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The Campfire Girls of Roselawn Part 24

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"If you please, Miss Jessie," he added, widely a-grin, "either let Miss Amy tell me or you tell me. I can't seem to get it right when you both talk."

"Oh, I am dumb!" announced Amy. "Go ahead, Jess; you tell him."

So Jessie tried to put the case as plainly as possible; but from the look on Chapman's face she knew that the chauffeur thought that this was rather a fantastic matter.

"Why, Chapman!" she cried, "you do not know much about this radio business, do you?"

"Only what I have seen of it here, Miss Jessie. I heard the music over your wires. But I did not suppose that anybody could talk into the thing and other folks could hear like----"

"Oh! You don't understand," Jessie interrupted. "No ordinary radio set broadcasts. It merely receives."

As clearly as she could she explained what sort of plant there must be from which the strange girl had sent out her cry for help.

"Of course, you understand, the girl must have got a chance on the sly to speak into the broadcasting horn. Now, all the big broadcasting stations are registered with the Government. And if secret ones are established the Government agents soon find them out.

"It might be, if the people who imprisoned this girl are the ones we think, they may have a plant for the sending out of information that is illegal. For instance, it might have some connection with race track gambling. One of the women is interested in racing and the other in automobile contests. If the broadcasting plant is near a race course or an autodrome----"

"Now you give me an idea, Miss Jessie!" exclaimed Chapman suddenly. "I remember a stock farm over behind Parkville where the barns are painted red. And there is a silo or two. Besides, it is near the Harrimay Race Course. I could drive over there in the morning, if you want to go. Mr. Norwood won't mind, I am sure."

"Would you go, Amy?" Jessie asked, hesitatingly.

"Sure! It's a chance. And I am awfully anxious now to find out what that mysterious voice means."

A PUZZLING CIRc.u.mSTANCE

SOMETHING DOING AT THE STANLEY'S

CHAPTER XIX

A PUZZLING CIRc.u.mSTANCE

Jessie's parents being away, Amy ran home and announced her desire to keep her chum company and was back again before ten o'clock. There was not much to be heard over the airways after that hour. They had missed Madame Elva and the orchestra music broadcasted from Stratfordtown.

"Nothing to do but to go to bed," Amy declared. "The sooner we are asleep the sooner we can get up and go looking for the mysterious broadcasting station. Do you believe that cry for help was from little Hen's cousin?"

"I have a feeling that it is," Jessie admitted.

"Maybe we ought to take Spotted Snake, the Witch, with us," chuckled her chum. "What do you say?"

"I think not, honey. We might only raise hopes in the child's mind that will not be fulfilled. I think she loves her cousin Bertha very much; and of course we do not know that this is that girl whose cry for help we heard."

"We don't really know anything about it. Maybe it is all a joke or a mistake."

"Do you think that girl sounded as though she were joking?" was Jessie's scornful reply. "Anyway, we will look into it alone first. If Chapman can find the stock farm with the red barn----"

"And there are two fallen trees and a silo near it," put in Amy, smiling. "Goodness me, Jess! I am afraid the boys would say we had another crazy notion."

"I like that!" cried Jessie Norwood. "What is there crazy about trying to help somebody who certainly must be in trouble? Besides," she added very sensibly, "Daddy Norwood will be very thankful to us if we should manage to find that Bertha Blair. He needs her to witness for his clients, and Momsy says the hearing before the Surrogate cannot be postponed again. The matter must soon be decided, and without Bertha Blair's testimony Daddy's clients may lose hundreds of thousands of dollars."

"We'll be off to the rescue of the prisoner in the morning, then,"

said Amy, cuddling down into one of her chum's twin beds. "Good-night!

Sweet dreams! And if you have a nightmare don't expect me to get up and tie it to the bed-post."

The next morning Chapman brought around the car as early as half past eight, when the girls were just finis.h.i.+ng breakfast.

"Don't eat any more, Amy," begged Jessie. "Do get up for once from the table feeling that you could eat more. The doctors say that is the proper way."

"Pooh! What do the doctors know about eating?" scoffed Amy. "Their job is to tend to you when you can't eat. Why? honey! I feel lots better morally with a full stomach than when I am hungry."

They climbed into the car and Chapman drove out the boulevard and turned into the Parkville road. It was a lovely morning, not too hot and with only a wind made by their pa.s.sage, so that the dust only drifted behind the car. They pa.s.sed the home of Mr. and Mrs. Brandon's daughter and saw the aerials strung between the house and the flagpole on the garage.

"Keep your eyes open for aerials anywhere, Amy," said Jessie. "Of course wherever that broadcasting station is, the aerials must be observable."

"They'll be longer and more important than the antenna for the usual receiving set, won't they?" eagerly asked Amy.

"Of course." Then Jessie leaned forward to speak to Chapman, for they were in the open car. "When you approach the stock farm you spoke of, please drive slowly. We want to look over all the surroundings."

"Very well, Miss Jessie," the chauffeur said.

Pa.s.sing through Parkville, they struck a road called a turnpike, although there were no ticket-houses, as there are at the ferries. It was an old highway sweeping between great farms, and the country was rolling, partly wooded, and not so far off the railroad line that the latter did not touch the race-track Chapman had spoken of.

The car skirted the high fence of the Harrimay enclosure and then they ran past a long string of barns in which the racing horses were housed and trained for a part of the year. There was no meet here at this time, and consequently few horses were in evidence.

"I like to see horses race," remarked Amy. "And they are such lovely, intelligent looking creatures. But so many people who have anything to do with horses and racing are such hard-faced people and so--so impossible! Think of the looks of that Martha Poole. She's the limit, Jessie."

"Neither she nor Mrs. Bothwell is nice, I admit. But don't blame it on the poor horses," Jessie observed, smiling. "I am sure it is not their fault. Mrs. Poole would be objectionable if she was interested in cows--or--or Pekingese pups."

Chapman turned up a hilly road and they came out on a ridge overlooking the fenced-in track. The chauffeur s.h.i.+fted his position so as to glance behind him at the girls, the car running slowly.

"Now look out, Miss Jessie," he advised. "We are coming to the old Gandy stock farm. That's the roof of the house just ahead. Yonder is the tower they built to house the electric lighting plant like what your father used to have. See it?"

"Yes, yes!" exclaimed Jessie. "But--but I don't see any aerials. No, I don't! And the red barn----"

"There it is!" cried Amy, grabbing at her chum's arm. "With the silo at the end."

The car turned a corner in the road and the entrance gate to the estate came into view. Up the well kept lane, beyond the rambling house of weathered s.h.i.+ngles, stood a long, low barn and a silo, both of a dull red color. And on either side of the entrance gate were two broken willow trees, their tall tops partly removed, but most of the trunks still lying upon the ground where they had fallen.

"Ha!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the chauffeur. "Those trees broke down since I was past here last."

"Do drive slower, Chapman," Jessie cried.

But she drew Amy down when the girl stood up to stare at the barn and the tower.

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