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   :PG.Id: 35821
   :PG.Title: Leo the Circus Boy
   :PG.Released: 2011-04-10
   :PG.Rights: Public Domain
   :PG.Producer: Roger Frank
   :PG.Producer: the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
   :DC.Creator: Ralph Bonehill
   :DC.Title: Leo the Circus Boy
   :DC.Language: en
   :DC.Created: 1897
   :coverpage: images/cover.jpg

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Leo the Circus Boy
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   This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
   almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
   re-use it under the terms of the `Project Gutenberg License`_
   included with this eBook or online at
   http://www.gutenberg.org/license.

   

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      Title: Leo the Circus Boy
      
      Author: Ralph Bonehill
      
      Release Date: April 10, 2011 [EBook #35821]
      
      Language: English
      
      Character set encoding: UTF-8

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      \*\*\* START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEO THE CIRCUS BOY \*\*\*

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      Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net.

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   LEO’S FIRST APPEARANCE

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   | :xl:`LEO THE CIRCUS BOY;`
   | 
   | or
   | 
   | :lg:`LIFE UNDER THE GREAT WHITE CANVAS`
   | 
   | BY CAPTAIN RALPH BONEHILL,
   | 
   | :sm:`Author of “The Young Oarsmen of Lakeview,” “The Rival`
   | :sm:`Bicyclists,” “Gun and Sled,” etc., etc.`
   |
   |
   |
   | CHICAGO:
   | :small-caps:`M. A. Donohue` & Co.
   |
   |
   |
   | 
   | :small-caps:`Copyright`, 1897.
   | :small-caps:`BY`
   | :small-caps:`W. L. Allison` Co.

.. contents:: CONTENTS
   :depth: 1
   
.. class:: center

   :xl:`Leo the Circus Boy`
  

CHAPTER I.—A ROW AND ITS RESULT.
================================

“Land sakes alive, Daniel, look at that boy!”

“Where is he, Marthy?”

“Up there on the old apple tree a-hangin’ down
by his toes! My gracious, does he wanter kill himself?”

“Thet’s wot he does, Marthy,” grumbled old
Daniel Hawkins. “He’ll do it, jest so ez we kin
pay his funeral expenses. Never seen sech a boy
before in my born days!”

“Go after him with the horsewhip, Daniel. Oh!
goodness gracious, look at thet now!”

And the woman, or, rather, Tartar, Mrs. Martha
Hawkins, held up her hands in terror as the boy on
the apple tree suddenly gave a swing, released his
feet, and, with a graceful turn forward, landed on
his feet on the ground.

“Wot do yer mean by sech actions, yer young
good-fer-nothin’?” cried Daniel Hawkins, rushing
forward, his face full of sudden rage. “Do yer
want ter break yer wuthless neck?”

“Not much, I don’t,” replied the boy, with a
little smile creeping over his sunburned, handsome
face. “I’m afraid if I did that I would never get
over it, Mr. Hawkins.”

“Don’t try ter joke me, Leo Dunbar, or I’ll break
every bone in your worthless body!”

“I’m not joking; I mean what I say.”

“Did yer put the cattle out in the cherry
pasture?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Feed the pigs?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Mend thet barn door! as I told yer to yesterday?”

“Mended it last night.”

“Wot about fixin’ thet scythe yer broke tudder
day?”

“I can’t fix that. I’ll have to take it down to
Joe Marks’ blacksmith shop.”

“O’ course! An’ who’s goin’ ter pay fer it?”
demanded Daniel Hawkins.

“You can take it out of my wages, Mr. Hawkins.”

“Out o’ yer wages?”

“That’s what I said, sir.”

The old farmer’s face grew darker than ever.
“Ain’t no wages comin’ to yer! You spile more
than yer earn.”

“According to my reckoning there are about
twenty-eight dollars coming to me,” returned Leo
Dunbar quickly. “I have kept the tally ever since
I came to live with you.”

“Ain’t a cent, boy; not a penny.”

“I beg to differ with you. And now while we
are at it, Mr. Hawkins, supposing we settle up?”

“Eh?”

“I say, supposing we settle up?”

“Settle up?” repeated the miserly farmer in
amazement.

“Yes. You can pay me what you owe me. My
month will be up to-morrow, and I don’t intend to
stay here any longer.”

“But yer will stay, boy! I’ve got a right on
yer. The poorhouse folks signed the papers.”

“Squire Dobb signed the papers, but to me that
doesn’t count. He never had any claim on me.”

“He settled yer father’s estate.”

“I know it—and kept me out of my money, too.”

“You—you——”

“No more compliments, Mr. Hawkins. I say he
kept me out of my money, and I mean it. And
now he and you are doing about all you can to
make me commit suicide.”
“Oh! jest to hear thet boy!” burst in Mrs. Hawkins,
who had just come up. “Daniel, why don’t
yeou birch him?”

“I will, ef he gives me any more sass,” replied
her husband. “He shan’t talk about me an’ the
squire.”

The old farmer was getting red in the face. He
knew that Leo Dunbar was telling the truth.

A year before, Leo’s parents had died, leaving
the boy alone in the world.

Mr. Dunbar’s property had been very much involved,
and Squire Dobb, the most rascally lawyer
in Hopsville, had taken the matter in charge.

At the end of six months he had announced to
Leo that there was no money coming to him.
Then, as manager of the poorhouse of the district,
the lawyer had bound Leo over to Daniel Hawkins
at four dollars a month and found.

“I will talk,” cried Leo spiritedly. “I think it
about time that I received my rights.”

This remark made Daniel Hawkins’ wrath boil
over. He ran toward the barn and presently returned,
carrying a heavy hide-bound whip.

“You ain’t had a dressing down in a month, an’
now I’m a-goin’ ter give it to yer good!” he exclaimed,
as he raised the whip and rushed at Leo.

Whiz! The heavy whip came down, the blow
aimed for the boy’s shoulder.

But Leo was not hit. Like a flash he moved to
one side at the last instant, and the whip only
circled through the empty air.

More enraged than before Daniel Hawkins rushed
forward again and caught the boy by the arm.

“You whelp! I’ll show you!” he snarled.

Again the whip was raised. But it never struck
the blow intended, for an interruption came as terrorizing
as it was unexpected.

There was a fearful roar out in the dusty road beyond
the house, a roar that echoed and re-echoed
among the hills around, and then a huge beast
bounded over the stone fence, landing directly at
Leo Dunbar’s feet.

It was a lion that had escaped from “The Greatest
Show on Earth,” the circus that was to perform at
Hopsville that afternoon and evening.

CHAPTER II.—CAPTURING A RUNAWAY LION.
=====================================

If Leo Dunbar was startled at the sudden appearance
of this mighty monarch of the forest, what
shall be said of Daniel Hawkins and his wife,
Martha?

The farmer and his spouse gave one look and then
stood, fairly paralyzed with fear.

They were unable to utter a word, and, to tell the
truth, they both felt as if judgment was about to
fall on them for ill-treating Leo, and that the ends
of their miserable lives were at hand.

The lion crouched low, moving his heavy tail
slowly from side to side.

He had escaped from his steel cage but an hour
before, and as yet hardly knew what to do with his
freedom.

From the road he had not been able to see the
persons in the yard. But he had heard their voices,
and his brute nature had caused him to leap the
stone fence that he might rend some living creature
limb from limb.

That the lion was in an ugly humor was easy to
see. His mane was ruffled, his immense claws unsheathed,
and his eyes were full of blood-curdling
ferocity.

At first he gazed at Leo, but then swiftly turned
toward Mrs. Hawkins, taking a single leap that
brought him at the woman’s very feet.

“Oh! Daniel, save me!” she managed to gasp.

“Can’t nohow, Marthy!” spluttered the old
farmer.

And then, recovering just sufficiently to move, he
made a wild dash for the farmhouse, leaving his
wife to her fate.

“You coward!” cried Leo, but Daniel Hawkins
paid no heed to the remark. It is likely that in his
terror he did not hear it.

“Save me, Leo!” went on the woman. “The
beast is goin’ ter eat me up!”

The sound of her voice appeared to anger the
lion still more.

His tail moved quicker, and Leo saw that he was
on the point of leaping on the woman.

The leap once made it would be impossible to do
anything for Mrs. Hawkins. The lion would simply
rend and devour her.

Leo gazed about him for some weapon. He realized
that if anything was to be done it must be
done instantly.

His eyes fell on the whip the old farmer had
dropped. With a rapid movement he picked up the
article, and, whirling around, struck the lion fairly
and squarely across the eyes.

It was a telling blow, and, smarting with pain,
the brute let out a roar ten times louder than before.

Then he turned about and faced Leo.

“Run for your life!” sang out the youth to the
woman. “Run, I tell you!”

She stared at him, but when he gave her a shove
she realized what he was saying, and made such a
spurt as had never before been seen in that dooryard.

The lion watched her go, but made no attempt to
follow. His mind was on Leo and on the blow the
boy had given him.

He was an ugly brute, and around the circus was
known to be the most difficult to manage. Trainer
after trainer had tried to break him in, but without
effect. Instead of getting more docile, he grew
worse.

In his former days he had killed a man, and evidently
he was longing for a chance to repeat this
bloody tragedy.

He took several steps and tried to get behind
Leo.

But the boy was on the alert and ran backward
toward the apple tree.

Then the lion crouched for a leap. His immense
body was bent low, his tail gave a quiver, and forward
he shot toward the very spot where Leo was
standing.

But as the lion leaped so did the boy. He turned
a graceful curve to the left, out of the brute’s
reach, and caught the lowest branch of the tree
behind him.

The lion’s nose struck the tree trunk, and he let
out another roar of mingled pain and disappointment.

“Didn’t do it that time,” muttered Leo. “What’s
the use of banging your nose like that?”

Another roar was the only answer, and then the
lion left the vicinity of the tree and moved back
several yards beyond the branch to which Leo
clung.

The boy knew what was coming, and immediately
stood up on the limb.

He was none too soon.

Again the lion made a leap upward.

He reached the limb, but only to find that Leo
had taken a spring to the next above.

But now an accident happened which neither the
boy nor the brute was expecting.

The apple tree was old and somewhat rotted at
the roots. The weight of the boy and the sudden
shock from the heavy body of the lion were too
much for it to stand.

There was a crack and a loud snap, and then the
tree went over on the ground, carrying Leo and the
lion with it.

The lion was completely bewildered by the fall,
and, moreover, he was entrapped for the moment
by several limbs which came down on his back and
neck.

As the tree went over, Leo turned around and
landed on his feet directly beside the lion.

He saw how mixed up the brute was amid the
branches and this gave him a sudden idea.

With a lightness of foot that was surprising in a
mere farm lad, he ran to the woodshed.

Soon he reappeared carrying a wash-line, a well-rope,
and half a dozen leather straps.

He fastened an end of the wash-line to one of the
limbs of the tree and then to another, and so on all
around the lion.

Then he crossed the well-rope over the line, and
even fastened it around the lion’s left hind leg.

Then making a noose of the longest strap, he
watched his chance and dropped it over the brute’s
neck.

Of course, the lion roared and struggled to free
himself, but Leo was too quick for him.

The noose around his neck, Leo tightened it considerably,
and then fastened the end of the strap to
the tree trunk.

“Now, if you move you’ll take the whole tree
with you,” thought the boy.

CHAPTER III.—LEO LEAVES THE FARM.
=================================

The savage lion was a prisoner.

In vain he tried to release himself. Turning over
merely tangled him up tighter, and in his struggle
he almost broke a hind leg and choked himself to
death.

He tried to run, and succeeded in carrying the
whole apple tree several yards.

But the load was too much for him, and, with a
roar of pain and rage, he at length became quiet.

In the meanwhile Daniel Hawkins and his wife
had gone into the farmhouse and locked all the
doors and lower windows.

They were now at an upper window watching
proceedings.

“He’s got him, Daniel!” cried Mrs. Hawkins.

“The apple tree is down!” groaned the old
farmer in reply. “Plague take the pesky critter!”

“Leo hez tied him fast!”

“Maybe he might git away an’ chew him up.
Wish he would,” continued Daniel Hawkins.

“It must be a lion from thet circus at Hopsville,
Daniel, an’ if so, they’ll come after him.”

“Well, they better take him away,” growled the
old farmer.

While they were talking a loud shouting was
heard on the road, and presently half a dozen men
on horseback came into view.

All were heavily armed, and several carried
lassoes and ropes.

They were a party from the circus on the search
for the lion.

Leo heard them coming and ran down the road
to meet them.

“Hi, boy! Seen anything of a lion around
here?” asked the leader.

“Indeed I have,” laughed Leo.

“Where is he?” demanded another of the crowd
quickly.

“Over in the dooryard of that farmhouse.”

“Has he hurt any one?”

“He has scared the wits out of that man and his
wife,” and Leo pointed to Daniel Hawkins and his
spouse.

“He’s enough to scare the wits out of any one,”
put in another of the crowd. “Come, boys, now
for a tussle with old Nero.”

“We ought to shoot him at once. We can’t capture
him alive,” growled a rear man.

“You won’t have to shoot him,” said Leo, with a
twinkle in his eye.

“Why not? You don’t mean to say he’s dead
already?”

“Oh, no! He’s alive enough.”

“Is it possible he has been captured?”

“Yes, I captured him and tied him to a tree.”

“Nonsense, boy, this is no time for fooling. The
lion may eat somebody up.”

“I’m not fooling, sir. I have captured him. If
you don’t believe me, come and see for yourself.”

Still incredulous, the party of men followed Leo
into the dooryard.

When they saw the lion under the fallen apple
tree they did not know whether to laugh, or praise
Leo the most.

“By Jove! but this is the greatest feat yet!”

“Old Nero has a cage around him now and no
mistake.”

“He can’t move a step unless he drags the whole
tree with him!”

“Say, boy, who helped you do this?”

“No one.”

“You did it entirely alone?”

“Yes, sir,” was the modest reply.

“Thet ain’t so; it wuz me as captured yer lion
fer yer,” came from Daniel Hawkins, who had joined
the party in the yard.

“Mr. Hawkins, how can you say that!” exclaimed
Leo in amazement. “You ran for your
life and locked yourself in the house, even before
your wife got away.”

“Tain’t so. I captured the lion, an’ if there’s any
reward it comes to me.”

“We have offered no reward, but we are willing
to pay for the capture,” replied the leader of the
circus men. “But if you caught the lion how is it
you were up in the house when we rode up?”

“Daniel! Daniel!” shrieked Mrs. Hawkins, still
in the window. “Come up again! Leo didn’t
fasten him tight enough an’ he’s gettin’ away!”

The alarm again terrorized Daniel Hawkins.

Forgetting all about his assumed bravery, he
made a wild dash for the cottage, leaving Leo and
the men alone in the yard.

“Does that look as if he had much to do with
catching him?” laughed Leo.

“No, it does not. But the woman is right. Nero
is getting ready to struggle for freedom. Come,
boys, put the harness over him while we have the
chance.”

The three circus men set to work. It was a dangerous
proceeding, but at last it was finished and
the escaped lion was a prisoner.

Then one of the men rode back to the circus
grounds to return with the cage in which the brute
belonged.

While this was going on, Daniel Hawkins again
came out, this time followed by his wife.

He tried to convince the circus men that he had
captured the lion, but no one would believe him.

“I reckon the credit goes to this boy,” said Barton
Reeve, the manager of the menagerie attached
to the “Greatest Show on Earth.”

“No sech thing. He only got the ropes fer
me.”

“If you were so brave, what made you run just
now?”

“I—I—went ter help my wife. She—she sometimes
hez fits, an’ I was afraid she would git one
and fall from the winder.”

All the circus men laughed at this explanation,
but not one believed it true.

“An’ another thing, thet apple tree hez got ter be
paid for,” continued the farmer.

“We’ll pay for that if the lion pulled it down.”

“He certainly did,” put in Mrs. Hawkins.

“Well, what was the old tree worth?”

“Fifty dollars an’ more.”

“Hardly,” put in Leo. “You said only day before
yesterday you were going to cut it down for
firewood, because it was so rotted.”

“Shet up, boy!” howled Daniel Hawkins. “The
tree is wuth fifty dollars an’ more.”

“I’ll pay you ten dollars,” said Barton Reeve.

“You’ll pay fifty.”

“Not a cent over ten. The tree is not worth
five.”

“I’ll have the law on yer fer trespass!”

“All right; if you want to sue, I guess we can
stand it,” was the circus man’s cool response.

Daniel Hawkins talked and threatened, but all to
no purpose.

At last he agreed to take ten dollars and two
tickets for the evening performance, and the bargain
was settled on the spot.

It was not long after that that the steel-caged
circus wagon came along, followed by a crowd of
men and boys, all eager to see the strange sights
connected with an escaped lion.

It was noised about that Leo Dunbar had captured
the savage brute, and the boys gazed at the
farm lad enviously.

“He’s a brave one, eh?” said one.

“I wouldn’t do it for a thousand dollars, would
you?” added another.

“I always knew he was a cool one, and there
isn’t a fellow around as limber as he is,” put in a
third.

And so the talk ran.

When the lion was safe in the cage once more,
Barton Reeve turned to Leo.

“Can you come with me to the circus grounds?”
he asked. “I would like to talk with you.”

“Certainly,” replied Leo quickly. “I was going
up there at the first chance I got to get away from
the farm, anyway.”

“Going up to see the show?”

“Not only that, but to see the manager.”

“What do you want to see the manager for?”

“I want to strike him for a job.”

“What sort of a job?”

“As a gymnastic clown.”

“A clown and a gymnast,” said Barton Reeve
slowly. “Well, you might be a clown, if you got
funny, but what do you know about gymnastics?”

“Quite a bit, sir, if I do say it myself. I have
liked the exercise all my life, and it seems to me I
was cut out for that sort of life.”

Leo’s earnestness kept Barton Reeve from smiling

He had often had boys and even men come to him
full of silly notions about joining the circus.

He saw that Leo was a level-headed youth, and
he noted, too, that the boy’s body was finely formed
and well developed.

“See here, what do you think of this?” suddenly
cried Leo.

Running forward, he turned several handsprings
and ended with a clear air somersault.

“That’s all right.” In fact, it was first-rate.

“If I had the apparatus I would like to show you
what I can do on the bar and with the rings,” went
on Leo.

“You can do that at the grounds. Come on.”

Barton Reeve rode off, with Leo behind him on
the horse.

Daniel Hawkins tried to call the boy back, but
all to no purpose.

“Has he any claim on you, Leo?” asked the man.

“Not a bit of a claim. He treated me like a dog,
and now I’m going to leave him whether I get in
with the circus or not.”

CHAPTER IV.—LEO JOINS THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH.
=================================================

On the way to the circus grounds Leo told Reeve
much about himself.

He was seventeen years old, and for years had
had a nice home with his parents, and it was during
this time that he had taken a thorough course of
gymnastics.

His father had been a retired officer of the United
States army, and was supposed to be well to do at
the time of his death.

But Leo had never gotten a cent out of the estate,
and since becoming an orphan had known nothing
but hard work.

The boy was satisfied that Squire Dobb was
keeping him out of his money, but he had no proofs
to use in bringing a case against the rascally lawyer.

Life on the farm he could not endure, and it was
only the hope of getting some money out of Daniel
Hawkins which had kept him so long at the
drudgery there.

