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<div class="fig">> <ANTIMG id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="The Boy Scouts Down in Dixie" width-obs="500" height-obs="757" /></div>
<div class="fig"> id="front"><ANTIMG src="images/front.jpg" alt="" width-obs="500" height-obs="795" /></div>
<p><span class="small">“Back water, fellows,” called out Step
Hen;—“What’s up?” asked Giraffe. <SPAN href="#Page_119">Page 119</SPAN>.</span>
<span class="jr">—<i class="small">The Boy Scouts Down in Dixie.</i></span></p>
<div class="box">
<h1>The Boy Scouts <br/>DOWN IN DIXIE</h1>
<p class="center"><span class="smaller">OR</span></p>
<p class="center"><b><span class="large">The Strange Secret of Alligator Swamp.</span></b></p>
<p class="tbcenter"><b><span class="large">By HERBERT CARTER</span></b></p>
<p class="center"><span class="small">Author of</span>
<br/><span class="small">“The Boy Scouts at the Battle of Saratoga.”
<br/>“The Boy Scouts Through the Big Timber.”
<br/>“The Boy Scouts On Sturgeon Island.”
<br/>“The Boy Scouts In the Blue Ridge.”
<br/>“The Boy Scouts’ First Camp Fire.”
<br/>“The Boy Scouts In the Rockies.”
<br/>“The Boy Scouts On the Trail.”</span></p>
<div class="fig"> id="logo"><ANTIMG src="images/logo.jpg" alt="A. L. BURT COMPANY; NEW YORK" width-obs="400" height-obs="388" /></div>
<p class="center"><span class="small">Copyright, 1914
<br/><span class="sc">By A. L. Burt Company</span>.</span></p>
</div>
<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
<dt class="jr"><span class="jl"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span></span> <span class="small">PAGE</span>
<br/><SPAN href="#c1"><span class="cn">I. </span>Khaki Boys in the Sunny Southland.</SPAN> 3
<br/><SPAN href="#c2"><span class="cn">II. </span>Among the Puzzling Swamp Water Trails.</SPAN> 13
<br/><SPAN href="#c3"><span class="cn">III. </span>Camp-Fare.</SPAN> 23
<br/><SPAN href="#c4"><span class="cn">IV. </span>Some Woods Lore.</SPAN> 32
<br/><SPAN href="#c5"><span class="cn">V. </span>Bumpus on Guard.</SPAN> 40
<br/><SPAN href="#c6"><span class="cn">VI. </span>The Night Prowler.</SPAN> 48
<br/><SPAN href="#c7"><span class="cn">VII. </span>The Heart of a Scout.</SPAN> 57
<br/><SPAN href="#c8"><span class="cn">VIII. </span>Looking Backward.</SPAN> 65
<br/><SPAN href="#c9"><span class="cn">IX. </span>“Combing” the Swamp Labyrinth.</SPAN> 76
<br/><SPAN href="#c10"><span class="cn">X. </span>Was the Mystery Solved?</SPAN> 86
<br/><SPAN href="#c11"><span class="cn">XI. </span>Alligator Smith, the Guide.</SPAN> 95
<br/><SPAN href="#c12"><span class="cn">XII. </span>What a Scout Stands For.</SPAN> 104
<br/><SPAN href="#c13"><span class="cn">XIII. </span>More Trouble All Around.</SPAN> 113
<br/><SPAN href="#c14"><span class="cn">XIV. </span>Swamp Tactics.</SPAN> 119
<br/><SPAN href="#c15"><span class="cn">XV. </span>Still Bumping Bumpus.</SPAN> 127
<br/><SPAN href="#c16"><span class="cn">XVI. </span>Ricky’s Post Office.</SPAN> 138
<br/><SPAN href="#c17"><span class="cn">XVII. </span>The Sheriff’s Round-Up Posse.</SPAN> 148
<br/><SPAN href="#c18"><span class="cn">XVIII. </span>A Surprise.</SPAN> 157
<br/><SPAN href="#c19"><span class="cn">XIX. </span>Joining Forces.</SPAN> 165
<br/><SPAN href="#c20"><span class="cn">XX. </span>The Scouts Show the Way.</SPAN> 173
<br/><SPAN href="#c21"><span class="cn">XXI. </span>On the Trail.</SPAN> 182
<br/><SPAN href="#c22"><span class="cn">XXII. </span>The Man-Trap.</SPAN> 190
<br/><SPAN href="#c23"><span class="cn">XXIII. </span>An Anchor to Windward.</SPAN> 201
<br/><SPAN href="#c24"><span class="cn">XXIV. </span>The Oasis in the Quaking Bog.</SPAN> 211
<br/><SPAN href="#c25"><span class="cn">XXV. </span>Playing “Second Fiddle” to a Boy.</SPAN> 219
<br/><SPAN href="#c26"><span class="cn">XXVI. </span>Polly.</SPAN> 227
<br/><SPAN href="#c27"><span class="cn">XXVII. </span>Mr. Jasper Surprised.</SPAN> 236
