The Essential Edward Stratemeyer Collection. Stratemeyer Edward
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Название: The Essential Edward Stratemeyer Collection

Автор: Stratemeyer Edward

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Учебная литература

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isbn: 9781456614089

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      When I brought out the first volume of this series, entitled "Dave Porter at Oak Hall," I trusted that the story would please the young people for whom it was written, but I did not imagine that so many thousands of boys and girls all over our broad land would take to Dave as they have, and would insist upon knowing more about him.

      My opening tale was one of boarding school life, and this was followed by "Dave Porter in the South Seas," whither our hero had gone in search of his father, and then by "Dave Porter's Return to School," in which book Dave met all of his friends again and likewise a few of his enemies.

      So far our hero had heard about his father, but had not yet seen his parent, and the next volume, "Dave Porter in the Far North," related the particulars of a trip to Norway, where the youth had some stirring adventures amid snow and ice in the Land of the Midnight Sun.

      Coming back to America, the lad was sent again to Oak Hall, as set down in the next volume, called "Dave Porter and His Classmates." During that term at school many complications arose, and our hero did something for the honor of Oak Hall that was a great credit to him.

      Dave's father was now with him, but his sister Laura was in the Far West, and upon her return he received an invitation to visit a large ranch, and how he went, and what strenuous times he had, were related in "Dave Porter at Star Ranch."

      As soon as his Western outing was at an end, Dave returned home, and then betook himself once more to Oak Hall. Here, to his surprise, he found an unusual state of affairs, the particulars of which are given in the pages that follow.

      Once again I thank those who have praised my books in the past. I hope the present volume will also please them and do them good.

      EDWARD STRATEMEYER.

      CONTENTS

      I. AN AUTOMOBILE RIDE

      II. DAVE AND HIS PAST

      III. WHAT HAPPENED AT THE FALLS

      IV. AN UNEXPECTED ARRIVAL

      V. THE BOYS AND A BULL

      VI. A TALK WITH AARON POOLE

      VII. ON THE WAY TO OAK HALL

      VIII. ABOUT SOME NEW STUDENTS

      IX. THE FOOTBALL MEETING

      X. LOOKING FOR A MISSING ROWBOAT

      XI. A MIDNIGHT FEAST

      XII. AN EARTHQUAKE FOR JOB HASKERS

      XIII. IN WHICH SOME SHOES ARE MISSING

      XIV. WHAT THE GIRLS HAD TO TELL

      XV. A RUNAWAY MOTOR-BOAT

      XVI. A STRUGGLE ON THE GRIDIRON

      XVII. REORGANIZING THE ELEVEN

      XVIII. AN INITIATION AND WHAT FOLLOWED

      XIX. SNEAK AGAINST SNEAK

      XX. THE GREAT GAME WITH ROCKVILLE

      XXI. THANKSGIVING, AND A SNOWBALLING CONTEST

      XXII. IN WHICH THE SHOES COME BACK

      XXIII. HOOKER MONTGOMERY'S STRANGE REQUEST

      XXIV. A RACE ON SKATES

      XXV. IN THE HANDS OF THE ENEMY

      XXVI. A DASH FOR LIBERTY

      XXVII. A GAME OF ICE HOCKEY

      XXVIII. A DISCOVERY OF INTEREST

      XXIX. HOOKER MONTGOMERY'S REVELATION

      XXX. THE ENEMY RUNS AWAY

      XXXI. ANOTHER VICTORY--CONCLUSION

      DAVE PORTER AND HIS RIVALS

      CHAPTER I

      AN AUTOMOBILE RIDE

      "Everybody ready?"

      "Yes, Dave; let her go!" cried Phil Lawrence.

      "How about you folks in the other auto?" queried Dave Porter, as he let off the hand brake and advanced the spark and lever of the machine he was about to run.

      "We are all ready," responded Roger Morr.

      "Been ready for an hour," added Ben Basswood, who sat beside Roger.

      "Oh, Ben, not quite as long as that!" burst out Laura Porter, who was one of three girls in the tonneau of the second car.

      "Well, make it fifty-eight minutes then; I'm not particular," responded Ben, calmly.

      "Are the lunch hampers in?" asked Jessie Wadsworth, anxiously. "Mamma said we musn't forget anything."

      "Trust Dave and Roger to look after the food," burst out Phil Lawrence.

      "Likewise Mr. Phil Lawrence," added Dave. "Just wait till it comes lunch time, and you'll see Phil stow away about fifteen chicken sandwiches, ten slices of cake, three pickles, five olives----"

      "Stop! I draw the line on olives, Dave!" cried Phil, making a wry face.

      "Oh, olives are fine; I love them!" cried Belle Endicott.

      "Then all that are coming to me are yours," returned Phil, quickly. "But start her up, fellows, if we are going!" he added, and then, putting a big horn to his lips, he blew a loud blast.

      "Take good care of yourselves!" cried a voice from the veranda of the mansion in front of which the two automobiles were standing, and Mrs. Wadsworth waved a hand to the young people.

      "We'll try to," answered Dave, and then he threw in the clutch on low gear, and the big touring car moved gently away, out of the grounds of the Wadsworth mansion and into the main highway leading from Crumville to Shady Glen Falls. The second car speedily followed.

      It was a late summer day, with a clear blue sky overhead and just enough breeze blowing to freshen the air. A shower of rain the day previous had laid the dust of the road and added to the freshness of fields and woods.

      The boys and girls had planned this outing for several days. All of the youths were to return to Oak Hall school the following week, and they wished to do something for the girls to remember them by, as Dave expressed it.

      "Might have a party," Roger had suggested.

      "No good, unless it was a lawn party," Phil had answered. "It's too stuffy in the house, these СКАЧАТЬ