Now he was satisfied there was no money to be
had, and he intended to leave at the first chance.

By the time Leo’s story was told the party had
arrived at the circus grounds.

It was afternoon, and already the great white
tents were up, covering an entire block in the
southern end of the town.

The cage was properly placed in the menagerie
department, and then Barton Reeve led the way between
numerous empty wagons to the rear of a
large affair used as a ticket office.

This was not yet open, but a knock on the door
brought a quick response.

Two men were in the wagon, the treasurer, Mr.
Giles, and Adam Lambert, the traveling manager
of the show.

“Here is a young man who would like to see you,
Mr. Lambert,” said Barton Reeve, and he introduced
Leo.

“What is it?” asked the manager shortly. “My
time is valuable.”

“He would like a job in the ring.”

And then Reeve told about what Leo had done
and what the boy’s aspirations were.

Ordinarily the manager would not have listened
to such an application, having hundreds of such
made to him every week.

But he liked Leo’s looks, and besides, a boy who
could capture a lion was certainly worth talking to.

“Don’t you know it’s a hard life, my boy?” he
said.

“I’ll warrant it is no harder than life on the
Hawkins’ farm, sir.”

“It’s not as rosy as it looks from a seat outside of
the oval.”

“I know that. But I am willing to put up with
the roughness just for the chance to make something
of myself,” returned Leo.

Adam Lambert thought for a moment.

“Come with me into the ring,” he said.

Leo followed him gladly.

The rings, two in number, were empty, and so
were the hundreds of seats, making the tent look
vast and gloomy.

“Now show me what you can do.”

“Yes, sir.”

Off came Leo’s coat vest, and shoes. Then followed
a number of handsprings, forward, backward,
and sideways, and somersaults and curious attitudes.

“Can I use that bar up there?”

“Certainly, but there is no rope to get to it.”

“Never mind, sir.”

As he spoke Leo ran to the centerpole, and up
this he went like a flash.

Then he gave a sudden leap and sat down on the
bar several yards off.

“By Jove, there is something in that boy!”
murmured Adam Lambert to Reeve. “He has
just daring enough to succeed.”

“So I would say, Mr. Lambert. Hullo! Look
there!”

Leo was turning rapidly on the bar.

He went through a dozen gymnastic movements,
and then slid down the center pole.

“That will do,” shouted the manager. “I’ll give
you a trial. You can place yourself under Dick
Pomeroy, the head tumbler and bar man. Mr.
Reeve, take him to Dick.”

Adam Lambert had scarcely spoken when a tall,
finely-built fellow rushed into the ring from one of
the dressing-rooms.

“Mr. Lambert!”

“Well, Dick.”

“Broxton is intoxicated again!”

“Indeed! Didn’t you warn him as I told you?”

“Yes, but it did no good. He is so intoxicated
he can’t stand.”

“Then he can’t do his brother clown act with
Snipper?”

“No, sir, we’ll have to cut it out.”

“Too bad, with Nash on the sick list, too.”

“See here,” put in Barton Reeve. “This boy
wanted to do clown as well as acrobatics.”

“Is that so, Dunbar?”

“Yes, sir, if I can help you out I’ll do my best.”

“It’s short notice,” mused Adam Lambert.

“Snipper can instruct him and cut out anything
difficult,” suggested Barton Reeve.

He had taken a strong liking to Leo and wished
to get the boy a place.

“Well, fix it up, Dick, the best you can,” said the
manager. “I must go back and see about those
stolen tickets.”

And off went the manager, followed a minute
later by Barton Reeve, leaving Leo alone with Dick
Pomeroy, who had charge of the clowns and tumblers
connected with the “Greatest Show on
Earth.”

Pomeroy at once led Leo around to a dressing-room.
In a corner sat Jack Snipper, a clown and
gymnast, his face drawn down.

“Here’s a man to take Broxton’s place,” explained
Pomeroy.

“Why, he’s a boy!” exclaimed Snipper.

“Never mind, you must drill him in the best you
can.”

“Can he do anything on the bar?”

“I reckon so.”

“I don’t like this drilling in new fellows every
couple of weeks,” growled Snipper, who was not a
man of cheerful disposition.

As a matter of fact, he was what is commonly
called a crank, and very jealous of his reputation.

He told Leo where he could obtain a pair of
tights and a clown’s outfit, and made up the boy’s
face for him.

Then he gave Leo a long lesson.

The two were to do a clown act, and then, while
on the bars, throw off their clown dresses, and go in
for a brothers’ gymnastic act.

Leo worked hard, and by the time the circus commenced
he was ready to go on, although it must be
admitted he was extremely nervous.

The grand *entrée* was the first thing on the programme.
It included the rulers of all nations,
savage tribes, elephants, camels, chariots, and a
hundred and one other things impossible to mention.

“Come on now!” suddenly said Snipper, and
then he and Leo ran out into the ring and fell down
and bounced up as if they were a couple of rubber
balls.

“Ho! ho! look at those two clowns!” shouted the
crowd.

The tumble over, the clowns chased each other
around the ring, knocked each other down, and did
a dozen other funny things.

While the two clowns were cutting their capers a
young lady bareback rider rode into the ring.

Her name was Natalie Sparks, but she was
known on the bills as Natalie the Fire Queen.

Her great act was to dive through numerous
hoops of fire while on horseback.

As she began to perform, Leo commenced to
climb the centerpole of the tent, doing so in a way
that nearly choked the crowd with laughter.

“See him twisting like a monkey!”

“He ain’t a clown at all! See, he is throwing off
his clown dress!”

“Now he is dressed in tights!”

It was true. Leo was in full gymnastic costume
and was swinging gracefully from the high bar.

As Leo began to do his best on the bar, Natalie
the Fire Queen started to leap through rings of fire
held up by several ringmen.

The performances of the young gymnast and the
Fire Queen were in full swing when a cry of horror
arose.

In some unaccountable manner the fire from the
hoops had communicated to the tarred ropes running
up by the centerpole to the roof.

The great canvas had taken fire in several
places.

Before Leo could realize what had happened a
cloud of smoke seemed to envelop him.

The fire had reached the ropes supporting the
very bar upon which he was performing!

His escape in that direction was cut off, and the
distance to the ring below was fully half a hundred
feet!

CHAPTER V.—A LEAP OF GREAT PERIL.
=================================

Leo fully understood his great peril.

The entire canvas above him was in flames, and
in a very short while the ropes which supported
the bar upon which he had been performing would
be burned through.

And then? Leo hardly dared to think of the
consequences. The sawdust ring below seemed a
terrible distance away.

A leap to it would mean broken limbs, perhaps
death.

A panic arose among the audience.

“He can’t escape!”

“He must fall or jump!”

A rope and a net were sent for, but long before
they arrived Leo had made a move to save himself.

The smoke rolled around him a second time.

It was fearfully thick, and made him close his
mouth and eyes for fear of being either blinded or
suffocated.

As the smoke swept back in another direction
there was a snap above.

One of the ropes which held the bar had parted!

The end of the bar hung down, and below it the
end of the burned rope.

As quick as a flash Leo slid down to the very end
of the rope.

Thus suspended he began to swing himself back
and forth.

Soon he gave an extra swing, just as the smoke
again came down.

Like a curving ball he passed through the cloud,
past the centerpole, and on to the rings, on the
other side of the tent.

He caught hold of one of the rings and hung
fast.

Then after a pause in which to catch his breath
he let himself down to the ground.

A deafening cheer arose.

Leo had actually saved himself from death, for as
he touched the sawdust the heavy ash bar high
above fell with a crash, just missing those who
came on with the net.

“He’s safe!”

The ushers and others now ran around asking the
vast audience to leave the tent as quietly as
possible.

But every one was afraid of the falling of the
huge centerpole, and all made a great rush for the
openings.

In this stampede many women and children were
knocked down, and it was a wonder that some of
them were not killed.

The fire brigade of the circus went to work as
speedily as possible. The nearest hydrant of water
was some distance away, but soon a hose was
attached and a stream poured on the burning
canvas.

In less than half an hour the excitement was
over. Without delay the canvasmen went to work
to repair the damage done.

A good many people grumbled at not having
seen a full performance. To these were given
tickets of admission to the evening performance.

With the others from the ring, Leo hurried to
the dressing tent. It was not long before he was
joined by Barton Reeve.

“A great leap, my boy,” said the manager of the
menagerie. “I never saw anything so neat.”

“It was a big undertaking,” smiled Leo. “I
don’t think I would care to try it at every performance—at
least not yet.”

“It would be the hit of your life to have that on
the bills,” put in Natalie Sparks.

.. figure:: images/illus-032.jpg
   :align: center

   THE FIRE SWEPT DANGEROUSLY CLOSE TO LEO.

“Oh, that wasn’t so very wonderful,” remarked
Jack Snipper, the brother clown and gymnast.

“It wasn’t, eh?” cried Reeve. He could easily
see how jealous Snipper was of the attention bestowed
upon Leo. “I’ll wager you a round hundred
dollars you can’t make the leap with the rings ten
feet closer.”

“Stuff and nonsense!” cried Snipper; but all
noticed that he did not take up the offer and moved
away a second later.

“You want to keep one eye on Snipper,” was
Natalie’s caution to Leo.

“Why?”

“Can’t you see he doesn’t fancy the attention
you are getting?”

“Oh, I’m sure I don’t want to cut short his popularity,”
exclaimed the boy gymnast quickly.

“Popularity!” The Fire Queen burst into a laugh.
“You can’t, Leo.”

“Why?”

“Because he never was popular. Why, they
used to call him Sour Snipper.”

It was now announced that the afternoon performance
would not go on, and the different people
separated to take off their ring dresses and put on
their everyday clothes.

Leo was rather slow to make the change. He
began to practice around the tent on several turns
which as yet were difficult for him to do gracefully.

“You must love to work,” growled Snipper on
seeing him.

“I love the exercise,” returned Leo shortly.

“You won’t catch me doing any more of that
than I have to.”

“I want to become perfect.”

“Do you mean to say by that that I am not perfect?”
growled Snipper.

“We never get really perfect, Snipper.”

“Oh, pshaw! Don’t preach to me. Do you
know what I think you are?”

“I do not.”

“A country greeny with a swelled head.”

Leo’s face flushed at this. A laugh came from
behind the canvas, where other performers were
undressing.

“Thanks for the compliment, Snipper. I may
be a little green, but at the same time I’ll tell you
what you can’t do.”

“What?”

“You can’t stunt me. I’ll do everything you do,
and go you one better.”

“Oh, you’re talking through your hat,” growled
Snipper.

“Am I? Take me up and see.”

“I won’t bother with you, you greenhorn.”

“Because you are a braggart and nothing else,”
retorted Leo, stung by the insolent acrobat’s
manner.

With a cry of rage, Jack Snipper leaped toward
the boy, picking up a heavy Indian club as he did
so.

CHAPTER VI.—LEO ASSERTS HIS RIGHTS.
===================================

At once a crowd of performers surrounded the
pair. Very few of them liked Jack Snipper, and
they wondered what Leo would do should the gymnast
attack the boy.

“Call me a braggart, will you!” roared Snipper.

“Don’t you dare to touch me with that club!”
replied Leo calmly.

“I’ll teach you a lesson!”

And, swinging the Indian club over his head,
Jack Snipper made a savage blow at the young
gymnast.

Had the stick struck Leo the boy’s head would
have sustained a severe injury.

But as quick as a flash Leo dodged, and the
Indian club merely circled through the empty air.

“For shame, Snipper!”

“Do you want to kill the boy?”

“What harm has he done?”

And so the cries ran on.

“Mind your own affairs!” shouted the maddened
gymnast. “I’m going to teach the boy a
lesson!”

Again he sprang at Leo.

But now suddenly the Indian club was caught.
A dexterous twist, and it went flying out of reach
across the dressing tent.

Then, before Snipper could recover, he received
a stinging slap full in the face that sent him staggering
backward on the grass.

A shout of approval went up.

“Good for Leo!”

“That’s right, boy, stand up for your rights!”

The shout brought Adam Lambert, the general
manager, to the scene.

No sooner had he appeared than all the performers
walked away. It was against the rules to fight,
and every one present was liable to a heavy fine.

With the crowd went Snipper, who rolled over
and over until a neighboring canvas-wall hid him
from view.

“Who is fighting here?” demanded Lambert
severely.

“Jack Snipper attacked me with an Indian club
and I knocked him down,” replied Leo.

“Why did he attack you?”

“Snipper’s jealous of the lad,” came from behind
a side canvas.

“Yes, the boy only stood up for his rights,” said
another voice.

“We want no fighting here, Leo Dunbar,” said
Lambert. “Another such scene and you may be
discharged.”

And off went the general manager to inspect the
mending of the tent.

He might have spoken even more severely, but
he had seen Leo’s wonderful leap and realized what
fine mettle there was in the lad.

Snipper remained out of sight, nor did he appear
again until the evening performance.

Having finished changing his clothing, Leo
walked outside and mingled with the crowd of
town people.

He knew but few of them, as since he had worked
on Daniel Hawkins’ farm he had been to Hopsville
but seldom.

He wandered around to the museum, or side
show, and while looking at the gigantic pictures
displayed, was rather taken aback to see Daniel
Hawkins and his wife standing not two yards
away.

“My gracious!” murmured Leo to himself, and
he lost no time in moving back.

As will be remembered, Daniel Hawkins had received
two tickets for the show from the men who
had come after the escaped lion.

Under pretense of looking for Leo, the old
couple, who generally spoke of all shows as works
of the evil one, attended the afternoon performance.

They saw the young gymnast, but the paint on
his face as a clown so disguised him that neither
recognized their bound boy.

They were much disappointed to have the fire
cut short what proved to be so entertaining to
them, but the extra tickets for the evening performance
soothed their feelings greatly.

“We’ll take in this ’ere side show and then git a
bite an’ wait fer the next openin’,” said Daniel.
“It’s better’n goin’ over to the county fair.”

And Mrs. Hawkins agreed with him.

As soon as Leo saw the old couple an idea entered
his head.

At the Hawkins’ farmhouse he had several things
which he wished to get. Not clothing—he was too
poor to own more than what was on his back—but
mementos of former days, when he had had as
nice a home as any lad in the Hopsville district.

These mementos were secreted in the garret of
the old farmhouse, in a corner behind the wide
chimney, where Daniel Hawkins had never looked
for them.

“I’ll visit the house while they are here and get
those things,” Leo said to himself, and off he
started.

As we know, it was quite a distance. Leo
looked around for some sort of a vehicle which
might give him a “lift,” but unfortunately none
appeared in sight.

At last he reached the place, to find it tightly
locked up below.

In a twinkle Leo was up on the kitchen shed.
From there he clambered along the gutter of the
addition until he reached the window of a middle
room.

As he had surmised this window was unlocked,
and he crawled inside, although not without difficulty
and danger of breaking his neck by a fall.

No sooner had he entered than a most appetizing
smell greeted his nose.

“Huckleberry pie!” he cried. “By criminy!
but I must have a piece!”

Down the stairs went Leo. The pies set on the
kitchen table, two in number. A third, partly gone,
rested close at hand.

At first Leo thought, just out of mischief, to cut
a fresh pie. But then he reflected that this might
cause suspicion and trouble, and he let the whole
pies alone and satisfied himself on a juicy portion
of that which was cut.

A glass of milk washed down the pie, and then,
feeling much refreshed, the boy hurried upstairs to
the garret.

The mementos were done up in a flat pasteboard
box. There were pictures of his mother and father
and other relatives, and half a dozen letters and
other things, including a silver watch.

Daniel Hawkins had always wanted the watch
but Leo had never let on that he possessed it.

With the articles in his pockets Leo started downstairs
once more.

He had just reached the second story and was on
the point of descending the lower flight of stairs,
when an unexpected sound greeted his ears.

Daniel and Martha Hawkins had returned.

“So much cheaper ter git supper ter hum,” he
heard Mrs. Hawkins say, speaking from the kitchen.

“It’s a pity, though, yer Aunt Mariah wasn’t
hum,” returned Daniel Hawkins.

Leo was startled.

“Caught!” he muttered to himself, and then
added: “Not much!”

With great caution he left the hallway and entered
the side bedroom.

As noiselessly as possible he opened the window
again.

The distance to the ground was at least twelve
feet, but there was heavy grass below, and Leo did
not mind such a drop.

“It’s nothing to that leap I had to take in the
circus,” he said to himself, and crawled out on the
window-sill.

“Hi! hi! You young rascal! What are you
doing up there?”

Leo looked down. Beneath the window stood old
Daniel Hawkins.

CHAPTER VII.—LEO GAINS HIS LIBERTY.
===================================

Daniel Hawkins had just come out to care for
his horse. By sheer accident he had glanced up at
the window and beheld Leo in the act of dropping
out.

The young gymnast was as much surprised as
was his tormentor. But he knew enough to cling
fast to the sill, and not to drop into Daniel Hawkins’
clutches.

“Goin’ ter drop out, eh?” went on the old
farmer.

“I rather think not,” replied Leo, and popped
into the room again.

At once Daniel Hawkins called his wife.

“Marthy! Marthy!”

“Wot, Daniel?”

“Leo’s up in the house a-tryin’ ter climb out o’
the winder!”

“You don’t say!”

“Run up an’ catch him!”

“Why don’t you go?”

“I want ter watch out here fer him! If I go up
he’ll drop anyway.”

“Drat the boy!” muttered Mrs. Hawkins, and
she went for her old-time weapon, the broom.

Armed with this, she ascended the stairs. She
entered the side bedroom, to which her husband
had pointed, only to find it empty.

“He ain’t here!” she cried from the window.

“He’s somewhere? Root him out!” shouted
Daniel Hawkins.

So Mrs. Hawkins ran around from room to
room.

But she did not find Leo, for the simple reason
that the young gymnast had, by running through
two rooms, reached the stairs and gone down to the
front door.

He opened this and ran outside just as Daniel
Hawkins appeared around the corner of the porch,
whip in hand.

“Stop, Leo!”

“Not to-day!” retorted the boy.

And away he went, Daniel Hawkins lumbering
after him.

The farmer was no match for the young gymnast.
Soon Leo was out of his sight, and he returned to
the farmhouse to talk the matter over with his
spouse.

“I’ll fix him yet, see ef I don’t!” he said to
Martha.

Soon his bony nag was hitched up to a buckboard,
and away went the farmer in pursuit of the
lad, who was doing his best to get away.

“I’ll teach him a lesson he won’t forget in a
hurry when I collar him,” thought the miserly man
savagely.

On went the boy until nearly half the distance to
Lendham, the next town, was covered. Wishing
to throw the farmer off the scent, Leo did not head
for the circus grounds.

As it was a hot day he was soon pretty well
winded and he dropped into a walk.

On looking back he was chagrined to see the
buckboard approaching.

“He means to catch me, after all!” he thought.

The young gymnast hardly knew what to do.

It was useless to think of going on, for his pursuer
would sooner or later overtake him.

On both sides of the road were open fields, offering
no place where he might conceal himself.

Suddenly an idea struck him.

He was approaching the inclosed grounds of the
County Agricultural Society.

The county fair was in progress and thousands of
people were in and about the inclosure.

Could he not lose himself in the crowd?

He resolved to make the attempt.

But he had not the price of admission, even
though it was but twenty-five cents.