<br/><SPAN href="#c28"><span class="cn">XXVIII. </span>The Mystery Solved—Conclusion.</SPAN> 242
<div class="pb" id="Page_3">3</div>
<h1 title="">THE BOY SCOUTS <br/>DOWN IN DIXIE</h1>
<h2 id="c1">CHAPTER I. <br/><span class="small">KHAKI BOYS IN THE SUNNY SOUTHLAND.</span></h2>
<p>“That’s always the way it goes!”</p>
<p>“Why, what’s the matter with you now, Step
Hen; you seem in a peck of trouble?”</p>
<p>“Who wouldn’t be, when some fellow went and
hid his hat away? Didn’t you all see me hang the
same on this peg sticking out from the trunk of the
pine tree, when we-all came ashore to eat lunch; because
that’s what I did, as sure as anything?”</p>
<p>“Oh! you think so, do you?”</p>
<p>“I know it as well as I know my name. Think
because I’ve got a stuffy cold in my head just like
Bumpus here says he has, and can’t smell, that I
don’t know beans, do you? Well, you can see for
yourself, Davy Jones, my nice new campaign hat
ain’t on the peg right now.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_4">4</div>
<p>“Do you know why that’s true, Step Hen? Because
a thing never yet was known to be in two
places at the same time. And unless my eyes are
telling me what ain’t so, you’ve got your hat on
right at this minute, pushed back on your head!
Told you, boys, Step Hen ought to get a pair of
specs; now I’m dead sure of it.”</p>
<p>The boy who seemed to answer to the queer name
of Step Hen threw up a hand, and on discovering
that he did have his hat perched away back on his
bushy head of hair, made out to be quite indignant.</p>
<p>“Now, that’s the way you play tricks on travelers,
is it? I’d just like to know who put that hat on my
head so sly like! Mr. Scout-master, I wish you’d
tell the fellows who love to play pranks to let me
alone.”</p>
<p>“I’d be glad to, Step Hen, only in this case I
happened to see you take your hat down, and clap it
on your own head, though I reckon you did it without
thinking what you were doing; so the sooner
you forget it the better.”</p>
<p>A general laugh arose at this, and Step Hen, subsiding,
continued to munch away at the sandwich he
gripped in one hand. There were just eight lads,
dressed in the khaki suits of Boy Scouts, some of
which were new, and others rather seedy, as though
they had seen many a campaign. But those who
wore the brightest uniforms did so because their
others had become almost disreputable, and fit only
to be carried along for use in case of absolute
necessity.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_5">5</div>
<p>While they sit there, enjoying their midday meal,
with two pretty good-sized paddling boats tied up,
showing just how they managed to reach this lonely
place on the border of one of the almost impenetrable
swamps in Southern Louisiana, let us
take advantage of the stop to say a few words concerning
these lively lads.</p>
<p>Of course the boy reader who has had the pleasure
of possessing any or all of the previous volumes
in this series, will readily recognize these sturdy fellows
as the full membership of the Silver Fox
Patrol connected with Cranford Troop of Boy
Scouts.</p>
<p>Under the leadership of Assistant Scout-master
Thad Brewster they had been having some pretty
lively outings for the last two years; at one time
in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina;
then up in Maine; afterwards finding a chance to
pay a hunting and exploring trip to the far distant
Rocky Mountains, and finally on the preceding summer
cruising upon the vast stretches of Lake Superior.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_6">6</div>
<p>Besides the patrol leader, Thad, there were Allan
Hollister, who had seen much actual life in the
woods, and was perfectly at home there; a tall lanky
fellow, with such a long neck that his chums had
long ago named him “Giraffe;” a dumpy, fat scout,
whose jolly red face was almost the color of his
