaw. "Then," he added,
without waiting for a reply, "I'll call up dad's editorial rooms and have a
reporter sent up here. Top of column, first page, illustrated! That's our
Camera Club in the morning newspaper!"
Frank's father was owner and editor of one of the big New York dailies,
and the boy always took along, on his trips, plenty of blank paper for
"copy," but never sent in a line! His letters to his father's newspaper
were usually addressed to the financial department, upon which he had
permission to draw at will!
"Huh!" Jimmie commented, wrinkling his freckled nose, "if you should
ever furnish an item for your daddy's newspaper he'd never live it down!
You've been on all our trips with Ned, and never wired in a word!"
The Boy Scouts of the Black Bear and Wolf Patrols had been through
many exciting experiences with Ned Nestor, who, young as he was,
was often in the employ of the Secret Service department of the United
States government. Frank, as Jimmie said, had been with Ned from the
start, and had never sent in a line of "copy" for the paper.

"I'm going to furnish a column a day this trip!" Frank declared, making
a motion to seize Jimmie. "We're going to take pictures, aren't we?
We'll take 'em by the acre, and dad's newspaper is going to catch every
one of them."
"Huh!" Jimmie declared, with a freckled nose in the air. "I'm a
newspaper man, too. You needn't think you're the only cherry in the pie!
I used to sell newspapers before I got into the Secret Service with
Ned!"
From his earliest years Jimmie had indeed been a newsboy on the
Bowery. He had never had a home except that provided by himself, and
this, in the early days of his life, had as often been a box or barrel in an
alley as anything else.
"Why the mountains?" asked Frank Shaw, presently. "Do you have to
go to the hills on this trip? I'm glad if you do, of course, but I'd like to
know something about it before we start. Dad will have to be shown
this time, I reckon! He thinks we rather overdid the stunt when we went
to Lady Franklin bay!"
"Never had so much fun in my life!" laughed Jimmie. "When you get
where it is forty below, there's some delight in living!"
"What are we going to take pictures of?" demanded Teddy Green.
"Moonshiners!" laughed Frank. "Isn't that right, Ned?"
"Not exactly," was the answer. "This is not a whisky case at all."
"Counterfeiters, then?" queried Oliver. "They live in the hills!"
"No, not counterfeiters, either," Ned replied. "The government has
plenty of men to look after counterfeiters and moonshiners. All we've
got to do is to go into the mountains and take pictures, and keep our
eyes open."
"Open for what?" insisted Jimmie. "My peepers will be open for a

venison steak about the first thing! You remember how fine the venison
steaks were up in British Columbia? That Columbia river trip was some
exciting! What?"
"Well," Ned began, "you all know that I'm in the Secret Service, for
you've been with me, some of you, at Panama, in China, and under the
ocean, so we'll let the details go without explanation. I'm going to the
mountains
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 64
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.