Yet this did not stop the youth.

“Necessity knows no law,” and just as Daniel
Hawkins drove up within a hundred feet of him he
ran in among the carriages at the gateway and
entered the grounds before the gatekeeper could
stop him.

“Hi, boy, stop! Where is your ticket?”

The policeman near the gatekeeper made a dash
after Leo.

But the boy was not to be collared.

He sprang into the midst of a crowd, and that
ended the chase so far as the guardian of the law
went.

Leo did not remain near the gates, but following
the crowd, he walked to one of the main buildings
and then to the large field beyond.

Here was a small racecourse, and local horsemen
were running races for small purses and side bets.

At once something in the center of the racetrack
attracted Leo’s attention.

It was a very large balloon, swaying gracefully
to and fro in the light breeze that was blowing.

The boy was interested on the instant, as he had
not seen a balloon since he was a small boy.

“Father once went up in one of those things,”
he mused, as he moved forward. “I would like to
try it once myself.”

Around the balloon were half a dozen men, preparing
for the ascension, to take place half an hour
later.

Professor Williams, the aeronaut, had not yet put
in appearance.

The balloon was about filled with hot air and the
men were merely keeping the air warm until the
professor should arrive.

As Leo stood by watching the arrangements an
outsider came up.

“Too bad!” he said.

“What’s too bad?”

“The professor can’t get here to-day.”

“Why not?”

“He has been taken sick and is at the hotel in
New Haven.”

“That will be a big disappointment to this
crowd.”

“I admit it, but it can’t be helped.”

The boy listened to the conversation with
interest.

He pushed his way to where the man in charge
of the balloon stood.

“I’ll go up in the balloon for you, if you’ll pay
me,” he said.

“You!” the man looked at him in astonishment.

“Yes.”

“It won’t do, my lad. The crowd want somebody
who will make a parachute jump, and all
that.”

“I’ll make the parachute jump if you’ll give me
a few instructions.”

The man laughed.

“You’re a daring youngster, to say the least,” he
remarked. “Why, you might break your neck.”

“No, I wouldn’t,” returned Leo confidently.

“Well, I’m much obliged, but I can’t use your
services.”

“Let me get in the basket and see how it feels,
will you?” asked the boy, after a pause.

“Well, seeing as you are so anxious, I’ll oblige
you,” laughed the man.

The basket rested on the ground, directly to one
side of the fire, with which the air in the swaying
monster was kept hot.

Hardly had the man given permission than Leo
entered the wicker inclosure.

It was about six feet in diameter and filled with
bags of sand for ballast.

To one side of the basket was attached a parachute.
This the balloonist used in making his
daring jumps from the clouds.

As Leo sat in the basket the crowd gathered
around him.

“Hullo, Leo Dunbar! what are you doing in that
basket?” asked Ben Barkley, one of the rich boys
of Hopsville.

“Going to make an ascension,” returned Leo
jokingly.

“Bet you ten dollars you are not,” laughed Ben.

“All right; I’ll take you up. But you must loan
me the money, Ben.”

“How is it old Hawkins gave you a day off?”
went on Ben. “Thought he was too mean to give
anybody a holiday.”

“So he is, Ben. I took a day off and I’m going
to take more.”

“Phew! What do you mean? Have you and
the old man parted company?”

“We have.”

“It is a wonder he would let you go—he got so
much work out of you.”

“He didn’t let me go. I ran away.”

Ben Barkley’s eyes opened widely.

“You don’t mean it!”

“I do! I’m tired of being his slave.”

“I don’t blame you a bit for leaving,” was Ben’s
decided reply. “I know what a hard-hearted man
he is.”

“I’m going to carve my own way to fortune.”

“What are you going to do?”

Leo was about to answer when Ben was pushed
to one side and the portly form of Daniel Hawkins
appeared.

“Ha! ha! So I have found you at last, you
scamp!” he cried in a rage. “A pretty run you
have given me! And made me pay out twenty-five
cents, too, to come in the fair after you!”

Leo was taken completely aback. He had not
dreamed that the farmer would follow him into
the grounds.

“I’ll skin you!” stormed the man, seeing the boy
did not immediately answer him.

“Not much you won’t,” put in Ben Barkley.

“What have you to do with this?” howled
Daniel, turning to the rich boy.

“You have no right to abuse Leo,” responded
Ben.

“This is none of your business!”

“Hold him a minute, Ben!” suddenly shouted Leo.
“Hold him!”

As the boy spoke he drew from his pocket a clasp-knife.

Quickly he opened the largest blade.

Slash! slash! slash!

He was cutting the ropes which held the balloon.

“Here! What are you doing!” screamed the
man in charge.

“I’m going to escape a tyrant!” responded Leo,
as he cut the last rope.

For an instant the balloon continued to sway
from side to side.

Daniel Hawkins fought off Ben Barkley and
leaped forward.

Too late!

Up shot the balloon, dragging the basket after it.

In less time than it takes to tell it, Leo Dunbar
was five hundred feet up in the air!

CHAPTER VIII.—AMONG THE CLOUDS IN A THUNDERSTORM.
=================================================

A cry arose.

“The balloon has gone up!”

“Why, the balloonist is nothing but a boy!”

“My! but ain’t it going up fast!”

Daniel Hawkins could do nothing but stare after
the balloon.

“Foolish boy, he will be killed!” he gasped.

Ben Barkley was also amazed.

“He said he would go up,” he murmured, “but I
never supposed that he meant it.”

The crowd continued to shout. They wondered
what it all meant, and some asked the men who
had had the balloon in charge, but those individuals
had no time to explain.

They sprang into a wagon and prepared to follow
the direction of the balloon, supposing it would come
down as soon as the hot air began to cool off.

Meanwhile, what of Leo?

So sudden was the upward rush of the balloon
that the boy was thrown to the bottom of the
basket ere he was aware.

He clutched the sides and then ventured to look
down. The earth seemed to be fading away
beneath him.

For a few minutes he was deadly sick at the
stomach and there was a strange ringing in his
ears.

The balloon was moving in the direction of Hopsville.
Soon it passed over the town.

Leo could see the few streets and the brook laid
out like a map beneath him.

He was growing accustomed to his novel situation.

On and on went the balloon.

The wind appeared to blow stronger the higher
he went.

Then he looked ahead and saw he was rushing
rapidly toward a dense mass of clouds to the southeast.

The boy had noticed the clouds while running
toward Lendham.

They betokened a thunderstorm, and already the
mutterings of thunder came to his ears.

“A storm would be more than I bargained for,”
he thought. “I wonder if I can’t get away from
it?”

Leo had heard tell of going up above a storm
when the latter hung low.

He did not know if he could make a hot-air balloon
go up, but he resolved to try.

With great rapidity he threw out one sandbag
after another.

Lightened of a great part of its load, the balloon
shot up a hundred feet or more.

Then the boy noticed a large sponge tied to the
side of the basket and beside a can labeled alcohol.

At once he saturated the sponge and placed it on
the stick for that purpose.

When the sponge was lit he held it up to the
mouth of the balloon.

The cooling air began to grow hot again, and
once more the balloon went up slowly, but steadily.

But now the wind made the basket rock violently
from side to side.

Soon Leo had to extinguish the sponge and put it
away.

A gust sent the basket almost over to one side,
and he had to let everything go in order to cling
fast.

Sizz! A jagged streak of lightning crossed
directly in front of the balloon!

He was now in the very midst of the storm and
all grew black around him.

The change from the bright sunshine was terrible
to the boy and he almost gave himself up for lost.

Back and forth rocked the balloon and the basket,
and many were the times that he was in danger of
being hurled to death.

Then the balloon began to descend.

The clouds were left behind, and there followed
a deluge of rain which drenched Leo to the skin.

He fell so rapidly that a new danger presented
itself.

Where or how would he land?

Would he break his neck or a limb?

Down, down he went! There were trees or
bushes under him, he could not tell which.

Crash! The basket settled in the top of a tree.

Down came the folds of the balloon on top of it,
and the boy was nearly smothered.

Yet he was exceedingly thankful that his life had
been spared.

He crawled from the basket and carefully made
his way down the tree to the ground.

The storm still raged, but gradually it moved onward,
and the sun broke from beneath the scattering
clouds.

Leo had traveled at least eight or ten miles, and
he wondered what he should do next.

He had half a mind to run off and leave the
balloon men to find their property as best they
might.

But he soon changed his mind on that point.

“I’ll aid them all I can,” he said to himself.

The boy knew there was a road through the
woods which ran almost directly to the fair
grounds.

He made his way to this and walked on through
the mud and wet.

It was not long before he came up to the men in
the wagon.

At first they were inclined to be abusive, and
they thought to have the boy locked up.

But Leo soon changed all this.

“Your balloon is all right,” he said. “And by
going up I reckon I saved you the amount you were
to get from the fair people. You wouldn’t get a
cent if somebody hadn’t gone up.”

This was a new way of looking at it.

“Well, we won’t get paid for a parachute jump,”
said the balloon manager. “But we can claim half
money, true enough.”

The boy showed the men where the balloon was,
and helped them load it on their wagon.

The men took to Leo, and as he helped them at
the hardest work, they readily answered his questions
about the circus and gave him full directions
by which he could take a short cut to the grounds.

“That was a narrow escape,” murmured Leo to
himself as he made his way back to the “Greatest
Show on Earth.”

Arriving there, he had another long talk with
Barton Reeve, who, as before stated, had taken a
sudden and strong fancy to the brave lad.

The upshot of the matter was that Reeve bought
Leo a trunk and advanced him money for several
changes of clothing.

The next day, at Lendham, the circus tents were
jammed with people.

Everything was again in order, and all the acts
went off with a dash that drew round after round
of applause.

Snipper was as sour as ever, but he took good
care not to interfere with Leo.

As for the boy, he appeared perfectly at home;
so much so that many said he was a born circus
performer.

As a clown he caused the people to laugh heartily,
and when he threw off his trunks and performed on
the bars and rings he got more than a share of the
applause.

As soon as the performance was over the circus
packed up, and at half-past eleven began to move
from Lendham to Middletown, seven miles distant.

Leo spent the night at the Middletown Hotel
with Barton Reeve. The boy was now a *protégé*
of the menagerie manager.

Before going to bed, Leo told Reeve much about
his former life, and showed the manager the pictures
of his folks.

Reeve became interested.

“I’ll tell you what I’ll do, Leo,” he said. “I’ll
go to this Squire Dobb and get him to release you
in a lawful way. Then you will have nothing to
fear from Daniel Hawkins.”

“But supposing Hawkins won’t let the squire
release me?”

“I don’t believe he has any claim on you that
would hold good in a court of law. I’ll make the
squire show his authority over you first.”

“I wish you could get Squire Dobb to make a
settlement of my parents’ estate,” went on Leo
earnestly.

“You think he is holding money from you?”

“I know he is.”

“Well, I’ll investigate.”

Bright and early the next day the young lad and
Barton Reeve drove over to the home of Nathan
Dobb.

They found the squire busy in his office, looking
over some legal papers.

Without preliminaries Barton Reeve introduced
himself. The squire listened in silence, at the same
time scowling at Leo.

“Want to quit the farm and become a circus
performer, eh?” said Dobb at last. “Can’t let you
do it. You’ll have to go back to Daniel Hawkins’
farm.”

“I never will!” returned Leo warmly. “I’ll run
away entirely first.”

“We’ll see,” sniffed Squire Dobb.

Barton Reeve had sized up the lawyer at a
glance. He saw that the man was a crafty villain,
not to be trusted.

“Squire, would you mind showing me your
authority over this boy?” he remarked firmly.

“Wh-what?” was the surprised exclamation.

“I would like to learn your legal authority over
Leo.”

“It’s none of your business!”

“I shall make it my business.”

“Going to pry into matters, eh?”

“Yes, unless you consent to release Leo. He has
been misused on the Hawkins’ place.”

The face of Nathan Dobb was a study. If there
was one thing he feared it was the exposure of the
past. Why he feared this will be explained later.

“I’ll have to see Hawkins first,” he said at last.

“When will you see him?”

“To-day. But what is Leo to do?”

“He is going to travel with me and perform in
the circus.”

“He can’t do anything.”

“Never mind. I’ll teach him a thing or two,”
replied Barton Reeve.

He was afraid if he told Squire Dobb what Leo
could really do that the miserly lawyer would
want money for the release.

After a little more talk Leo and Reeve left the
squire’s house.

On the next day Reeve got a short note from
Dobb. It read:

“I have given up all claim to Leo Dunbar, and so
has Daniel Hawkins.”

Leo was much pleased. Barton Reeve smiled to
himself.

“There is something in all this, Leo,” he said.
“Next week, when I get time, I’ll look into your
past and Squire Dobb’s doings.”

CHAPTER IX.—THE MAD ELEPHANT.
=============================

From Middletown the circus went to Dover, and
then to Grasscannon.

At each of these places a big business was done,
and at every performance Leo did better.

The young gymnast became a great favorite
with all but two people in the “Greatest Show on
Earth.”

These two people were Jack Snipper, who remained
as overbearing as ever, and Jack Broxton,
the fellow discharged for intoxication.

Broxton had been following up the circus ever
since his discharge, in the vain hope of being reinstated.

But the rules in the “Greatest Show on Earth” are
very strict, and no intoxication is allowed.

After leaving Grasscannon, the circus struck up
through New York State, and at the end of the
week arrived at Buffalo.

It was while at this place that Broxton tried
to play a dangerous trick upon Leo.

He met the young gymnast on the street one
night after the performance.

He was under the influence of liquor at the time,
and in his pocket he carried what is known by the
boys as a giant torpedo.

As Leo turned a corner he threw the torpedo
at Leo’s feet.

Luckily the torpedo failed to explode.

Had it gone off the young gymnast would have
been sadly crippled.

“You rascal!” cried Leo, and he made for Broxton
and landed him in the gutter.

Some of the other performers then came up.

“What’s the row, Leo?”

“Look what Broxton threw at me,” he replied,
and handed the torpedo around for inspection.

While the explosive was being examined, Broxton
sneaked off, and it was well for him that he did
so, for otherwise the crowd would have pounced
upon him and given him the greatest warming up
of his life.

But that ended Broxton’s hope of rejoining the
circus. The story of his attempt on Leo circulated,
and he did not dare to show his face anywhere
around the dressing tents.

After leaving Buffalo the circus turned southward
toward Pennsylvania.

One night they arrived at Harmony Falls.

“To-morrow, if all goes right, I am going to take
a train for Hopsville and see Squire Dobb,” said
Barton Reeve to Leo.

“I hope you have luck,” replied the boy. “If he
is keeping any of my property back from me I want
to know it.”

The day in Harmony Falls opened very warm.
A haze hung over the mountains to the westward.

“We’ll have a storm by night,” said Natalie
Sparks to Leo.

The two were now warm friends.

“That will make it bad for the ticket-wagon,”
laughed the young gymnast.

“Oh, I hate a storm during a performance,” went
on the girl, “especially if it thunders and lightens.”

“Well, that’s what it’s going to do.”

“How do you know?”

“Oh, didn’t I live on a farm?”

“That’s so!” Natalie laughed merrily. “You
don’t look much like a farm hand now.”

“Thanks for the compliment,” and Leo blushed.

During the afternoon it grew hotter and hotter.
Under the big tents it was suffocating.

“Dandy weather for lemonade,” said the owner
of the main drinking stand, but he was about the
only person who appreciated the sudden rise in the
thermometer.

At seven o’clock the circus tents were again
crowded, and amid the general excitement but few
noticed the flashes of lightning over in the west.
The low rumblings of thunder they attributed to
the lions in the cages.

At last the grand *entrée* was over, and then the
performance settled down to the various specialties.

Then, as Leo and Snipper came on, a louder peal
of thunder attracted every one’s attention.

To quiet fears the band struck up. Of course Leo
and Snipper could not talk against the music, and
so they tumbled around instead, Leo casting himself
into the most awkward of shapes.

The rain began to fall, but as the canvases were
waterproof this did no great harm.

Then the wind freshened up, and every one realized
that a big storm was at hand.

Leo had just thrown off his clown’s dress and
mounted up to a pair of rings when a fearful crack
of thunder caused every one to leap up in terror.

The lightning had struck a pole in the menagerie
tent!

Down came the heavy stick, straight across the
backs of three of the largest elephants.

.. figure:: images/illus-064.jpg
   :align: center
   
   THE ELEPHANT MADE FOR THE CROWD

The thunder and the fall of the pole frightened
the huge beasts. They roared and plunged and
finally broke from their fastenings.

Two of them were secured without much difficulty,
but the third, the largest, could not be managed.

With a fearful roar he rushed into the main
circus tent, under the spot where Leo was performing,
and directly in the faces of the crowd, which
tried in vain to flee from his path.

CHAPTER X.—CAPTURING THE ELEPHANT.
==================================

For the moment it looked as if the mad elephant
would crush a dozen or more of the audience.

He was making straight for the crowd, which
tried in vain to clear a path for him to pass.

The uproar was terrible, but it was nothing compared
to the trumpeting of the gigantic beast.

Several attendants rushed toward the elephant
with prods, but he was too angry to notice them.

“Turn him back!”

“He’ll walk right over the crowd!”

“Lasso him!”

“Shoot him!”

And so the cries went on.

The uproar had caused Leo to stop his performance;
indeed, it had stopped everything but the
stampede of the audience.

Suddenly the elephant ran directly under the
young gymnast.

As he did so there came another crash of
thunder.

The elephant raised up on his rear legs, and his
trunk went up to where Leo swung.

And then a startling thing happened.

Leo dropped directly upon the beast’s head. With
remarkable rapidity he slid back on to the neck.

“Throw me a rope!” he yelled to the nearest
attendant, and the fellow did so.

Then the end of the elephant’s trunk came up
angrily. He intended to catch hold of the young
gymnast and hurl him to the earth, there to trample
on him.

But Leo slipped further back, and at the same
time threw the noose of the rope over the uplifted
proboscis.

He hauled it taut, and with the end of the rope
in his hand, sprang down and ran at lightning
speed to the nearest centerpole.

Around this he went half a dozen times.

“Now keep him back with your prods!” he sang
out.

More enraged than ever, the elephant tried to
pull himself free.

But the rope held, and he was forced on his knees,
roaring with pain, for an elephant’s trunk is his
most sensitive organ.

A shout of approval went up, and the crowd
paused in its hasty flight.

But the elephant was not yet a prisoner. He
pulled and tugged, and had the centerpole not been
so strong and so deeply set in the ground, he would
surely have either broken it off or pulled it up.

But now he hesitated, and in that moment more
attendants came up. One began to soothe him,
while the others slipped a leather and iron harness
over him. Soon he was a complete prisoner, and
realizing this, he shambled back to the menagerie
tent as mildly as a lamb.

The rain was now coming down in a perfect
deluge, and the audience would not remain. In less
than a quarter of an hour the circus grounds were
deserted, saving for those who had to remain on
duty, and the performers in the dressing-tents.

Every one praised Leo for what he had done;
every one, that is, but Snipper. He had not a word
to say, but looked more morose than ever.

Leo did not wait, however, to hear all that the
others had to say. He donned his regular clothing
just as quickly as he could, and with Natalie Sparks
rode from the grounds to the hotel at which they
were stopping.