hair, and who came when any one called “Bumpus;”
a very neat and handsome boy who had been
christened Edmund Maurice Travers Smith, but
who did not object when all that was shortened to
just plain, every-day “Smithy;” an acrobatic chap
who loved to stand on his head, and play monkey,
Davy Jones by name; Step Hen himself, otherwise
Stephen Bingham; and last but not least one Robert
Quail White, a native of the South, and whose
rather odd name was soon happily changed among
his mates to plain “Bob White,” which, as all boys
know, is the popular way a quail is designated in the
country.</p>
<p>It might as well be said right here in the start
that Bumpus was also occasionally at school and
at home addressed as Cornelius Hawtree; and that
Giraffe would come to a meal if some one called
softly “Conrad Stedman;” because he was very,
very fond of responding to any sort of a summons
that had something to eat along with it.</p>
<p>These eight boys did not constitute the whole of
Cranford Troop, for there was another full patrol
enlisted, and part of a third; but they were all
boon companions; and chancing to have a snug
amount of hard cash in the treasury of the patrol,
separate from the troop amount, they were enabled
to take advantage of a golden opportunity to visit
the far South in the dead of winter.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_7">7</div>
<p>It chanced that they were talking about this right
then and there, so that by listening for a bit we
may learn what unusual circumstances had arisen
to give the scouts this wonderful chance to take a
vacation, when they apparently should be industriously
working at their books in the Cranford
High School, to which all of them belonged.</p>
<p>“You can say what you like,” Giraffe was remarking,
as he carefully drained the coffee-pot into
his tin cup, that being his third allowance; “I think
the Silver Fox Patrol was hatched out under a
lucky star. We’ve had heaps and heaps of good
things happen to us in times past; and now just
to think that the old frame building we’ve been using
for a high school for years, should go and take
fire and burn to the ground, a month or six weeks
before the new brick schoolhouse could be furnished
and heated, compelling the Board to dismiss
school for that time. Let me tell you it’s a mighty
bad wind that blows good to nobody.”</p>
<p>“But that’s only a part of our great good luck,
and you forget that, Giraffe,” insisted Davy Jones,
nodding his head, eagerly, as he looked around at
the live oak trees, in the crooked and wide spreading
branches of which he expected to soon be sporting,
holding on with his toes, and swinging from
limb to limb with the abandon of an ape.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_8">8</div>
<p>“Why, to be sure, I had ought to enumerate the
rest!” declared the lanky member of the patrol.
“Think of it, how just after that sad catastrophe—excuse
me, boys, while I wipe a tear away in memory
of that poor old schoolhouse—there was that
strange letter came to Thad’s bully old guardian,
Daddy Caleb Cushman Brewster, from a man he
used to know years ago. It was written from
down here in Southern Louisiana, and told how the
writer had seen one Felix Jasper, with a very pretty
if ragged little girl in his company, hurrying along
a lonely trail that led into old Alligator Swamp, and
acting like he had recognized the gentleman, and
was afraid to let him come any closer.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” spoke up Thad, who in the absence of the
regular scout-master, Dr. Philander Hobbs, always
acted as the leader of the troop, “and all of you
chance to know that years ago, when I was much
smaller, and lived in another town, that man Felix
Jasper was the manager of my mother’s estate, and
was found to be stealing from her, so he was discharged.
Later on my only little sister, Pauline,
strangely disappeared, and could never be found.
