The Submarine Boys' Lightning Cruise / The Young Kings of the Deep
nge
in the ice; or it might have been near rapi
oor of the shed, meant danger in the most terrible form. It was the so
yard in which the Pollard submarine boats were built, and this shed contained some two dozen Whitehead su
of seventeen, each in natty blue uniforms and caps resembling those worn by naval officers, crossed the y
son, stopping before the door and fumbli
on in this old shed," smiled Hal Hastings. "Th
in life look like a really dangerous one," muttered Ja
sufficient danger, just in going out on the ocean in a
d Captain Jack. "Really, riding around in a submarine craft seems as
nds of gun-cotton on board," smiled Hal, "I don't suppo
ing it open. Then both young
ng person, to make certain that neither boy was like
boats. They had operated such craft, when awake, and had dreamed of doing it when asleep. Being youths of inten
o, fired below the water, and traveling under the surface, to make the torpedo bo
the actual torpedo. An officer of the United States Navy, especially detailed for the work, was expected hourly at Dunhaven. The three submarine boys were eager for their first ta
with which the first work was to be done. As Jack stepped about the shed, looking to
ember of the crew, however, named Williamson. He was a grown man, a machinist who had been long in Fa
country. He had taken a midwinter vacation, and had gone to visit his mother. N
"Williamson ought to be here not later than to-morrow
on the light crust of snow outside. The
f angels!"
ad to see you back," haile
s they shook hands all around. Then, as they fell to chatting, the machinist seated himself
g about. "We're just waiting for that Navy man, and then we're goin
ong. The older one was named the "Benson," after Captain Jack. But the latest one to be launched, which had had its full tr
cern, drew a pipe out of one of his pockets, filled it, and stuck the stem between his lips. Next, he stru
inquired the machinist, still sittin
enson caught, in his nostrils
out his mouth. All that part of the face showed white and pallid. Just a second or two later Hal
ded low, yet hard and metallic. One would hav
ed, "just step outside
em between his teeth, rose and walked out into the open. With an almost inarticulate yell Captain Ja
oor way; then paused, grasping the edge
at?" demanded the machinist, angrily, leaping to his feet an
r," ordered Hal Hastings, poi
oor was open and swung back when I came along, so I couldn't see any
pen keg that you were sitting on?" de
ed the machin
any sparks from your pipe had dropped down and set the baggin
amson, beginning to
roof. But the smaller explosion would have touched off the two tons and a half of gun-cotton in those Whitehead torpedoes. That would
the machinist, his face now
fter a
uble stored in that shed,
ened to be swung open, so that you couldn't see it. Yet I guess you'r
idea!" demanded Williamson, beginning
expect to have very muc
re the explosive, and it
t. You're not afraid to
are
at the young skip
per cent. good on nerve? Though I'll admit that my appetite for smoking won't be good when I'm near this she
e scene, and drills us in using torpedoes," Captain Benson answered. "
into the harbor," grinned the machini
ipper Jack. "It won't do any harm to have the machiner
e silk stored on board the new craft?" inqui
ous than gasoline,"
particular about not going to work near any stuff that has such a big idea of itself t
skiff and pulling himself out to the newer of the pair of very capable sub
ad quietly swung the sh
, "Danger," was once
o do now!" asked youn
time wondering where t
ain
then. Mr. Farnum may have
ombination of first officer, steward and general utility man on board t
llard," after David Pollard, the inventor of the craft and of its successors. By the time that the "Pollard" was ready for launching Jack and Hal had made themselves so valuable to their employer that the boys were allowed to take to the water with the boat when it left the stocks. Eph Somers, freckle-faced and sunny aired, was a Dunhaven boy who had fairly won his way aboard the same craft by his many sided ab
ships. Captain Jack conceived and carried out a most laughable trick against one
and its submarine business, with a series of startling plots that the submarine boys were instrumental in balking. The submarine boat itself passed some of the severest trials that could be invented, yet the trials through which the builders and the submarine boys passed were far greater. Yet, in the end, just as Mr. Farnum an
of the Naval Academy how to operate boats of this class. That narrative was unusually full of adventures, including the laughable recital of how Eph innocently brought down upon the trio a first-class sample of
. In this volume it was related how Captain Jack's very life was at stake, from the foreign spies gathered at Spruce Beach to pry into the secrets of the mysterious submarine. Here the United States Secret Service officers were called in to aid, yet it was Captain Jack and his friends who contributed to the full success of the government sleuths. At this period o
resence of the heavily charged torpedoes at the shipyard there had been nothing like excitement, for some
building of the shipyard, Jacob Farnum, the own
ck, cheery greeting. "I was
edly, "as to when that cold-molasses
office sounded
y," grinned Mr. Farnum
d States sailors, standing at ease near the door. In a chair near Mr. Farnum's desk sat a third man, dressed in ordi
broadly, "I want to present my submarine boys to
very red face, holding out his hand. With a quiet smile, Lieutenant Frank
staken about the mol
. "However, my delay in getting here was due entirely to delay in off
ith a bang. Hal looked out into the corri
t to the 'Hastings,' telling me that it will be all right there. So I light my pipe on the platform deck and go below. Great Jehosh! The first thing I run on to is a couple of
voice died out. "You're always safe, man, in following any lead that Captai
zles with artillery-felt, or some other explod
hey're aboard just for dummy torpedo practice. There isn't
at the machinist with
ly out through the doo
proposed Lieutenant Danvers, "and make
d Skipper Jack, with a laugh. "That'll give Willia
nk me too much like cold molasses"-Jack winced-"I would propose that we start at a little after
suits you, Lieutenant,
g with us to-day, ar
actice on one of our boats. And I'm almost ashamed of Dave Pollard. That fellow, instead of being here, is away somew
out on the yard near the street gate. "What's this comin
ople, and fully a dozen of these new-corners