Barton Reeve was nowhere around. He had
gone off to Hopsville to see Nathan Dobb.

He came in about half-past ten, and then Leo and
he had a long discussion concerning the boy’s past
and future.

“The squire is a sly one,” said the menagerie
manager. “It was about as easy to get information
out of him as it is to get milk out of a stone.”

“Then you learned nothing?” returned Leo,
much disappointed.

“I did and I didn’t. He admitted that your
folks were once wealthy; but he said the money
was lost in speculations before you were left an
orphan.”

“I don’t believe that.”

“Nor I. I asked him for some proofs, but he
would give me none. Then I asked him flatly how
much there was coming to you when your folks
died, and he said not more than a couple of hundred
dollars. I wanted to see the papers, but he
wouldn’t show them.”

“Didn’t you tell him we would take the matter
to court?”

“I did, and it worried him a good bit. That is
what makes me think there is considerable at stake.
If he had nothing to hide, what is he so scared
about?”

“Just wait till I have money enough, I’ll stir him
up!” cried Leo.

He had not yet forgotten how Nathan Dobb and
Daniel Hawkins had mistreated him.

“We’ll both stir him up, Leo. But I guess before
we go much further we had better get a
lawyer’s advice. In a few weeks the circus will
make two three-day stops and that will give us
a little time, certainly more than we get when we
go to a new town every day.”

They talked the matter over for some time longer,
and when Leo went to bed it was with the fixed
determination to make Squire Dobb “toe the
mark.”

And while the young gymnast was meditating
thus, Nathan Dobb was walking up and down his
office, his face dark and full of cunning.

“The boy’s getting too big and he’s making too
many friends,” he muttered to himself. “Why
couldn’t he remain a simple farm hand, without
trying to rake up the past and make a place for
himself?” He took a turn or two and clenched his
bony hands. “I wish I had stuck to my original
idea and sent him to Africa on that freight steamer
without a cent in his pocket.”

Then Nathan Dobb dropped into the chair beside
his safe, and from the strong box took a package of
documents. These he looked over for nearly half
an hour.

“Ten thousand dollars!” he muttered. “It
would be a fortune to him! But he shan’t have it.
I’ve worked too hard for it to have it slip through
my fingers at this late day. I had better burn all
these papers and then concoct some scheme for getting
him out of the way.”

Nathan Dobb’s soliloquy was interrupted by a
crash in the rear of the house. Some one had
broken into the kitchen, most likely a burglar.

CHAPTER XI.—A CRIMINAL COMPACT.
===============================

There had been several robberies in Hopsville
lately, so the squire was certain the burglar had
now come to his house.

Instantly he turned out the light in the office.
Then opening the door to the hall he listened attentively.

He was right; some one was moving cautiously
about the kitchen.

Moving back to his desk the squire secured his
pistol and also a club.

When he came out into the hall on tiptoe he heard
the would-be burglar moving around the dining-room.

Presently the fellow struck a light, which he set
on the table.

Then he began an examination of the silverware
on the sideboard.

By the light the squire got a good look at the
would-be burglar.
He was astonished beyond measure.

“Hank Griswold!” he muttered, half-aloud.

The man whose name he mentioned had formerly
been a tavern-keeper in Hopsville.

But he had been sent to jail for robbing and
beating a drunken man. His discharge had taken
place but two weeks before.

As Squire Dobb spoke, the would-be burglar
turned swiftly.

“Collared!” he muttered laconically.

Then he tried to escape by a rear door, but
Nathan Dobb covered him with the pistol.

“Stop, Griswold!”

“Confound the luck! The game is up!”

“It is. Stop where you are.”

“Don’t be hard on me, squire.”

“So you were going to rob me, eh?”

“Let me go this time, squire,” went on the man
pleadingly.

“What for? So you can rob somebody else?”

“I ain’t got a cent to my name, squire.”

“I can’t help that.”

Suddenly a thought flashed over Squire Dobb’s
mind.

“Griswold, step into my office.”

“Don’t lock me up, squire.”

“I won’t—if you will do as I wish you to.”

“I’ll do anything you say, only don’t arrest me
again.”

“Step into the office, and see to it that you don’t
wake up the whole household.”

Hank Griswold complied. The squire followed
him, still, however, keeping his pistol ready for
use.

But when the office was reached, and the door
shut, Nathan Dobb’s manner changed. He took
Griswold’s hand.

“Griswold, you are just the man I want to see.”

“I—I—don’t understand,” was the confused
reply.

“I’ll explain. Sit down and take it easy. You
love to smoke? Have a cigar,” and a box was
shoved toward him.

“See here, Nathan Dobb, what’s your game
now?”

“I want to throw some work in your hands,
work that will pay well.”

“What kind of work?” asked Griswold suspiciously.
He was half-inclined to believe Nathan
Dobb was out of his mind.

“You just said you would do anything for me if
I didn’t have you arrested.”

“So I will.”
“Supposing I put a job in your way that will
pay you an even hundred dollars——”

“You’re foolin’ me, squire.”

“I mean it, Griswold, a hundred dollars. Would
you do the work and say nothing?”

“Yes.”

“It’s a—a—job that isn’t strictly—ah—all right,
you know.”

“I don’t care what it is,” returned Griswold
recklessly. “I’ll do anything you say. You can
trust me.”

“Will you?” cried Nathan Dobb eagerly. He
hesitated. “I want to get a boy out of my way.”

“Who?”

“Leo Dunbar, who used to live with Dan
Hawkins.”

“I know him. Didn’t his father once have my
tavern shut up as a disorderly house?”

“Well, as I said, I want to get that boy out of
my way.”

“Where is he now?”

“He is traveling as an acrobat with that circus
which performed here a week or so ago.”

“And you want me to—to—?” Griswold hesitated.

“I want him removed from my path. I never
want to see him around here again.”
“And you’ll give me a hundred for the job?”

“I will.”

“It’s not enough. Make it two hundred.”

“Well, I will.”

“In cash?”

“Yes.”

“When can I get the money?”

“You can get it right here as soon as—well, I’m
sure Dunbar won’t bother me any more.”

“You’re a cool one, Dobb. But I said I’d go
you, and I will. But, say?”

“Well?”

“You must let me have fifty dollars on account.
I’ll have to hang around the circus for awhile and
lay my plans. It’s no fool of a job to do as you
wish.”

“Here are thirty dollars. And one word more,
Hank. Never mention my name in this, and if I
were you, don’t ever let Leo Dunbar see you.”

“I’ll remember,” replied Griswold.

Ten minutes later he left Nathan Dobb’s house
as secretly as he had entered it.

CHAPTER XII.—THE STOLEN CIRCUS TICKETS.
=======================================

ON the following week the circus moved down
through Pennsylvania. Fine weather favored the
show, and the crowd at each performance was very
large.

“This is going to be a banner season,” said Giles,
the treasurer, “unless we get tripped up as we were
last season.”

He referred to a serious matter, namely, that of
thousands of stolen tickets, which during the previous
summer had been secured and sold by outside
speculators.

This season a few tickets had thus far been missing,
but the number was not sufficient to cause a
serious loss.

Leo’s performances in the ring improved every
day. Already was he as good as Jack Snipper, and
soon he would outrival the other acrobat in every
way.

Leo’s acts, while disguised as a clown, were highly
amusing, even better than some of the regular
clowns, of which there were eight.

“He could do clown and get big wages, even if
he didn’t know a thing about gymnastics,” remarked
Natalie Sparks.

Natalie was now a warm friend to Leo, much to
Snipper’s disgust.

The second-rate gymnast had always been enamored
of the Fire Queen, but he could make no
progress in his suit.

One day he met Natalie in the dressing-tent when
no one else was present.

He began to talk familiarly to her, and then
attempted to kiss her.

“Don’t you dare!” she cried angrily.

“I guess you won’t mind very much,” said
Snipper, and then, despite her struggles, he bent
over and stuck his repulsive face close to her fair
cheek.

But just then Leo came on the scene. For a
moment he stood in amazement.

“Leo, make the horrid fellow go away!” panted
Natalie.

“Do as Miss Sparks wishes, Snipper!” cried the
young gymnast.

“Mind your own business!” grumbled Snipper.

“This is my business,” returned Leo warmly.

And rushing up, he collared the second-rate
gymnast and hurled him halfway across the tent.

Snipper was clearly in the wrong, and, as Natalie
had called on Leo for assistance, he did not dare
raise a row.

He sneaked out, shaking his fist at Leo as he
did so.

“Oh, Leo, I am very thankful you came in,”
panted Natalie as soon as she could recover.

“So am I,” went on the boy honestly, and then,
as he looked at the beautiful girl, both blushed.

Following the scene just recorded, Jack Snipper
was more ugly than ever. Whenever he met or
passed Leo he would mutter something under his
breath.

“Look out for him, Leo,” said Dick Pomeroy,
the tumbler, one day. “He’s cutting a club for
you.”

“I’ve got my optics peeled,” laughed Leo.

That afternoon, after the performance, Leo was
walking around outside, near the side-show.

Presently he saw something that at once interested
him.

A “flim-flam worker,” as such criminals around a
circus are called, was trying to swindle a countryman
out of twenty dollars.

He was working an old game, which consists in
getting an outsider to hold the stakes in a bet with
another flim-flammer.

The game is to mix the stakeholder up and make
him put up his own money, and then secure all the
cash in sight.

Leo was interested for two reasons.

In the first place, he did not wish to see the
countryman swindled.

In the second place, he knew that swindlers of
any kind were not allowed to work in the vicinity
of the “Greatest Show on Earth.”

The flim-flam man was about to receive the
countryman’s money when Leo stepped up.

“Drop this,” he said quietly.

“Wot yer givin’ us, sonny?” came in a hoarse
growl from the swindler.

“I say drop the game.” Leo turned to the
countryman. “Put away your money, or you will
be swindled out of it.”

“By gum! Is thet so?” ejaculated the farmer,
and he at once thrust the cash out of sight.

At this the would-be swindler turned on Leo.

“I’ll thrash you for that!” he howled, and
rushed at the young gymnast, while the two partners
in the deal did the same.

Leo knew it would be foolish to attempt to stand
up against all three, so he gave a peculiar whistle,
known to all circus hands.

A cry of “Hi! Rube!” arose and soon several
circus detectives reached the spot. But the swindlers
vanished before they could be captured.

The countryman, whose name was Adam Slocum,
was much pleased over what Leo had done, and insisted
on shaking hands. He invited Leo to call on
him when the circus came to the next town.

“Thank you, I’ll call,” said Leo.

Snipper had witnessed the scene between the
swindlers and Leo. When the three men went off
he followed them.

All four met at a low resort half a dozen blocks
from the circus grounds.

Snipper knew the men. As a matter of fact, he
would have left the circus and joined them in their
work, but he had his reasons for remaining as an
employee of the “Greatest Show on Earth,” as will
be seen later.

The four men had a conference, which lasted
over an hour.

Then Snipper and one of them called on a local
locksmith.

The swindler told a long story of having lost the
keys to his trunk, and he ordered the locksmith to
make him three keys from impressions furnished by
Snipper.

With these keys in his possession, Snipper went
back to the circus grounds.

On the following day, toward evening, there was
a commotion at the entrance to the main tent of
the circus. One of the managers of the great
aggregation had discovered that hundreds of circus
tickets had been sold throughout the district at a
discount from the regular price, fifty cents.

A hurried examination was made, and then it
was learned that two thousand tickets had been
stolen from one of the box-office wagons.

These tickets were now either sold to individuals
or in the hands of the outside speculators.

Who could have stolen the tickets was a mystery,
until a slip of paper was handed to Giles, the treasurer,
which read:

    “Leo Dunbar was hanging around the ticket
    wagon last night. Better watch and search him.
    
    .. class:: right
    
       “A Friend.”

Giles lost no time in acting upon the suggestion
given in the note. He ran to the dressing-tent and,
finding a key to fit Leo’s trunk, opened it.

A first examination of the contents revealed
nothing, but then the treasurer brought to light
three heavy strips of red paper, each marked 100—50s.

They were the strips used around bundles of
tickets.

This was sufficient proof against Leo for Giles.
He told several of the others, including Mr. Lambert,
the general manager, and then waited for the
boy to come in from his performance in the ring.

Amid a generous round of applause, the young
gymnast finished his turn and bowed himself out.

On his appearance in the dressing-tent, Giles at
once placed his hand on our hero’s shoulder.

“Consider yourself under arrest, Leo Dunbar,”
he said sternly.

Leo was much startled.

“What for?”

“For stealing two thousand circus tickets.”

CHAPTER XIII.—LEO MAKES A CHANGE.
=================================

Leo stared at the circus treasurer in amazement.

“For stealing two thousand circus tickets?” he
repeated.

“Exactly, young man.”

“I am innocent.”

“I don’t believe Leo would steal a pin,” put in
Natalie Sparks, who had just come up.

“That’s not for you to decide, Miss Sparks.” said
Giles sharply. “We found evidence against you
in your trunk, young man. You may as well confess.”

“What evidence?” asked Leo, bewildered.

The circus treasurer mentioned the red strips.

“I never placed them there,” declared Leo.
“Somebody has been tampering with that trunk.”

“That’s too thin,” sneered Giles.

“Of course it’s too thin,” put in Snipper, who
was watching the scene with an ill-concealed smile
of triumph on his face.

Leo looked at the gymnast sharply. Then he
suddenly bounded toward Snipper and ran him up
against a pile of boxes.

“You scoundrel! This is some of your work! I
can see it in your face.”

He choked Snipper until the man was red in the
face.

“Let—let me go!” gasped the second-rate gymnast
finally.

“Let him go, Dunbar,” ordered Giles, and caught
Leo by the collar.

The noise of the trouble had spread, and now
Barton Reeve appeared on the scene.

“What’s the meaning of all this?” he demanded.

He was quickly told by Natalie Sparks.

“I do not believe Leo is guilty, in spite of the
red strips found in the trunk,” he said.

He talked the matter over with Giles, and finally
Leo, Giles, and Barton Reeve went off to interview
the manager.

They found Adam Lambert in the main ticket
wagon, counting tickets and cash. He was much
disturbed.

“I don’t know much about you, Dunbar,” he said
coldly. “The thing looks very black, and——”

“Mr. Lambert, I am innocent!” cried Leo. “I
believe this is only a plot against me.”

“A plot? Whose plot?”

“This man Snipper——”

“You and Snipper seem to be fighting continually,”
broke in the manager.

“It is not my fault. He——”

“He always got along well enough before you
came, Dunbar. I won’t have this continual quarreling
around the show. It sets a bad example for
the others.” The manager pulled at his mustache
for a few seconds. “Can you prove you are innocent
of the theft of the tickets?”

“Perhaps I can.”

“Aren’t you sure you can?”

“No, sir. I hope to be able to do so later on,
though.”

“Well, then, until that time arrives you can consider
yourself suspended from duty. I am going to
get to the bottom of this affair.”

“I am discharged!” gasped Leo.

“Mr. Lambert, aren’t you a bit hard on the lad?”
put in Barton Reeve.

“I don’t think so. Most men would have him
arrested. But I’ll let him go, and that will give him
a chance to clear himself—if he can.”

There was a sneer in the last words which cut
Leo to the quick. He drew a long breath.

“Very well, sir, I’ll go,” he said in a strained
voice. “But, sir, let me tell you that you are doing
me a great injustice.”

Unable to control his feelings any longer, Leo,
left the ticket wagon and hurried to the dressing
tent.

Here his friends surrounded him and tried to
pour words of sympathy into his ears. But he
would not listen. Sick at heart, yet burning with
indignation, he packed his trunk and prepared to
leave.

“Where are you going?” asked Natalie Sparks,
with something like a tear in her eye.

“I don’t know, Natalie—I’m too upset to think,”
responded Leo, and that was all he could say.

Just before he left Barton Reeve brought him
the wages due him, which Leo thrust into his
pocket without counting.

“Lambert has got ’em on to-day,” he said. “In
a day or two, when he cools down, he’ll be sorry he
let you go.”

“It was a mean way to act,” answered the boy
bitterly; and then he walked away from the circus
grounds. A few blocks off he met a man with an
empty wagon and hired him to go and fetch his
trunk. When the man came back he asked if there
was any hotel or boarding-house on the other side
of town, conscious, in a way, that he must put up
somewhere.

“Yes, there’s the Eagle Hotel,” said the man.
“A good place and very reasonable.”

“All right; take me there.”

This was done, and then Leo sent the man to the
other hotel, at which the higher class of circus performers
were stopping, for the valise which contained
his ordinary clothing.

He was still so upset in mind that he knew
not what to do. Having engaged his room, he
entered it and locked the door, and gave himself up
to his reflections.

What should he do? Ah, that was the question.
He had said that perhaps he could clear himself.
How should he go to work to do it?

For fully an hour Leo pondered over the
situation. Then he walked downstairs, left the
hotel, and sauntered back to the circus grounds.

He kept his eyes and ears open in a vain endeavor
to learn something to his advantage. The ticket
thieves had taken warning, and not the slightest
clew to them could be unearthed.

Leo passed a sleepless night at the hotel. Before
he arose the “Greatest Show on Earth” had left
the town.

“I’m out of it now,” he sighed. “Out of it, too,
with a stain upon my name.” He bit his quivering
lip until the blood came. “I can’t keep on following
the circus around trying to clear myself, for
I haven’t money enough.”

Yet Leo was not willing to give up, and that
afternoon he took the stage to the next town, where
the “Greatest Show on Earth” was stopping. Once
more he hung around, and again nothing came of
it. Sick at heart, he returned to the Eagle Hotel,
wondering what he should do next.

At the hotel he found a man awaiting him—a
sharp, shrewd individual, who introduced himself
as Nathan Wampole.

“This is Leo Dunbar?”

“That is my name,” replied the young gymnast.

“I am the proprietor of ‘Wampole’s Trans-Continental
Specialty Company,’ which opens in this
place to-night. I was over to Cokeville this afternoon,
where I met a friend of mine, Jack Giles, who
belongs to the circus. He told me that you were
out of a position, and as I need an extra performer
or two, I thought I would call around and see you.”

“Did Mr. Giles send you to me?” queried Leo.

“Well, not exactly. But he said that probably
you would be glad to obtain a position on the stage.
He said you were a very fair gymnast and tumbler.”

“They used to think so at the circus.”

“I’ve no doubt you could do a very good turn or
two.” Nathan Wampole coughed slightly and lowered his
voice. “I heard of your trouble on
account of some circus tickets, but of course that
makes no difference to me,” and he looked at Leo
suggestively.

“I had trouble, but I’m not guilty of any crime,”
replied the boy quickly.

“Of course not, of course not! I merely thought
to mention it. What do you say, would you like to
join my company? We have a splendid route laid
out and, consequently, we are sure of a very successful
season.”

“What would you pay me, Mr. Wampole, if I
joined you?” asked Leo cautiously. He did not
like the man’s looks, but still thought it would be
foolish to throw a chance of work aside.

“I might pay you ten dollars per week.”

“That would be a very small amount for a performer
like myself.”

“Well, if you can do two good turns at each performance
I’ll give you fifteen dollars. Come, what
do you say?”

“I’ll take a look at the show first,” replied Leo.

In a few minutes more the pair were on the way
to the theater in which “Wampole’s Trans-Continental
Specialty Company” was to perform that
evening.