It was believed at the time that Jasper in a spirit of
revenge had stolen the little child, but he could not
be located; and the grief of that loss I really believe
hastened the death of my dear mother.”</p>
<p>Thad was so overcome with emotion that he could
not go on. His chums cast sympathetic looks at
him, for they were very fond of their leader; then
Allan Hollister took up the narrative by saying:</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
<p>“And his gentleman who happened to glimpse
the man and girl, and who had known of the circumstances
in the past, wrote that he felt almost
certain he had been looking on the face of the long-lost
little Brewster girl. Daddy was laid up with
one of his attacks of rheumatism; and besides, he
could never have stood such a trip. So he put up an
unlimited amount of spending money, enough to allow
the whole patrol to make the trip by rail; and
here we are, determined to stand by our chum, and
penetrate this dismal Louisiana swamp to find out
whether it is Thad’s sister and Felix Jasper who are
living somewhere about here; or if the gentleman
made a bad mistake.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” went on Bob White, impulsively, for he
was a true, warm-hearted Southern boy, a little
touchy with regard to his “honor,” but a splendid
and loyal comrade for all that, “and we’re bound
to do it, I reckon, suh, or know the reason why.”</p>
<p>“The first thing we did when we got down here,”
Giraffe went on to say, “was to pick up all the information
connected with this swamp we could,
which was not a great lot, because they seem to
think it’s a terrible place, and few persons ever
dream of penetrating its unexplored depths, except
now and then a muskrat trapper, or an alligator-skin
collector; though they do say it’s been an asylum
for occasional negro convicts who broke away
from the turpentine camps and were pursued by the
dogs.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_10">10</div>
<p>“Huh! looks some like we might be up against
the toughest proposition we ever tackled, believe
me,” Step Hen observed.</p>
<p>“Well,” remarked Bumpus, composedly, “we’ve
pretty nearly always come out on top, haven’t we;
and according to my notion we’re strong enough to
do it again.”</p>
<p>“There’s something pretty strong around here,
and that’s a fact,” spoke up Giraffe as he changed
his seat. “I wonder, now, if the decaying vegetation
in these here old Louisiana swamps always tone
up the air like that. Smells to me kind of like rank
onions that have got past the useful and respectable
stage. I can see how we’re bound to have a high
old time if this is a specimen of swamp air, and we
expect to breathe it for mebbe two whole weeks.”</p>
<p>“Oh! say, that ain’t hardly fair!” remarked Davy
Jones; “alaying it all on the poor old swamp, when,
honest Injun, I’ve been asniffing that same queer
odor all day.”</p>
<p>He looked straight and hard at Bumpus as he
said this. The fat scout immediately frowned as
though he felt hurt.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_11">11</div>
<p>“I know what you’re ahinting at, Davy Jones,”
he remarked, hotly; “just because I choose to continue
wearing my old suit, and keep the new one for
another day you like to make out this outfit ain’t
all right. I admit she looks a mite greasy, because
I’ve helped cook many a fine meal while wearing the
same. There’s <i>associations</i> wrapped up with every
inch of this faded cloth, and you can laugh all you
want to, but I decline to throw it away while on
this trip. What’s a swamp but a muddy hole, and
I don’t choose to spoil my brand new suit, if you
do. Besides, Step Hen and me, we’ve got such
stuffy colds in our heads we can’t smell a single
thing.”</p>
<p>“Then for goodness sake, change places with me,
and be a chum of Step Hen’s during the remainder
of this whole trip. Besides,” added Giraffe, as he
saw Bumpus getting as red as a turkey gobbler with
indignation, “it’ll balance the two boats better, I’m
thinking. How about that, Mr. Scout-master?”</p>
<p>“I was figuring that we could do better than we
have so far; and if Bumpus is willing to change
with you, let him,” replied Thad. “That will bring
him in my boat with Davy and Step Hen. They
say colds like that are catching, so perhaps both
Davy and myself will soon have one.”</p>
<p>“Huh! I hope so,” muttered the Jones boy,
sniffing the air suspiciously when poor Bumpus
happened to move to windward of him; but the usually
good-natured fat boy pretended not to notice
the slur.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
<p>“Well, as we’re all through lunch, let’s make a
start, for we expect to be deep in Alligator swamp
long before night comes on,” said Allan, who had
the second paddling boat, fashioned somewhat after
the pattern of the old-fashioned dug-out canoe made
from a log, in his charge, being the assistant patrol
leader of the Silver Fox band.</p>
<p>Ten minutes later, and having packed all their
stuff away, the boys were ready to continue their
journey into the depths of the thickening wilderness
where the hanging Spanish moss that draped the
trees proved such a strange sight to them all, and
gave such a graveyard look to their surroundings
that more than one of them felt a little shiver of
apprehension, as though they fancied all manner of
mysteries must presently arise to confront them.</p>
<p>The boat containing Giraffe, Allan, Bob White
and Smithy happened to be ahead when they came
to where their progress was hindered somewhat by
floating logs and other stuff; so Giraffe, without being
told to do the same, stood up in the bow to
punch his way clear. He made a vicious stab at
what he thought was a floating log, but had no
sooner struck his paddle against it than the seemingly
harmless object made a sudden lunge, splashed
water all over the boat, and disappeared from sight;
while the astonished boy, losing his balance as his
paddle slipped off the scaly armor of the old mossback
alligator that had been sleeping so placidly on
the surface of the lagoon that it had not noticed
their approach, fell in with a tremendous splurge.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
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