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Under the Ocean to the South Pole

Chapter 3 RUNNING DOWN A WARSHIP

Word Count: 1583    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

ke it?" asked

exclaim

" crie

Washington. "'Nebber in all my born days

," remarked Andy Sudds. "There's so

trip to the pole," remarked the professor. "Now we wil

hut them off, as they could see out into the ocean when the int

of him. Then he started the engine, slowly at first, and gradually increasing the spee

ng her back to the starting point. She worked as smoothly

note of anxiety into his voice. He slowed down the engine and started the powerful pumps that were to

e felt her beginning to rise. Up and up she went

ne shot upward to the surface and lay undulating on

ted Jack. "We'

!" exclaimed

st whispered. "The pumps worked. The Porpo

the dock, where she was moored,

great trip," remarked the professor. "I want to give her a little

ey had lived during the building of the submarine. Dinner was prepa

e ship is finished as far as we can do anything, and we may as wel

ofessor replied, "but if you would like to remain i

u have been very kind to us, and we would do anything we could for, bu

hough he seemed disappointed. "I will

ure of the two young machinist

them staying wit

are to make the trip. They need not be machinists, but we will have to have some

ame a rap on the door.

am bery busy jest at de present occasioness an' he'll be most extremely discommodated if yo' obtrude yo'

utside, laughing heartily. "Just you tell the

ssor started and Mark and Jack wond

in, Washington," c

'em," objected

em both

cabin, and in came two men, who

" asked the professor,

her, Tom," remarked t

" exclaimed Andy Sudds. "Wa'al I'll be

ob locating you. I guess Washington didn't know us since we

fooled the professor,"

so Bill and I thought it would be a good time to hunt up the professor. We heard he was down in this neig

as he came forward to welcome the two young men. "Do y

forget it in a hu

" put in Tom. "We hoped you might

answered t

t is

under th

new proposition to them. Yet they recalled that they

of the crew?" asked the inventor,

unt on me!"

es I'll go too!

be all one to us if Professor Henderson

fessor. "You certainly cam

ing the eating of which they told of their experiences since landing from the a

ovements to the Porpoise. Tom and Bill were much astonished at their first sight of the quee

the inventor one evening. "We will be gone all day if nothing happens to make the

overhauled, the professor explained that he intended making a trip, entirely under

watch the various gages and registers to give warning of any danger. The professor, of course, would be in the conning tower and operate the craft. Andy was to be

beneath the waves. The engine that worked the endless screw was star

!" yelled

as covered as shown by the patent log. The lights were turned off, and through

the professor to Andy. The inventor started the pu

ted the old hunter, gra

shadow, loomed up in the du

?" cried th

hit somethin' ha

aimed the inventor as he jammed

th a shock that made her shiver from stem to stern

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Under the Ocean to the South Pole
Under the Ocean to the South Pole
“Roy Rockwood was a house pseudonym used by the Stratemeyer Syndicate for boy's adventure books. The name is mostly well-remembered for the Bomba, the Jungle Boy (1926-1937) and Great Marvel series (1906- 1935). The Stratemeyer Syndicate was the producer of a number of series for children and adults including the Nancy Drew mysteries, the Hardy Boys, and others. The Stratemeyer Syndicate was the creation of Edward Stratemeyer, whose ambition was to be a writer a la Horatio Alger. He succeeded in this ambition (eventually even writing eleven books under the pseudonym "Horatio Alger"), turning out inspirational, up-by-the-bootstraps tales. In Stratemeyer's view, it was not the promise of sex or violence that made such reading attractive to boys; it was the thrill of feeling "grown-up" and the desire for a series of stories, an "I want some more" syndrome. Works written under that name include: Five Thousand Miles Underground; or, The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth (1908), Jack North's Treasure Hunt (1907) and Lost on the Moon; or, In Quest of the Field of Diamonds (1911).”
1 Chapter 1 WILL THE SHIP WORK 2 Chapter 2 A LAND OF ICE3 Chapter 3 RUNNING DOWN A WARSHIP4 Chapter 4 IN THE MIDST OF FIRE5 Chapter 5 A GRAVE ACCUSATION6 Chapter 6 ON A RUNAWAY TROLLEY7 Chapter 7 OFF FOR THE SOUTH POLE8 Chapter 8 ASHORE IN THE DARK9 Chapter 9 A PRICE ON THEIR HEADS10 Chapter 10 ATTACKED BY A MONSTER11 Chapter 11 CAUGHT IN A SEA OF GRASS12 Chapter 12 FIRE ON BOARD13 Chapter 13 THE GHOST OF THE SUBMARINE14 Chapter 14 DIGGING OUT THE SHIP15 Chapter 15 THE STRANGE SHIPWRECK16 Chapter 16 THE GHOST AGAIN17 Chapter 17 ATTACKED BY SAVAGES18 Chapter 18 ON LAND19 Chapter 19 REGAINING THE SHIP20 Chapter 20 ON A VOLCANIC ISLAND21 Chapter 21 CAUGHT IN A WHIRLPOOL22 Chapter 22 UNDER FIRE23 Chapter 23 CAUGHT IN AN ICE FLOE24 Chapter 24 THE SHIP GRAVEYARD25 Chapter 25 CAUGHT BY SEA SUCKERS26 Chapter 26 LAND UNDER ICE27 Chapter 27 ATTACKED BY AN OCTUPUS28 Chapter 28 OUT OF THE ICE29 Chapter 29 THE BOILING WATER30 Chapter 30 CONCLUSION