CHAPTER XIV.—LEO MAKES A NEW FRIEND.
====================================

Leo found that the specialty company numbered
fifteen people. The performers were, for the most
part, of very ordinary ability. There were several
song and dance men, a number of musicians who
drew tunes out of a variety of articles, several lady
vocalists, a comical fat man and a magician.

The magician was a young fellow, hardly older
than Leo. His name was Carl Ross, and he had
such a smiling face and gentlemanly manner that
Leo took to him instantly.

“We want a good all-around gymnast and
tumbler,” said Carl Ross. “As it is the show is
lop-sided—too much singing and dancing.”

Leo was asked to give an exhibition of what he
could do, and readily complied, performing at first
on the floor of the stage and then on a bar let
down from the flies.

“Very good!” said Nathan Wampole, highly
pleased, and Carl Ross also smiled his approval.

At the conclusion of the show that evening Leo
decided to join the company, and from that moment
on he and Carl Ross became warm friends.

From Cokeville the company proceeded to Lumbertown
and then to Wimblerun. For the time
being Leo lost track of the circus and devoted himself
entirely to his new position. His acts on the
stage were well received, yet Carl Ross remained,
as heretofore, the star of the combination.

“I wish I could do tricks,” said Leo, as he
watched the young magician at practice. “But I
don’t believe I could learn.”

“You could learn as easily as I could learn to
act on the trapeze,” laughed Carl. “If I tried that
I would get dizzy and fall sure.”

“Every one to his own line,” concluded Leo. “I
can go up any distance into the air and not be
afraid.”

“Up in a balloon?”

“Yes, even up in a balloon,” and Leo told of his
adventures along that line.

For several weeks matters ran smoothly, but then
they took a turn. Leo found out that Nathan
Wampole loved dearly to play cards, and every
dollar the manager could raise was staked and lost
at the gaming-table. For two weeks he could not
get a cent of salary.

“I don’t like this,” he said to Carl Ross, when
the pair talked the matter over.

“I don’t like it myself, Leo. But what can we
do about it?”

“That is what I would like to know. I am half-inclined
to go on a strike.”

“I doubt if he has any money. Business was
poor last week on account of the rain. I imagine
we are lucky to get our traveling expenses and
board bills paid.”

“You don’t know if the board bills really are
paid,” was the suggestive response. “I haven’t
seen Wampole pay Mrs. Gerston a cent.”

“Well, if he doesn’t pay we’ll have trouble;
that’s a foregone conclusion,” said Carl. “He
ought—Here he comes now, and two strange men
with him.”

Carl broke off short as Nathan Wampole entered
the dressing-room of the little country theater at
which the company had been performing for the
past two nights.

“I’ve got to have my money, and that’s all there
is to it,” one of the men was saying. “You agreed
to pay for the theater after the first performance,
and you haven’t paid a cent.”

“I will pay to-morrow,” replied the owner of the
organization uneasily. He was naturally a closefisted
man, and bad business had made him more
miserly than ever.

“That don’t go. You pay this afternoon or this
theater will be dark to-night.”

A long war of words followed, and it soon transpired
that the second stranger was a constable,
brought to enter an attachment on the scenery and
other things, should Nathan Wampole fail to come
to terms.

“I’ll tell you what I’ll do,” said the proprietor
finally. “I’ll pay you twenty dollars on account,
and the other fifty as soon as the money is taken in
at the box-office to-night.”

He held out the twenty dollars temptingly as he
spoke, and the landlord took it with but little
hesitation.

“Come on, Yentley,” he said to the constable.
“Remember, I’ll be on hand for the balance,” he
called to Nathan Wampole and departed.

Nathan Wampole growled something under his
breath, and was about to pass on to the empty
stage, when Carl and Leo stopped him.

“Well, what do you fellows want?” he demanded
angrily. “Be quick, for Lanning is sick, and I’ve
got to get up an act to fill in his time.”

“We want to know about our pay, Mr. Wampole,”
said Carl.

“Your pay? As if I didn’t have enough to
worry me with all this bad weather!”

“But we must have some money,” pleaded Leo.
“I’ve been promising to buy myself a new suit,
and——”

“I can’t help it. I can’t give you any now!”
snapped Nathan Wampole.

“Then I can’t go on any more.”

“Neither can I,” added Carl quietly.

“What! Do you mean to say you’ll leave me in
the lurch?” howled Nathan Wampole.

“We want our money, that’s all.”

“You shall have it.” Nathan Wampole paused
for a minute. “I’ll pay you both twenty-five
dollars on account to-morrow morning.”

“If you’ll do that I’ll be satisfied,” said Leo.

“So will I,” added Carl Boss.

“Good!” said Nathan Wampole; but as he turned
away a cunning smile crossed his wrinkled features.

It needed but an hour to the time for the performance
for the evening to begin, and soon after
Carl and Leo separated to fit themselves out for
their separate “turns,” as specialty performers call
their performances.

Carl Ross was an orphan, having lost both of his
parents six years before in a terrible railroad disaster
in the West.

Carl’s father had in his time been a juggler and
magician, and it was but natural that the son
should take up the same calling.

When left an orphan Carl had been placed under
the care of a well-known conjuror, who had taught
the youth many of the finest stage tricks ever performed.
A number of these wonderful tricks will
be mentioned and explained as our story progresses.

After the conjuror had had Carl under his care
for four years the man had been called to Germany.
He had left the youth with Nathan Wampole,
who had agreed to give him a good position
in his traveling company.

It did not take Carl and Leo long to shed their
street costume and don their stage dress. This
done they began to practice several new “turns”
for the stage.

Outside of the small theater a “barker” was
collecting quite a good-sized crowd.

“Walk up, ladies and gentlemen! The show is
just about to begin. Nowhere on the face of the
earth can you get so much for your money as right
here! Remember, it costs you but half or quarter
of a dollar to see our great company of sixty high-priced
and talented artists! Walk up and get your
tickets without delay!”

The barker succeeded in getting several scores of
people to enter the building. Nathan Wampole
was in the box-office, taking the money for the
tickets. He smiled as the cash came in.

“The more the better,” he muttered to himself.
“Won’t somebody be knocked out when they learn
the truth!”

CHAPTER XV.—AN ACT NOT ON THE BILLS.
====================================

The performance had been going on for half an
hour. Leo had done some very clever acts and
been well received, and now it was time for Carl to
make his bow.

The little orchestra struck up a grand flourish,
and suddenly the young magician bounded upon
the stage, bringing with him a small, square box.

He came down to the front, made a bow and
threw the square box into the air. Down it came
into his hands, and as he whirled around on his
heel the box disappeared from view.

“My, look at that!”

“Where did that box go to?”

“Must have gone up in smoke.”

Such were some of the remarks passed.

The trick was a decidedly clever one, yet as
simple as could be when explained.

True to our promise, we will let our readers into
the secret.

The box consisted of nothing but six perfectly
square and thin boards, all hinged together in such
a manner that it would collapse into a perfectly flat
mass when pressed on any two sides. With a little
study any boy can make such a box.

As the box entered Carl’s hands he flattened it,
and, as he whirled around, he slipped it into the
bosom of his costume.

This trick performed, the young magician brought
out several other tricks and then began to juggle
ten teacups, throwing them over his head and under
his arms. There was a perfect stream of teacups in
the air, and not a one was so much as cracked.

“He’s certainly clever-handed!”

“He’s the best part of the show!”

Hearty hand-clapping followed, and then Carl
threw the teacups to Leo, in the wings, and started
to do a great balancing act on four chairs.

He had just arranged the chairs in position when
he heard a commotion in the wings.

“I say the hall ain’t paid for, and the show can’t
go on!” he heard, in the angry tones of the theater
owner.

“Where is Wampole?” several asked.

“I can’t find him.”

“He was taking the money at the box-office.”

“Well, he’s not there now.”

“He must be somewhere around.”

“I’ll give you five minutes to produce him. If
you can’t, out go the lights.”

Realizing that matters had reached a crisis, the
young magician proceeded with his act as quickly
as he could. The orchestra struck up a lively air,
but scarcely had they played half a dozen bars
when the proprietor of the theater came out on the
stage and silenced them.

“This show can’t go on, ladies and gentlemen,”
he said. “I haven’t been paid for the hall, and the
head man of this company has skipped out with all
of the funds.”

“What’s that?”

“Skipped out?”

“No more of the show?”

“That’s a shame! Give me my money back?”

A hundred other cries arose on the air. The
owner of the place prudently retired, and in wonder
the orchestra did the same. A second later the
curtain came down, and the lights were lowered.

“Is it true that Wampole has skipped?” asked
Carl of Leo hurriedly.

“Yes; and he took every cent of the receipts
with him,” was the bitter answer.

Carl said no more. He followed Leo to the dressing-room
and hurried into his street clothing.

Overhead the pair could hear the tramp of many
feet. Presently came the crash of a breaking bench.

“Some of the audience are getting mad,” Leo
muttered to himself. “I fancy——”

“We must run for it,” gasped Carl, in a low
voice. “Hark! Some of the toughs that were in
the gallery have threatened to mob the entire company!”

“I am ready to go,” said Leo, as he picked up
his valise.

He turned to go out into the hallway. Then he
leaped back and slammed the door shut and
locked it.

“Too late. They are coming; they are here!”

The young gymnast spoke the truth. Heavy
footsteps came up to the door. A hand tried the
knob.

“Open that door, you confounded fakirs, or we’ll
smash it down!” was the cry. “You can’t escape
us! We are bound to get square with you!”

“Shall I open for them?” whispered Leo.

“No, no!” cried Carl. “They would half kill
us, they are so enraged over the loss of their admission
money.”

“But what’s to be done?”

“Here I have it—the window. Out you go.”

“And you?”

“I’ll follow. Quick!”

Leo leaped for the window, a small affair,
opening on a narrow and dirty alley.

The opening was barred, but he easily wrenched
the irons from their rotted fastenings and crawled
through the opening.

As Carl followed there was a crash, and the door
fell in.

Half a dozen young men, the worst in the town,
swarmed into the apartment, only to find it empty.

Up the alleyway sped Leo and his companion, nor
did they stop until the theater had been left several
blocks behind.

Deeming themselves now safe, they dropped into
a walk and began to discuss the situation.

Soon they met several other members of the
company. From these they learned that Nathan
Wampole had indeed run away, carrying every
cent of the box-office receipts with him.

“The scoundrel!” burst out Carl. “What are
we going to do here, penniless and over two hundred
miles from New York?”

No one could answer that question, and, as there
was nothing else to do, Leo and Carl turned their
steps toward the boarding-house at which they had
been stopping.

CHAPTER XVI.—AN UNPLEASANT POSITION.
====================================

The bad news had preceded Leo and Carl Ross,
and they found Mrs. Gerston, the landlady, waiting
at the front door.

“So Mr. Wampole has run away, eh?” she said
sharply.

“It seems so,” said Carl soberly.

“And who is to pay me?”

“He is responsible, madam,” replied Leo.

“Well, you’ll not come in this night, unless you
pay,” cried the landlady, blocking up the doorway
with her portly form. “I’m not running a boarding-house
for fun.”

“I have no money to pay with.”

“Neither have I,” added Carl.

“Then you can just leave.”

“Very well; give us our baggage and we will.”

“I’ll not give up a thing until I’m paid,” was the
determined reply.

Both Carl and Leo were nonplussed. They could
not blame the woman, yet it was a hard situation
to face.

“We have lost more than you,” said Carl. “Mr.
Wampole owes us both three weeks’ salary.”

“That’s not my affair. When you pay the ten
dollars due me you can both have your traveling
bags, and not before.”

And with this the boarding-housekeeper shut the
door in their faces.

“Knocked out all around,” said Leo, with a grin.

It was not in his nature to grieve over misfortune.

“Where shall we go for the night?”

“I don’t know. Let us look around for
Wampole.”

The two set out on a search. It availed nothing,
and by midnight they were worn out.

Fortunately the night was warm, and coming to
a deserted mill on the outskirts of the town, they
determined to remain there and rest. They found
some old sacks, and on these made their bed.

Carl awoke with a start the next morning. Looking
up he saw a young man of eighteen standing near
him. The young man had a pleasant face, and
he was smiling.

“Thought I’d wake you up,” he said. “How is
it you are bunking here for the night?”

“We are out of funds,” replied the young magician.

“Tramping?”

“Hardly that; but we may be soon.”

“We belonged to the specialty company that
went to pieces last night,” explained Leo, who had
roused up.

“Oh! Were you on the stage?” the young man
asked of Carl.

“Yes.”

“Are you the magician?”

“Yes.”

“And he is the gymnast, isn’t he?”

“I am,” replied Leo.

“I saw you both. You did finely. So you are
out of money and out of a job?”

“We are.”

“It’s strange. Do you know I intended to call
on you to-day.”

“On us?” cried Carl in wonder.

“Yes. You see I am from Raymondsville, the
next town. My name is Walter Raymond, and my
father owns about half the place. My brothers and
sisters are going to give a lawn party this afternoon,
and I promised to see if I couldn’t get some of the
members of your company over to liven things up.”

“I would like to appear for you, first rate,” said
Carl quickly, thinking he saw a chance to make a
few dollars.

“So will I appear,” added Leo.

“How much will you charge for an entertainment
lasting say an hour?”

Carl looked at Leo. They did not wish to ask
too much, and at the same time wanted to make all
they could.

“Two city performers generally get twenty dollars,”
said Leo; “but we might go a bit cheaper.”

“I wouldn’t mind giving twelve dollars,” replied
Walter Raymond. “If you can come for that, I’ll
drive you over as soon as you can get ready.”

A bargain was struck, and then the two performers
returned to the vicinity of the theater. Nothing
could be learned of Nathan Wampole, and an
hour later they left for Raymondsville.

They found Walter Raymond very kind. He
treated them to a liberal dinner, and aided them to
get their stage things into proper shape.

“It’s lucky we got our stuff from the theater,”
said Leo. “We may pick up quite a little money
by giving private performances throughout this
district.”

“That twelve dollars will help us to get our baggage
from Mrs. Gerston,” said Carl.

The Raymond homestead was surrounded by
beautifully laid out grounds, and directly after the
noonday hour the guests began to arrive, to the
number of a dozen or more. Carl and Leo had been
given a dressing-room in the mansion, and here
they prepared for their acts.

Leo was the first to perform, and at the conclusion
of his initial act he was loudly applauded.

Then Carl appeared, followed by one of the
house servants, who brought his paraphernalia.

“Isn’t he handsome!” whispered several of the
girls.

Carl began to juggle with several balls and a
hoop. He threw the balls through the hoop and
around it. Then he brought forth several daggers
and juggled them in one hand, while he kept the
balls going with the other. The hoop he balanced
on a stick set on the end of his nose, and placed a
ball on top of all.

This was a remarkable feat, requiring great delicacy
of touch and a keen eye. The boys and girls
watched him breathlessly, and then began to clap
their hands.

“Wonderful! wonderful!”

“I never saw anything to equal that!”

“It’s as good as a performance in a circus or a
theater!”

The juggling continued, Carl getting down on
one knee and also on his back, without making a
miss of anything that was in motion.

At the very height of the act came a loud cry
from the house.

“Help! help!”

“Look out for Jack Darrow’s dog!”

“The brute is mad!”

The cry was taken up on all sides. The boys and
girls looked around in terror.

And well they might, for a few seconds later an
ugly-looking bulldog with glaring eyes and mouth
dripping with white foam leaped into their very
midst.

For an instant he stared at the spectators—the
next he turned toward Carl, and with a loud snarl
leaped straight for the young performer’s throat.

CHAPTER XVII.—CARL SHOWS HIS BRAVERY.
=====================================

“A mad dog!”

“He is going to bite the young juggler!”

Shriek after shriek arose on the air and several
of the boys and girls fled from the scene.

It was truly a thrilling moment, and a youth
with less nerve than Carl Ross would have been
paralyzed with terror.

But in knocking around during the past few
years of his life the boy juggler and magician had
more than once been thrown into a position of
peril, and he realized that to lose his nerve would
perhaps cost him his life.

As the mad beast leaped for his throat Carl
dodged to one side and caught the animal by the
left hind leg.

He whirled the body in the air and flung it with
great force against a neighboring tree.

The shock was such that for the moment the enraged
beast was stunned. It lay panting upon the
grass, its glassy eyes rolling frightfully.

“Get into the house, all of you!” cried Leo, and
picked up a wee bit of a girl that was standing
near. She was too young to realize her peril, and
gazed at him in wonder.

The crowd started pellmell, with Leo and his
burden in the rear.

Scarcely had Leo moved when the dog recovered
and stood up. He had his eyes on Carl, and leaped
once more for him.

Carl ran to where he had been performing. The
four daggers he had used were still on the ground
and he picked them up.

Swish! One of the daggers flew through the air
with lightning-like rapidity. It struck the brute in
the forehead, inflicting a telling injury.

“He has knifed the dog!”

“That was a clever throw!”

Seriously wounded, the bulldog, with the tenacity
of his race, still showed fight. He crouched down,
then made another leap for our hero.

As he did this his breast became exposed, and
launching forth a second dagger the young magician
struck him fairly between the ribs. The shining
blade sank deep into the flesh, and with a snarl and
a yelp the mad bulldog rolled over—dead.

A shout went up from the neighborhood of the
mansion. Nearly all who had attended the party
had seen the skillful way in which the dangerous
animal had been dispatched. Leo was the first to
reach Carl’s side.

“By jove! Carl, that was great!” he ejaculated.
“You did him up in jig time.”

“You are a brave young man and no mistake,”
put in Walter Raymond. “Not one man in a hundred
would have tackled that dog. I wouldn’t
have done it for a thousand dollars.”

“I don’t want any more of it,” answered the
young magician, as he wiped the perspiration from
his forehead. “Shall I go on with the performance?”
he continued to the young man of the house.

“I don’t know as the folks are in the humor,”
replied Walter Raymond.

“We’ll do a double act and make them forget
the dog incident,” said Leo quickly.

The gardener was called, and he removed the
body of the canine. As soon as this was accomplished
Leo and Carl set to work to do some sleight-of-hand
performances of a humorous nature.

Taking Leo by the nose, Carl pretended to extract
from his mouth a handkerchief, a baseball
cap, and then a live frog.

To those wishing to know how this was accomplished
he would say they were purely tricks of
dexterity. Carl had the articles mentioned about
his person and concealed them in his hand as he
reached for Leo’s mouth. A handkerchief and a
baseball cap can be rolled into very small balls
when it is necessary, and even a frog is small when
tightly held.

Then, because Leo would not let him get anything
else out of his mouth, Carl pretended to get
angry.

“I’ll bang myself against the tree!” he cried,
and, rushing up to the nearest hardwood tree, he
brought his forehead up against the bark. A
thump was heard and each time his head went
forward another thump followed.

“Oh, he’ll hurt his head!” shrieked several of
the girls.

But Carl did not hurt his head a bit. His head
struck the tree very lightly. The thump was made
by his fist, which, however, was kept concealed
from the audience.

In the meantime Leo did some funny work on
the ground, bending himself into an odd shape
backward and hopping around after the released
frog.

By this time a crowd had assembled in the
grounds, for the grown folks were not supposed to
come in until late. Seeing this, Carl stepped up on
a little bench.

“Now, ladies and gentlemen, I will give you an
exhibition of one of my most wonderful tricks,” he
said. “Is any one of you a good shot with a horse-pistol?”

There was a pause, and then an elderly gentleman
with but one arm stepped forward.

“I fancy I can accommodate you,” he said with
a smile. “I am considered a crack shot, and was
an officer in the cavalry.”

“Very well, sir; I will give you the pleasure of
shooting me.”

As Carl spoke he brought out a long pistol.

“Please examine this,” he went on, and as the
pistol went the round of the crowd he opened his
valise and brought forth a horn of powder and a
good-sized ball.

“I wish you would mark this bullet so you will
know it again,” he continued. “And will somebody
bring me a nice, ripe apple?”

The apple was brought, and Walter Raymond
marked the bullet with his knife. Then with great
gravity Carl proceeded to load the pistol.

“There goes the powder, here the paper, here
the ball, and here more paper. Did you all see it
loaded?”

“Yes, yes!”

“Good! Thanks for the apple—I’ll eat it after
I am shot. Now then, Mr. Cavalry Officer, kindly
take your station over there, aim straight for my
heart, and fire.”

“But—but I might kill you!” suggested the one-armed
man nervously.

“Never mind—I’m like a cat that has nine lives.
Go ahead. Ready?”

“Yes.”

Carl took the apple given him and held it on his
palm at arm’s length.

“Now aim for my heart. Ready? Fire!”

Bang! With a loud explosion the pistol went off,
and for a moment the spectators were enveloped in
smoke.

As it cleared away the young magician was seen
to be standing as before. There was a smile on his
face.

“I am much obliged to you for shooting me,” he
said. “But what has become of the bullet?”

Thus speaking he bit into the apple.

“Hullo! what’s this? The bullet, I declare!
Look!”

He was right; the bullet, with the mark still
upon it, was embedded in the heart of the apple!

CHAPTER XVIII.—A WONDERFUL TRICK EXPLAINED.
===========================================

“Wonderful!”

“That’s the best trick I’ve seen yet!”

“Really a remarkable performance,” said the old
cavalry officer, who had done the firing. “How
did you do it?”

To this question Carl, of course, made no reply.
He was not in the habit of giving away his secrets.

But we will let our curious readers into the
mystery. The way the trick was worked was as
follows:

When Carl received the marked bullet back from
Walter Raymond he substituted in its stead a
similar-looking one made of amalgam of tinfoil and
quicksilver. This bullet was rammed into the pistol
so forcibly that it went to pieces beneath the paper.
Even if it had not gone to pieces the firing of the
weapon would have shattered it.

When Carl received the apple he split it partly
open and dropped the marked bullet inside on the
sly. The rest of the trick will now be readily
understood.

The remarkable performance with the pistol and
some additional acrobatic feats from Leo brought
the entertainment to a close, and the two performers
hurried to the house to get into their street
dress.

“You must have dinner here before you leave,”
said Walter Raymond as he paid them off. “It is
but a slight return for killing that mad bulldog and
saving the children.”

The performers were hungry, and readily
accepted the invitation. While they were eating
Walter Raymond sat close by.

“I wouldn’t mind knowing how to do some
tricks,” he said. “It must be lots of fun.”

“Not so much when one performs for a living,”
returned Carl. “To do tricks for your friends is
amusing.”

“Can you show me some simple ones?” Walter
pleaded.

Carl smiled.

“Let me have a cent,” he said, and after it was
produced he took a knife and cut a little nick in one
edge, turning the shaving of metal outward.

“Now this cent will stick on any door you place
it,” he said, and illustrated by sticking it up with
the metal shaving clinging to the woodwork. “Any
boy can do this with ease.”

“That’s a nice trick.”

After this Carl explained a number of other
simple tricks with coins and cards, and then he and
Leo departed with a cheer from the young people
as they walked away.

“Well, what’s to do now?” questioned Leo as
they hurried on.

“I move we get our baggage from Mrs. Gerston.
I need some of my clothing, especially if we are to
give garden exhibitions.”

“That’s true. All right; Mrs. Gerston’s it is.”

The walk back to town did not take long. At
first the boarding-house mistress frowned on them,
but when they explained that they intended to
settle up her expression changed.

It was too late to go anywhere that night, so a
bargain was struck whereby she agreed to let them
remain and have breakfast for one dollar more, or
eleven dollars in all.

“That leaves us with just a dollar capital,”
laughed Leo. “Not much, but a good deal better
than nothing. The question is, what shall we do
to-morrow?”

“We had better try to work our way from town
to town,” replied Carl. “Perhaps we’ll be fortunate
enough to give exhibitions on the way. Even
if we can’t strike garden parties, we can show at
country hotels and take up a collection. It’s not a
nice way to do, but it’s better than begging.”

The next morning found the pair up bright and
early. Their baggage—two satchels belonging to
each, for their trunks had been lost—were soon
strapped up, and after breakfast they set out to
shake the dust of the town from their feet.

Hardly had the last house in the place been
passed than Leo noticed that they were being
followed by a burly fellow, who carried in his hand
an ugly-looking rawhide whip.

The fellow soon caught up to them.

“Stop there, do yer hear?” he called out.

“What do you want?” asked Carl, coming to a
halt.

“I want ter talk to yer. Ain’t you the chap as
killed the dog over ter Raymond’s place?”

“I am.”

“I thought so. Do yer know I was the owner
of that dog, an’ that he was a valuable beast?”

“If he was valuable, it’s too bad. He was mad
and had to be killed,” put in Leo.

“He wasn’t mad—he only had a fit. He gits ’em
often. I want yer to pony up twenty-five dollars
fer him. If yer don’t I’ll fix ye, see?”

“I’ll not pay a cent,” cried Carl. “He was mad
and we can easily prove it.”

“No sech thing, boy! Are yer goin’ ter pay?”

“No.”

“Then take that!”

The fellow raised the rawhide whip and brought
it down with a whir over Carl’s head.

Had the rawhide descended as intended the young
magician would have been seriously injured.

But Carl was not to be caught unawares.

He leaped aside, and before the man could raise
the whip again, Leo wrenched it from his grasp.

“Give me that whip or I’ll fix yer, as sure as my
name is Jack Darrow!” fumed the fellow.

“Stand back!” ordered the young gymnast.
“You have no right to attack my friend.”

“I’ll show ye!” yelled Jack Darrow, and leaped
upon Carl.

The young magician was on guard, and in a
twinkle he put out his foot and sent the fellow on
his back.

“Now leave me alone or I’ll shoot you,” he said
sternly, and walked away. Leo threw the whip
over a fence and followed.

Darrow got up and stood still. He shook his fist
after them, then disappeared in search of his whip.

The next village was four miles distant, and when
they reached the place, Carl, who had lamed his
foot on a stone, was glad enough to sit down. He
entered a tavern and took a seat by a corner table.

“I’ll be with you in a few minutes,” said Leo.
“I want to see what the prospects are here.”

“All right, I’ll wait,” replied the young magician,
and taking up a paper that lay handy he glanced it
over.

Presently a man came in and dropped in a chair
opposite to him. Carl glanced over the paper and
saw it was Nathan Wampole.

CHAPTER XIX.—WAMPOLE’S NEW SCHEME.
==================================

“Some ale,” said Wampole to the waiter, and it
was quickly brought and set before him.

“What’s your order?” asked the waiter of Carl.

“I’ll wait till my friend comes back,” said Carl
quietly.

Wampole had not yet seen him, but he heard the
youth’s voice and now looked around the edge of
the paper.

“Carl Ross,” he murmured, as he fell back in his
seat.

“Yes, Mr. Wampole. You didn’t expect to see
me here.”

“Well—er—not exactly. But it’s very fortunate,
very fortunate, indeed!” went on Nathan Wampole,
gathering himself together with an effort.

“Why, do you want to pay me off?”

“Well—er—not exactly that, Carl,” with a reproachful
glance. “But the fact of it is, I’m thinking of reorganizing.
I’ve seen four of our company
already.”

As he spoke Nathan Wampole drew a folded
document from his pocket and thrust it across the
table.

“There’s my new scheme,” he said earnestly.
“A grand thing, too. We’ll make money hand
over fist. Of course you’ll go in.”

Carl looked at the paper.

“Hardly, sir. I don’t care to work for nothing
but fame.”

“But this is dead sure, Carl, dead sure. A
fortune——”

“The other company was to bring me a fortune,
Mr. Wampole. No, henceforth I’m going to travel
with a responsible manager or on my own hook.”

“Do you mean to insinuate I’m not responsible?”
cried Nathan Wampole, bristling up.

“You haven’t proved yourself to be.”

“I’ve had a misfortune, that’s all. But I’ll get
on my feet again, and—hullo, here’s my friend, Leo
Dunbar!”

“Nathan Wampole!” ejaculated the young
gymnast.

“I want you for my newly organized company,”
commenced the old manager, but Leo cut him
short.

“I overheard your offer to Carl, Wampole. My
answer is the same as his.”

“You won’t join me?”

“No.”

Nathan Wampole’s face grew dark and bitter.

“You’ll regret it—mark my words, you’ll regret
it!” he hissed; and gulping down the liquor set
before him, he arose and hurried from the place.

“The fraud!” murmured Leo. “I’ll never perform
for him again.”

“Nor will I,” added Carl.

A little later they were eating dinner, not an
elaborate meal, for they had little to spend.

“I’ve struck luck,” went on the young gymnast.

“I met a gentleman who was at Mr. Raymond’s
yesterday, and he has hired us to perform at his
house this evening from eight o’clock to nine. He
is going to pay us the same amount, twelve dollars.”

This was good news, and on the strength of it
Carl ordered some dessert, which cost him five cents
additional.

They hired a room at the tavern, and leaving
their baggage there took a walk out to see the
sights. They walked further than they had intended
and it was dark when they returned. The
landlord of the place met them in surprise.

“Hullo, I thought you had changed your mind
about coming back,” he said.

“Changed our minds?” queried Carl, puzzled.

“Yes.”

“Why so?”

“Didn’t you send for your baggage?”

“No.”

“What! why, a man came here not an hour
ago and took all your things off.”

Carl and Leo gave a simultaneous whistle of surprise.
Here was a pretty state of affairs.

“Who was the man?”

“I don’t know. He had a wagon and said you
had sent him.”

Carl gave a groan.

“We have been robbed, Leo.”

“It looks like it, Carl. What are we to do? We
must get our things back, and that quickly, or we
won’t be able to perform to-night.”

“Do you mean to say that man was a thief?”
demanded the landlord of the tavern, with intense
astonishment.

“That’s just what he was,” answered Carl. “We
never sent him here.”

“What sort of a looking man was he?” asked
Leo.

“Tall and dark, with a cast in one eye,” was the
reply. “I’ve seen him in these parts before.”

“A cast in his eye?” repeated Carl. “It must
have been that Jack Darrow!” he burst out.

“That’s so,” returned the young gymnast. “He
said he would get square.”

“Who is Jack Darrow?” questioned the landlord.

Matters were quickly explained.

“You had no right to let our baggage go,” said
Leo severely.

“Can’t we go after the fellow? I’ll drive you to
his house, if you know where it is.”

The landlord was very anxious to help them, realizing
that he had “put his foot into it.” The
matter was talked over for several minutes, and it
was decided to take a fast team of horses and drive
back to Raymondsville and ascertain where Jack
Darrow resided.

Five minutes later found Leo, Carl and Mr. Cook
on the way. They made fast time, and soon drove
up to the first of the line of stores in the next town.

“Jack Darrow is a worthless scamp,” said the
storekeeper. “He hasn’t any regular home, but I
fancy you can find him hanging around Budd’s
livery stable most any time.”

“We can if he’s not in hiding,” said Carl in a
low voice, as they drove off again.

The town being a small one it was easy to find
the livery stable mentioned. Outside of the building
sat two hostlers talking and smoking.

“Is Jack Darrow anywhere around?” questioned
Mr. Cook.

“Yes; just went over to yonder stable,” called
back one of the hostlers. “Want to see him?”

“Yes.”

“I’ll call him,” went on the hostler, thinking there
might be a chance to earn a dime.

“Never mind,” put in Carl. “Come on, Leo, we
won’t give him a chance to run away.”

“That’s so; we won’t,” returned Leo, and followed
the young juggler to the ground.

The stable pointed out was but a short distance
down a lane, back of which flowed a good-sized
brook. Making their way rapidly to the building,
which was old and much out of repair, they entered
the open doorway.

A sound in the rear greeted them.

“There he goes!” yelled Carl. “Stop, Jack
Darrow!”

A muttered exclamation was the only response.
They saw the good-for-nothing leave the barn and
run for the brook.

“He’s going to leg it!” burst out the young
gymnast. “Well, three can play at that game.”

Through the barn rushed Leo and Carl. Down
by the brook the bushes grew to a height of several
feet. Reaching the water’s edge, nothing was to be
seen of the man they were after.

“He’s hiding somewhere, that’s certain,” said
Carl. “You go up and I’ll go down the bank.”

This advice was followed, and both covered a distance
of fifty feet, when a faint splash was heard.

“He’s crossing over!” cried out the young
magician. “This way, quick!”

Regardless of the wetting, he plunged into the
brook, which luckily was hardly a foot deep, and
Leo came, too. The young man they were after
had gone over in full view. He was running down
a country road on the opposite side at top speed.

He was a good runner, and once having gained
the road, Leo and Carl felt they had a lively chase
before them.

But the thought of losing their baggage nerved
them to do their best, and over the ground they
flew in good shape, gradually closing the gap between
them and the man they were after.

Evidently Jack Darrow was getting winded, for
when a quarter of a mile had been passed he slowed
up and turned around.

“Keep back or I’ll fire on yer!” he howled, making
a suggestive movement, toward his hip pocket.

The two pursuers slowed up, but did not come to
a halt.

“Do you think he’s got a pistol?” asked Leo.

“No; if he has he won’t dare to use it. Arm
yourself with a stick or stone,” were Carl’s words.

As he spoke he picked up a stick lying near, and
Leo followed his example. In another moment
they were within ten feet of Jack Darrow, who had
started to run once more.

“Stop!” cried Carl. “Stop, or I’ll fire!”

“You ain’t got no pistol!” roared Darrow.

“No; but I’ve got this!” was the retort. The
stick whirled through the air, launched with the
young juggler’s aim, and struck the thief in the
back between the shoulders. It was a heavy blow,
and Darrow fell flat on his face.

Before he could get up Carl and Leo were on top
of him. In vain he tried to fight them off. Carl
held him fast while the young gymnast produced a
stout cord and tied his hands behind him.

The two heroes of the occasion had scarcely finished
their work when carriage wheels were heard
approaching, and Mr. Cook and his turnout hove
into sight.

“Hullo! you’ve got him!” cried out the tavern-keeper.
“That’s a good job done. What are you
going to do with him?”

“Lemme go!” whined Darrow, all his bravery
oozing away. “Lemme go! I ain’t done nuthin’!”

“Where are our things?” demanded Carl.

“Wot things? I ain’t got nuthin’ belongin’ to
you.”

“That’s a falsehood!” put in Mr. Cook. “You
are the man that took their baggage from my hotel.
I have witnesses to prove it. The best thing we can
do is to take him to the village lock-up.”

“Don’t yer do it—I’ll fix yer if yer do!” bellowed
Darrow. “Let me go an’ I’ll tell yer where
the satchels are, every one of em.”

“I’ve an idea he hid them in that stable,” said Leo.
“It seems to me he was coming down from the loft
when we entered.”

“We’ll soon find out,” said Carl. “Dump him
into the carriage and drive back.”

CHAPTER XX.—ANOTHER STOP ON THE ROAD.
=====================================

In vain Jack Darrow protested against the proceedings.
He was lifted into the carriage without
ceremony, and the horses’ heads were turned back
along the road to where a bridge crossed the brook.

The stable reached, Leo and Carl went upstairs.
The loft was filled with loose hay.

“I’ll pitch it over with this fork,” said Carl, and
took up the implement he had mentioned.

He had proceeded but a short distance into the
hay when one of Leo’s valises came to light. His
own followed, and soon all their baggage was
recovered.

“Well?” called the tavern-keeper from below.

“We have it,” replied the young gymnast.

“Good enough. This fellow is good for a term
in the State prison.”

At this Darrow began to whine and beg. But
Mr. Cook was obdurate and told him to shut up.

As soon as the two performers came below again
the party drove off for the squire’s office, situated
over the general store and post office. Here a
formal complaint was lodged by Mr. Cook, and
Jack Darrow was locked up to await the sitting of
the grand jury at the county seat.

“He’ll be indicted—I’ll see to it myself,” said
the tavern-keeper, as he and our heroes drove back
to Charlotting.

Leo and Carl were anxious to get to the place
where they were to perform that night, and as it
was some distance out Mr. Cook drove them directly
to the spot—a fine country seat, at which a party
of over forty were stopping.

A round of applause greeted their appearance in
the drawing-room some time later. The drawing-room
opened into a conservatory, and the latter
was used by the pair for a stage.

As usual, Leo was the first to appear, doing a
number of feats which were watched with close
attention. As the space was limited he did not
confine himself to acrobatics but, in addition, performed
several tricks with fire which Carl had
taught him.

Among other things he did was to stuff his mouth
with burning cotton.

“He’ll burn himself up!” cried several, but Leo
only smiled. His mouth had been washed with a
strong solution of alum, and was to a certain degree
fireproof. Of course, he had to be very careful in
doing the fire tricks, for at the best such tricks are
highly dangerous.

“I will next swallow a red-hot knife,” he announced,
and brought in an iron blade, heated to a
red heat. He faced the audience sideways, and it
looked as if the knife slid down into his open mouth,
which was thrown back, but in reality it slipped
close to the outside of his mouth, on the side from
the spectators, and into a sheath inside his collar,
placed there to receive it. As the knife disappeared,
the sheath followed, and he faced the
audience to show that all was fair and square.

This concluded Leo’s single act, and then Carl
came on. After giving a number of the tricks previously
mentioned, he came forward smilingly.

“I have in my hand a box given me by the Prince
of Wales,” he said, holding up an oblong object
four inches wide by four high and eight inches
long. “This box, the prince insisted, was the most
wonderful box he had ever possessed. See; I open
the box, and find it contains nothing but an empty
sliding drawer. Will somebody be kind enough to
put a quarter into the box?”

He held the open drawer out, and a young lady
threw a piece of silver into it. Then Carl shut the
box up and blew upon it. When he opened the box
again the silver was gone!

The company applauded, while the young lady
looked glum. Carl smiled upon her.

“Never mind; we’ll try to get the silver back,”
he said, and struck the box on the bottom. Then
he opened the drawer, and out tumbled the coin
into the lady’s lap.

“Good! good! Very neat!”

Carl turned around to put the box on the table.
Leaving it there, he came forward again.

“Now, ladies and gentlemen,” he began, when of
a sudden the box on the table began to dance,
finally dancing to the floor.

“Well, I declare!” cried the young magician.
“Something has surely gotten into that box. And
yet we left it empty, did we not?”

There was a nod from the young lady, who had
looked into the box when the coin came out.

Holding the box before him, Carl gave the knob
to the drawer a jerk, out it came, and a shower of
small candies flew all over the audience. Some fell
into the young lady’s lap, and all present sent up a
shout of laughter, in the midst of which Carl
temporarily withdrew.

Now, no doubt our young readers are, as usual,
anxious to know how it was all done. The explanation
is simple.

The box was not exactly what it appeared to be.
Instead of having one drawer it had two, one that
worked inside of the other. The outside drawer
was a mere shell, without a back, to allow the inner
box to slide back and forth within it. There was
a little spring outside at the end which held the
inner drawer when desired.

When the box was opened first the coin was
placed in the second or inner drawer. When it was
opened again the second drawer was held back by
the catch, and out came the shell, or empty drawer.
The third time the second drawer came with the
coin, as described.

After the young ladies and the others had seen
the box was empty Carl turned toward the table,
and while so doing slyly poured the candy from his
bosom into the open box, and after closing the
article stuck a bent pin into one corner to which
was attached a long, black horsehair, the other end
of the horsehair being pinned to his leg.

As he began to talk, he pulled in jerks on the
horsehair, which caused the box to dance and fall.
Then bringing it forward he opened it and released
a spring that held the bottom, thus causing the
candy to fly in all directions. When he retired the
horsehair was removed, and he prepared for his
next trick.

Carl now came out in a new rôle—that of a mesmerist,
and after drawing the curtains over the door
for an instant, requested the company to draw
around, that they might get a good view of the top
of the table which was covered with a smooth
cloth which reached to the floor.

“You have all played tiddle-de-winks and such
games,” he said. “I have my own way of playing
them. See, I place three circles on the table, and
also this shining bit of metal—my mascot, I call it.
I name the circles 1, 2, and 3. Now, will somebody
kindly designate a circle to which the bit of metal
shall pass!”

“To circle No. 2,” said an interested boy.

“Advance, and do as bidden!” cried Carl, making
some passes at the metal, and slowly but surely the
piece moved across the table until it reached the
center of the circle, where it stopped.

“Again?” said Carl impressively.

“To circle 3,” said a lady.

Slowly but surely the mesmerized metal turned
in the direction. Then circle 1 was called out, and
the others again. Wherever commanded the metal
went.

“And now who will keep the mascot for a keepsake?”
cried Carl.

The little girl of the house spoke first, and as she
was sitting close to the table the metal moved to
the edge and fell into her lap.

CHAPTER XXI.—AN UNEXPECTED BATH.
================================

Soon after this the young performers brought
their performance to a close.

But the last trick—how was it performed? we
hear some of our readers say.

It was very simple. When the curtains were
closed Leo came forward and concealed himself
under the table. He had a powerful magnet, and
wherever he pushed the magnet under the table
the bit of metal on top of the table was sure to
follow.

Leo knew where the circles were to be placed,
and made his movements accordingly. A swift
motion at the finish dropped the metal into the
little girl’s lap.

“I would like to see you,” said a gentleman at
the close of the engagement. “I belong across
the river about ten miles north of here. The folks
are going to give a sociable, as we call it. I will
give you twenty dollars if you can give us a first-class
entertainment to last two hours.”

“We’ll try to suit you,” said the young gymnast,
and the engagement was duly entered on a passbook
he had purchased.

“We are getting famous!” cried Carl, when the
mansion was left behind. “We are making money
faster than we ever did with Nathan Wampole’s
combination.”

“The trouble is, these snaps may not last, Carl.
By the way, I wonder if Wampole will really succeed
in getting our people together again.”

“He won’t get me. I am done with him.”

“So am I.”

The two partners, as they now called themselves,
slept soundly that night and did not get up until
late. Their hotel bill paid, they found themselves
eight dollars and a half ahead.

“We’ll have to open a bank account soon,”
laughed Carl. “We’ll be waylaid for our wealth.”

“Wait awhile, my boy, wait awhile,” sang out
Leo. “But tell me, how do we get over to Point
Snoker?”

Mr. Cook was appealed to, and told them to take
the road to the river.

“You’ll come to Jack Hazlett’s landing, and he’ll
ferry you across in his sloop. We haven’t got any
regular ferry on the river closer than the town of
Perryskill.”

A colored man suggested that they let him wheel
their baggage in his barrow for a quarter, and they
accepted the offer, and the start was made immediately
after breakfast.

On the way Carl had considerable fun with the
colored man. He played a number of clever tricks
on that individual, and when the river was reached
conjured a quarter from his coat-sleeve, and pretended
to wring the money from the old fellow’s
nose.

“Here’s your quarter, uncle.”

“Fo’ de law’s sake, chile!” cried the darkey, and
his eyes rolled around in intense surprise.

“Easy way to get the money, uncle.”

“Yo’ must be in wid de ole boy hisself,” was the
darkey’s comment. “Much obliged.”

And off he went with a side glance at Carl, as if
half-expecting the young juggler might conjure the
quarter from the pocket in which he had placed it.

Leo and Carl found that Jack Hazlett was out on
the river, but would soon return. They sat down
and waited. While doing so they noticed a large
steamboat coming up the river, crowded with
people.

“An excursion of some sort,” said Carl. “See
the flags flying.”

“They are going to land up at yonder island,”
said Leo. “See, they are turning into the landing.”

While the steamboat was discharging its passengers,
Jack Hazlett returned and took them on
board. The passage across the river took them
close to the steamboat.

“She seems to be an old ferryboat fixed up,”
observed the young gymnast as they came up.
“See, several people have remained on board.”

“What is the matter with that young girl!” cried
Carl, pointing to a young lady hanging over the
rail. “Can she be seasick?”

“There she goes!” yelled Leo. “My gracious!”

With a loud splash the young lady had dropped
over the rail into the river!

“She’ll be drowned!”

“My daughter! Save her! She has a fit!” suddenly
cried an old man, rushing from his seat in the
shade.

“A fit—that accounts for it,” said Leo. “I’ll
save her!”

In another moment he was on the boat’s rail—the
next he was over the side. He struck out
boldly.

“Take care—she may fight you if she has a fit!”
called his partner.

Soon Leo reached the girl’s side. She was about
to sink when he came to her support. She lay like
one dead.

“I guess the fit’s gone,” he thought, when suddenly
she gave a frightful scream and began to tear
at his face like an enraged tigress!

It was a position he had not bargained for, and
what to do the young gymnast did not know.

“Look out for her!” yelled Carl, as the girl in
the water began her attack.

“Keep quiet, please!” gasped Leo to his charge.
“I will take you to the boat.”

But the girl paid no attention. Her eyes rolled
horribly, and she continued to clutch at his throat.

Realizing that something must be done, the young
gymnast resolved to duck the girl. He did so, and
when she came up again she lay as limp as before.
Ere she could recover he struck out for the boat.

Carl and Jack Hazlett were waiting for him, and
quickly assisted him on board. Here the girl
dropped upon the deck unconscious.

“My gracious, that’s the worst experience I ever
had in my life!” panted Leo, as soon as he could
speak. “I thought she was going to chew me up!”

“She’s got fits the worst way,” put in the boatman.
“I’ll take her back to that steamboat.”

This was done. The girl’s father was anxiously
awaiting their arrival, and, taking his daughter in
his arms, he carried her into the cabin, where a
stewardess waited upon her.

“I had her in a hospital,” he explained, “but
they discharged her last week as being cured. You
are a brave lad to save her.”

Leo smiled faintly.

“Thanks; but I don’t want the job again. Come
on, Carl.”

He was about to go aboard the small boat again,
when the fond father stopped him. Taking a ten-dollar
bill from his pocketbook, he pressed it into
the young gymnast’s hand.

“Don’t say you won’t take it,” he said. “You
deserve more, but it’s all I have with me.”

And he made the youth keep the amount.

CHAPTER XXII.—WAMPOLE SHOWS HIS HAND.
=====================================

After this adventure the river was soon crossed,
and an hour later Leo and Carl found themselves
installed at another hotel but a short distance from
the mansion at which they were to perform.

While they were taking a stroll through the
village, Carl’s eyes were suddenly arrested by a
huge poster stuck on the side of a barn.

“Look, Leo, what do you think of that?” he
cried.

The poster referred to ran as follows:

   | Wampole’s Trans-Continental
   | Specialty Company.
   | Reorganized!
   | Better and Brighter than Ever!
   | See Leo, the Wonderful Clown and Gymnast!
   | Don’t Miss Carl Ross,
   | The Greatest Juggler and Magician
   | The World Has Ever Produced!
   | 30—Other Artists—30!
   | At Pelham’s Hall To-night!
   | Admission 15 and 25 Cents.

“If that ain’t cheeky!” burst out Leo. “What
right has he to advertise us when we are no longer
with him?”

“That is what I would like to know,” returned
Carl.

“We ought to stop him.”

“We certainly can,” said the young juggler.
“He hasn’t any more right to use our names than
the president’s.”

“What shall we do?”

“I wonder where we can find him?”

“Most likely at Pelham’s Hall, wherever that
is.”

The two made inquiries and soon located the hall,
which was situated over the general store.

Going upstairs, they met a tough-looking individual
coming down.

It was Bill Gormley, one of the Wampole Company.

He was put down on the bills as Ricardo, the
Great German Impersonator. He could do one or
two things fairly well, but the majority of his acts
were decidedly poor. More than that, he was a
heavy drinker, and had on several occasions appeared
on the stage when he could hardly stand.

“Hullo, Ross!” he called out. “Hullo, Dunbar!
so you’ve decided to rejoin, eh?”

“Hardly,” replied Carl. “Where is Wampole?”

“Back of the stage. But you ain’t going to join
us, you say?”

“We are not,” answered Leo.

“You had better. We are going to make a big
thing of the show now.”

“Wampole was always going to do that,” laughed
Carl.

They passed up the dingy stairs and into the hall.
Nathan Wampole stood on the empty stairs rehearsing
a boy of twelve in a funny dialect part.

“That ain’t right!” he roared. “Do it this way!
You ain’t worth your salt! Come now, or I’ll
crack you with this club!”

“Wampole!” called out the young gymnast.

“Leo! And you, too, Carl! Delighted to see
you!” Nathan Wampole’s face took on a smile,
and the boy was forgotten. “So you thought you
would join us again. I was on the point of sending
for you.”

“We are not going to join, and we want to know
by what right you are advertising us,” said Carl
firmly.

Nathan Wampole’s face instantly took on an ugly
look.

“Not going to join eh?” he muttered.

“No.”

“And we demand that you take our names from
your bills,” added Leo.

“What! Not much!”

“Then we’ll compel you.”

Nathan Wampole’s face grew white.

“You will not. On the other hand, I’ll compel
you to perform in my company. I have your signatures,
remember.”

“That old contract doesn’t count—you broke it
yourself,” returned Carl.

“It was never broken.” Nathan Wampole smiled
maliciously. “I’ve been to a lawyer and he says
you must perform with me.”

“The lawyer that said that is a fool,” cried Leo.

“No, he’s not—he’s a smart man. You will perform
with me and nowhere else. If you don’t——”

“If we don’t?” queried Carl.

“If you don’t I’ll have you arrested.”

“You can’t do that.”

“Yes, I can.”

“On what charge, pray?” asked Leo.

“On a charge of breaking up my former company
and running off with some of my things,” replied
Nathan Wampole, triumphantly. “I’ve got witnesses
to prove that you two fellows are thieves.”

Scarcely had he uttered the words when both
Leo and Carl leaped forward. Two quick blows
landed Nathan Wampole flat on his back.

“You contemptible cur!” cried Carl.

“Take that for calling us thieves!” added the
young gymnast.

“Whow!” spluttered Nathan Wampole as he
struggled to rise. “Wha—what do you mean by
attacking me in this fashion?” he howled.

“What do you mean by insulting us?” said Carl
sternly.

“I—I told the tru——”

“Stop or we’ll give you another dose,” ejaculated
Leo. “Now let us come to an understanding, Nathan
Wampole. You broke your agreement with
us, and that ended our engagement. As to the
things we took, we can prove our property. Your
talk doesn’t go.”

This plain talk had its effect on Nathan Wampole.
He was naturally a coward, and he at once began
to cringe.

“Well, I—perhaps I was mistaken, gentlemen,
but—ah—really, you ought to join our company.
It will be the chance of a lifetime, and——”

“We won’t waste words with you,” said Carl.
“But understand, our names come off your bills.
If they don’t, we’ll tear the bills down and have
you up in court for false pretense. We are done
with you.”

Thus speaking, Carl left, followed by Leo.
Walking down the street they tore their names
from every bill to be found.

Nathan Wampole followed and expostulated, but
in vain. He had to rebill the town, and this time
took good care that their names did not appear.
Wampole never bothered either of them again.

At the proper time Leo and Carl made their appearance
at the mansion where they were to perform.
The partners had a new trick which they
called “Samson’s Strength.”

“Any one can have the strength of a Samson if
he so desires,” said Carl on coming forward.
“Please to look at these dumbbells.”

He produced a pair of iron dumbbells each weighing
about ten pounds.

“Now, if you will observe, I handle these dumbbells
with ease.” He gave them a flourish. “Over
they go—high in the air—around and around—easy
enough, is it not? Bang!”

Down went the dumbbells on a large, flat stool
he had provided.

“Will the strongest man present pick them up?”

A tall, well-formed man came forward and caught
hold of one of the dumbbells.

He thought he could lift it with ease.

He was sadly mistaken.

In vain he tugged at the dumbbell. It refused to
budge.

“You have fastened it down in some way,” he
said.

“Fastened it? Nonsense!” cried Carl, and leaning
forward he picked up the dumbbell with only
his forefinger and his thumb.

“Try the other dumbbell,” he said.

The man did so, and found it equally hard to
raise.

“Why, a little girl can pick them up,” said Carl,
and he motioned for a young miss of twelve to
come forward. “I will strengthen your arms,” he
added, and made several mysterious signs over her
wrists.

The little girl took hold of the dumbbells. Sure
enough, she raised them without trouble.

This trick was a grand success, and the audience
wondered how it was accomplished.

The explanation was simple. Under the stool
Carl had a powerful magnet connected with the
electric current which served the mansion with
lights. By applying this magnet to the dumbbells
the attraction was so strong they could not be
moved. Leo controlled the current from below the
floor, and certain movements which Carl made with
his foot told the young gymnast when to turn the
attractive force off or on.

CHAPTER XXIII.—THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH ONCE MORE.
====================================================

The performance at the mansion lasted longer
than had been anticipated. Many visitors were present
and the whole affair was voted a big success.

But, though Leo and Carl both tried, they failed
to secure another engagement anywhere in the
vicinity.

“Never mind, we can’t expect to earn twelve or
twenty dollars every night,” said the young gymnast.
“If we did that we would be millionaires in
no time.”

When they arrived at the hotel at which they
were to stop they found several gentlemen talking
about eggs and how Columbus had stood one on
end.

“Yes, but he cracked the shell,” said Carl. “I
will agree to stand an egg on end without cracking
the shell. Wait till I put my traps away.”

He disappeared upstairs, but soon returned.

“I’ll bet a dollar you can’t stand an egg up on
end,” said one of the gentlemen, and produced an
egg brought from the kitchen.

Carl took it and waved it over his head several
times.

“You have to daze the chick inside,” he explained.
“Now it will stand up all right.”

He put the egg down on the smooth table. Sure
enough, it stood up as nicely as one would please.
Then he took the egg up, and, making several
passes, handed it to the man.

But the egg wouldn’t stand for the man, try as
hard as he could.

“You’ve won the bet.”

“Keep your money; it was only a trick,” smiled
Carl.

“And how was it done?”

“Ah, that’s one of our professional secrets,”
laughed Carl. “Good-night,” and he and Leo
retired.

“How was the trick done?” the reader asks.
We will tell them. When Carl went out he procured
another egg and put in one end a bit of quicksilver.
This egg he substituted for the original
egg when he waved the latter in the air. The egg
with the quicksilver could, of course, be set on end
with ease, for the quicksilver’s weight would balance
the other end.

Leaving the town the next day, Leo and Carl
struck out for a city five miles away, having heard
that it was a good place in which to perform. There
was no stage running to the city, so the pair walked
the distance. When they reached the outskirts Leo
suddenly stopped short and pointed to several billboards
fastened to the side of a barn.

“What’s the matter?” asked Carl. “I don’t see
anything but circus bills. And the circus won’t be
here until the day after to-morrow.”

“It’s the ‘Greatest Show on Earth’—the circus
I used to travel with,” said the young acrobat.

“Oh, that’s so. Well, we needn’t come in contact
with the crowd, if you don’t care to do so,”
said Carl.

For Leo had told his friend the whole story of
the stolen circus tickets and Carl sympathized with
him over the fact that he was under suspicion.

“If only I could get at the bottom of that affair.”
murmured Leo as they walked along one of the
city streets.

“Those ticket thieves are sure to be run down
some day,” put in Carl, “and then your name will
be cleared.”

“They can’t be run down any too quick for me.”
answered Leo.

Since leaving the circus he had often thought of
Barton Reeve, Natalie Sparks and his other friends.
No communications had passed between them for
the reason that none of those traveling with the
circus knew where Leo was.

In Chalburgh, for such was the city’s name, Leo
and Carl were lucky enough to strike an engagement
with a fat men’s association. The association
gave a picnic in a large grove, and the pair performed
on one end of the dancing platform. This
engagement brought in eight dollars more, and
when they were paid off the head man of the committee
asked if they intended to remain in the city
long.

“That depends,” said Carl. “We’ll stay if we
can find another opening.”

“I might be able to find you an engagement with
another society,” said the fat man, who tipped the
scales at three hundred and ten pounds. “I can let
you know by to-morrow night, if you can wait that
long.”

Leo and Carl consulted together, and agreed to
remain in Chalburgh, and the fat man took down
their hotel address.

So the time went by until the day came when the
circus was to perform in the city. Long before
daybreak the wagons arrived and also the canvas
and ring men. Leo could not resist the temptation
to take a walk down to the circus-grounds for a
look at the familiar scene.

While he stood there somebody touched him on
the shoulder. It was Barton Reeve.

“How are you, Leo,” said the menagerie manager
heartily, as he held out his hand.

“I am pretty well, thank you,” replied the
young gymnast.

“Where have you been all this time?”

“Knocking around on my own hook,” and Leo
smiled faintly. He was glad to see Reeve still considered
him a friend.

“I heard you had joined Wampole’s specialty
company.”

“I did, but I had to get out,” answered the boy,
and told of the theatrical manager’s doings and of
how he was now giving private exhibitions with
Carl.

“I wish you were back in our show,” said Barton
Reeve. “All of us miss you.”

“Has Mr. Lambert discovered the ticket thieves
yet?”

“No, but he’s got his eyes on several fellows who
are following us around.”

“Is Snipper still with you?”

“Yes. But nobody likes him. Natalie Sparks
thinks Snipper may be in with the ticket thieves—that’s
between you and me, of course,” added Barton
Reeve quickly.

“I have the same kind of an idea, Mr. Reeve.
But the thing is to prove it.”

“Of course. Until you can do that you had better
remain silent.”

While conversing, the two had been skirting the
circus grounds, and now they came to a halt near a
lemonade stand. Leo looked up, to see Jack Snipper
not over fifty feet away.

“There is Snipper now,” he exclaimed. “Who
are those two men with him?”

Barton Reeve gave a look.

“I declare, they are two of the crowd that Lambert
has under suspicion,” he ejaculated.

“The three are going somewhere,” said Leo
quickly. “If you have the time to spare, let us
follow them.”

Barton Reeve looked at Leo, and saw what was
passing in the young gymnast’s mind.

“I have the whole morning on my hands and
will go willingly,” he replied.

They set off side by side, taking care that Snipper
should not notice them.

A half dozen blocks were covered, and the old
gymnast and his two companions turned into a low-looking
drinking resort.

Passing the place, Leo and Barton Reeve saw the
men take a drink and then walk into a back room.

At once Leo led the way through a side yard belonging
to the drinking resort.

Here was a window opening into the back room,
and standing close to this the two could hear and
see all that was going on.

The men were counting over several bags of
money.

This finished, one of them brought out several
bundles of unsold tickets.

“When can you get more for us, Snipper?” asked
one of the circus swindlers.

“I don’t know. They have discovered this loss
already,” replied the second-rate gymnast.

“Didn’t you put it off on the boy, as you said
you would?”

“Certainly. But they think the boy is too good
to steal,” growled Snipper.

Then one of the other men began to figure up
profits and mentioned how the money was to be
divided.

“Hurry up,” said Snipper. “I don’t want to stay
away too long. It might excite suspicion.”

At this Barton Reeve motioned to Leo to walk
a distance away.

“Run for a couple of policemen,” he whispered.
“I’ll keep an eye on the crowd.”

The young gymnast needed no second bidding,
but went off swiftly.

At the first corner he ran across a bluecoat and
hurriedly related his story.

At once the policeman rapped for an assistant.

Then the three joined Barton Reeve.

Snipper and the swindlers were just preparing to
leave the saloon.

The back window was wide open, and with a
bound Barton Reeve leaped into the apartment.

Leo came close behind, and the policemen followed.

Jack Snipper turned as pale as death when he
saw how he was trapped.

He started to sneak out through the drinking
resort, but Leo caught him and threw him down on
the sawdust floor.

Then a struggle took place between the swindlers
and Barton Reeve and the policemen.

But at last the swindlers were overcome and
handcuffed.

Snipper was also made a prisoner, and the whole
crowd marched down to the police station.

The excitement was great at the circus when it
was learned that Leo was innocent and Jack Snipper
was guilty.

In her joy Natalie Sparks actually hugged Leo,
while the boy blushed most furiously.

In due course of time Snipper and the swindlers
were tried, and each was sentenced to two years’
imprisonment.

CHAPTER XXIV.—IN THE CIRCUS RING AGAIN.
=======================================

“Leo, Mr. Lambert wants to see you,” said
Barton Reeve, after the excitement of the arrest
was over.

“What about?” questioned the young gymnast.

“Oh, he wants to see you, that’s all,” added
Reeve, with a peculiar wink of his eye.

The circus manager was at the main ticket wagon,
as usual. As Leo entered, he held out his hand.

“Dunbar, I did you a great wrong, and I am
sorry for it,” he said frankly.

“I am glad that my name is cleared, Mr.
Lambert,” said Leo, as he took the extended hand.

“We owe you something for what you have done
for the show,” went on the manager. “You did
what the detectives failed to do, and I feel I ought
to pay you a reward.”

“You can reward me well enough by taking me
back, Mr. Lambert—that is, if you will take my
present side partner, too,” Leo added, for he did not
intend to desert Carl, who had done so much for
him.

“I don’t understand. Who is your partner?”

“Carl Ross, a magician and juggler. He is very
clever, and I think would make a hit with the show.
We have been traveling around giving private exhibitions.“

“In that case, I will be pleased to see what your
partner can do. Can he come around to the dressing-tent
just before the evening performance
begins?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Very well then. Have him bring what apparatus
he possesses with him. And remember, your
old place is open whenever you care to step into it
again.”

“I’ll be on hand as soon as you settle with Carl
Ross,” smiled Leo.

He lost no time in hunting up Carl, who was close
at hand, having heard of the arrest of the ticket
thieves at the hotel.

“The manager of the circus says my old position
is open for me,” said Leo.

“Are you going to leave me, Leo?” asked Carl,
with an anxious look on his face.

“No. I said I would rejoin if he would give you
an opening too.”

“Oh!”

“He wants you to show what you can do at the
dressing tent a little before seven o’clock.” And
Leo went into a few particulars. “Do your best,
Carl, and you are sure of a steady place at a good
salary.”

“That would certainly be far better than knocking
around, as we have been doing, on an uncertainty.”

That evening Carl presented himself, in company
with Leo, and gave an exhibition of his finest tricks
and of his most dexterous juggling. Mr. Lambert
was greatly pleased.

“You’ll do first rate,” he said, when Carl had
concluded. “If you wish, you can join us, and I’ll
pay you the same wages that I was paying
Dunbar.”

Carl accepted on the spot, and the next day found
him and Leo traveling with the other performers
of the “Greatest Show on Earth.”

Leo’s friends were glad to see him back, and
doubly glad that they had gotten rid of Snipper.

“I never want to see that man again,” declared
Natalie Sparks, and nobody blamed her.

The next two weeks were busy ones for Leo.
Not only had he to practice up himself in his old
acts, but he had also to instruct a new gymnast
who came to take Snipper’s place.

The newcomer was named Harry Ray. He was
a first-class fellow, and soon he and Leo and Carl
became warm friends.

The “Greatest Show on Earth” moved nearly
every day. Its course was westward, something
which did not suit the young gymnast, but which
was also something he could not help.

For during all his adventures he had not forgotten
about the old life at Hopsville, and how Barton
Reeve had promised, when he got the chance, to
look up his monetary affairs for him. One day he
spoke to Reeve about it.

“I haven’t forgotten, Leo, don’t think that. But
at present I can do nothing.”

“When will we move eastward again?”

“That I can’t say either. It will depend to a
great extent on how matters pan out in the West.
If we don’t take in much money we’ll turn back
again as soon as the necessary arrangements can
be made.”

“Well, I want the show to make all the money
possible. But I want my rights, too.”

“And you shall get them; never fear of that,”
concluded Barton Reeve.

“I reckon Nathan Dobb is glad to get rid of the
care of me,” thought Leo, as he walked away.
“And yet, it seems to me he has been acting very
queerly.”

Never for an instant did the young gymnast
dream that Nathan Dobb had placed Hank Griswold
on his track to do him harm.

Why Griswold had not put in an appearance ere
this will be related later.

CHAPTER XXV.—ANOTHER BALLOON TRIP.
==================================

In the middle of the ring the circus men usually
built a large tank, in which several celebrated swimmers
and divers used to give a special performance.

This was something new in the circus line, and it
made a hit with the audience.

One morning one of the swimmers, a lad named
Delbier, was trying a new act.

This was to turn in the air in a peculiar way and
land in the water on his side, with his body tied up
in a knot.

It was a very difficult feat, and Leo watched
Delbier with interest.

“That’s dangerous,” he said.

“I know it, but orders are for something new,
and it’s the only thing I can think of,” was the
reply.

Leo was practicing on the rings close at hand, and
for some minutes all went along well.

Then Delbier did the new trick. Down he went
into the tank, but failed to come up.

Leo waited for nearly half a minute, and then
growing alarmed, dropped from the rings and
hurried to the edge of the tank.

In the clear water he beheld Delbier at the
bottom.

The fellow had disjointed himself in some way
and could not straighten out.

He was in great danger of drowning.

Without hesitation Leo leaped into the tank, intending
to raise the doubled-up body.

He made an alarming discovery.

Delbier had a cramp, and his right hand and left
foot were tightly twisted about a corner brace in
the bottom of the water-box.

In vain Leo tugged to free the diver. He could
not break that deathlike hold.

In less than half a minute Leo was out of breath.

It looked as if he must arise to the surface and
leave poor Delbier to his fate.

But then he clinched his teeth.

“I’ll save him,” he thought grimly.

Catching the brace in both hands, he planted his
feet against the side of the tank.

Then he strained and tugged for dear life.

At first the brace, which was screwed on, would
not budge.

But finally it parted with a snap which sounded
unusually loud in the water.

Delbier still clung to it, and so Leo brought both
brace and drowning man to the surface together.

By this time a crowd of helpers and performers
had gathered.

“What’s the matter?”

“Hello! Delbier has a cramp!”

“See how he holds to the brace!”

“Leo Dunbar saved him. He tore the brace
loose!”

Meanwhile a doctor was sent for. He quickly
came, and after an hour’s hard work succeeded in
bringing Delbier around all right.

Leo’s wonderful nerve was much commented
upon.

“He’s a plucky chap,” said Pomeroy, the head of
the tumblers, and all agreed with him.

Delbier was very thankful to our hero for what
he had done for him, and from that day he was
added to Leo’s growing list of friends.

About this time the “Greatest Show on Earth” was
joined by a balloonist named Professor Ricardo,
and his assistant, Larry Greson. The professor
gave ascensions in the afternoon, previous to the
circus performance, and thereby attracted large
crowds.

Professor Ricardo was a jovial sort of fellow and
he and Leo were soon on good terms.

“How would you like to go up some day with
me, Dunbar?” he asked one afternoon.

“First-rate.”

“It’s a peculiar sensation when you go up for the
first time.”

The young gymnast smiled.

“It wouldn’t be my first trip,” he said. “I went
up once before—in a big hurry.”

And he told of his adventure while trying to
escape from Daniel Hawkins.

About a week after this Leo went up with the
professor, taking the place of the assistant. He
rather enjoyed the trip and was not at all afraid.

“I’m used to swinging around in the air, you
know,” he explained.

The circus was going still further west, and one
day it struck a town around which the forest fires
were raging rather extensively. On this same day
Larry Greson came to the manager of the show and
said that Professor Ricardo was sick and could not
give his customary exhibition.

“That’s too bad,” replied Adam Lambert. “It
has been advertised, and I hate to disappoint the
crowds.”

Leo heard about the trouble and presently he
volunteered to go up with Greson.

“I’ll do a turn or two on the bar and the country
folks won’t know the difference,” he said.

And so it was arranged that the young gymnast
should go up.

“But be mighty careful, Leo,” cautioned Barton
Reeve. “We can’t afford to lose you.”

At the appointed time Leo was on hand, the big
balloon was inflated, and up the monster went,
with Greson in the tiny basket and Leo clinging to
a bar beneath.

The wind was blowing rather strongly, and as
they shot up it increased in velocity. Before Leo
had time to make a dozen turns on the bar the
balloon had left the circus grounds far behind and
was sailing rapidly over the outskirts of the town.

Far ahead could be seen the burning forests.

It being useless to remain on the bar, Leo hastily
clambered into the basket.

“We had better come down,” he cried.

“We can’t come down fast enough,” gasped
Greson.

“What do you mean, Greson?”

“We are sailing along too fast. We’ll land right
in the center of the fire.”

“Then what is best to do?”

“Sail over it and land on the other side of the
woods.”

“Can we do that?”

“Oh, yes.”

“Then go ahead,” returned Leo, much relieved.
“Put some more alcohol on your sponge,” he added,
referring to the sponge which was blazing beneath
the balloon opening to keep the air hot.

Leo kept a sharp lookout ahead while Greson
tended to the lighted sponge.

They kept well up in the air.

It was not long before the burning forest could
be seen plainly.

“Gosh! but we don’t want to get down in that!”
cried Greson, with a shudder. “We would never
come out alive!”

“Look to your sponge!” called out the young
gymnast sharply.

A puff of wind had blown the flame in an opposite
direction.

Greson turned to comply, but at that moment the
wind took a piece of the lighted sponge from the
holder and carried it upward.

It caught on the balloon. There was a puff of
smoke and a tiny flame.

The balloon was on fire!

White with terror, Greson sank down on the floor
of the basket, too overcome to think or act.

Leo’s heart leaped into his throat.

They were speeding with terrible swiftness directly
toward the forest of fire.

CHAPTER XXVI.—ADVENTURES AMID THE FLAMES.
=========================================

There was no escape, for the burning balloon was
going down in the very midst of the crackling forest.

Already the atmosphere was thick with smoke and
flaming pieces of wood and brush.

It was with difficulty that Leo breathed, and he
could scarcely see a dozen feet before him.

Larry Greson, the assistant, lay on the floor of
the basket, too frightened to move.

“Out with the sandbags!” cried the young gymnast.
“It is our one hope!”

“What’s the use? The balloon is on fire!” gasped
Greson hopelessly.

“We must do something—I won’t give up!” was
Leo’s response.

He began to cast out the heavy bags one after
the other. Greson at last consented to help him.

The burning balloon shot up into the air fifty or
sixty feet. But only for a few seconds.

Yet this space of time was enough to carry them
over the worst of the burning forest.

Then they began to settle again, the smoke rolling
blackly on all sides of them.

“We’re goners!” groaned Greson. “Good-by.”

Splash! What was this? Both could scarcely
believe the evidence of their senses.

They had dropped into the very center of a
little lake in the midst of the forest. Down they
went, with the burning balloon settling over them.
Both knew enough to leap from the basket and
dive under. It was well they did so; otherwise
they would have been caught in the folds of the
ignited monster and drowned like rats in a trap.

Leo took a long dive, and when he came up he
was fully fifty feet away from what was left of the
once valuable balloon, now partly above and partly
below water, and still burning and hissing.

“Larry, where are you?” he called out.

He received no reply, but a moment later perceived
his assistant puffing and blowing not a dozen
feet away.

“This is awful!” spluttered Greson. “We’ve
escaped from fire to be drowned.”

“Nonsense! Come, let us swim ashore.”

“How can we do that when the fire is on all
sides of the lake?” was Greson’s dismayed answer.

“I’ll find some spot to land, never fear,” was
Leo’s confident reply.

He led the way, and Greson, being a good
swimmer, easily followed.

The firebrands were thick about them, and often
they had to duck to get out of the way of being
burned. It was with difficulty that they could get
any fresh air.

To one side of the lake, which was not over three
hundred feet in diameter, Leo beheld a number of
high rocks comparatively free from burning brush.
Hither he directed his course.

“We can get on the rocks, if nothing else,” he
said.

“Yes, and have our feet blistered,” growled
Greson. “I’ll bet the stones are as hot as pepper.”

“We’ll try them, anyway.”

The young gymnast swam around with great
care before he essayed to land.

Presently he discovered a little cove, and further
on a split in the rocks several feet in width.

“Just the spot! Come,” he shouted to Greson.

He led the way into the narrow opening. Fifteen
feet further on was a bit of a cave, and into this
the pair crawled on hands and knees.

It was much cooler in the cave than it had been
outside. By lying flat on the flooring they managed
to get a current of fresh air. There was also a little
pool there, and both washed the sweat and smoke
from their faces and procured a drink. They were
exhausted, and only too glad to about lie down and
rest in their safe retreat.

“A narrow escape, truly,” said Leo with a shiver.

“We ain’t out of it yet,” returned Greson.

“I know that.”

“We may have to stay here a week, and without
food; that won’t be very pleasant.”

Slowly the day wore on.

Overhead the flames crackled and roared as if delighted
to hold sway over such an immense area of
woods.

Once the wind changed a bit and blew the smoke
directly down upon them. But just as they had
about made up their minds that they would have to
seek new quarters it went back, and they were molested
no more on that score.

Toward evening both began to feel hungry.

“There ought to be lots of dead birds and small
animals around,” said the young gymnast. “But
the thing is to get hold of them.”

“I’m not going to venture out—at least not yet,”
said Greson.

“All right—let’s wait till empty stomachs drive
us out.”

“I have an idea. The lake—it must have fish in
it.”

“That’s right!” cried Leo.

He had some line in his pocket. Soon he had
made a hook with a big bent pin.

In the meantime Greson dug around among some
dirt near the pool for worms. He brought out
several.

The line was baited, a stone put on for a sinker
and thrown into the water. Then they went back
to the cave.

Twice they found the line as they had left it.
But the third time something was on it. They
hauled in the catch.

It was a fat, spotted fish, weighing nearly two
pounds.

“Good!” shouted Greson. “Now to cook him.
Heaven knows there is fire enough!”

Half an hour later the fish was done to a turn.
They ate him with a big relish, and at once threw
out the line again, in hope of catching something
for the morning meal.

CHAPTER XXVII.—ESCAPE FROM THE BURNING FOREST.
==============================================

The night passed and half of the next day.

The two remained in the cave, living on fish
alone.

It looked as if they would have to remain in the
cave a week, perhaps longer.

“I’m sick of it from my hair to my toes,” growled
Greson.

“So am I; but I am thankful we are alive,” returned
Leo grimly.

The noon hour passed slowly.

It was furiously hot.

“Wouldn’t you think the fire would burn itself
out, Leo?” remarked the assistant.

“There are a good many thousands of cords of
wood to consume, and that takes time, Larry.”

About the middle of the afternoon it began to
grow dark.

“More smoke coming this way,” announced
Greson.

“No, it’s clouds!”

“Clouds! yes, and—hark!”

They listened intently. A low rumble was
heard.

“A thunderstorm! If it only rains hard enough!”

The sky kept growing blacker and blacker. Then
came a flash of lightning through the smoke, and
the patter of rain.

As the rain came down the smoke grew thicker,
and soon it drifted into the cave, and they were all
but driven out.

“We can’t stand this! Let us get out!” said
Greson.

“No, no; wait awhile, Larry! See, the wind is
changing!”

The young gymnast was right. The wind
swerved around and at once the smoke left them.

Another hour passed, and still the rain came
down steadily. It had full effect on the burning
forest, for the fire died out in spot after spot.

“We’ll be able to get out by morning,” said Leo.

That night they thought it safe to sleep, and lay
down utterly exhausted.

In the morning it was still raining. All around
the lake the burned trunks of tall trees were left
standing. Every bush was reduced to ashes.

They had not even a compass by which to make
their course out of the forest. But this did not stop
them from departing.

“Here is a stream that flows from the lake,”
said Leo. “It must lead to some river or larger
lake. We will follow it for a few miles and see
where it brings us.”

“That’s right; keep near the water. We may
need it if the rain stops and the fire starts up again,”
replied Greson.

They picked their way slowly along the bank of
the brook, sometimes walking directly in the water
where the dirt and stones became too hot for their
feet.

“Hurrah!” cried the young gymnast at the end
of a long turn in the stream.

He pointed ahead. There, beyond a stretch of
prairie grass, lay a small village.

Evidently it had entirely escaped the ravages of
the fierce forest fire.

The prairie grass was burned in spots, but that
was all.

The village could be distinctly seen, but they
knew it was, nevertheless, several miles off.

One can see a long distance over a prairie, the
same as over the water.

The middle of the afternoon saw them safe in the
village of Rallings, footsore and weary.

The people were astonished to hear their tale.

“It’s lucky ye escaped with your lives,” said one
old inhabitant, and Leo and Larry Greson agreed
with him.

To keep the circus folks from worrying, Leo sent
Barton Reeve a telegram stating they were both
safe. That very day they started back to join the
“Greatest Show on Earth.”

When they returned it was found that Professor
Ricardo was still sick. He had another balloon,
but this would be of no use unless somebody was
found to take his place.

“I’ll become balloonist for awhile,” said Leo,
“that is, if you don’t ask me to go up near any
burning forests again.”

“That’s right,” put in Greson. “No more such
adventures for me. Besides, burning up balloons is
rather expensive.”

The matter was talked over, and it was decided
that for the next few weeks Leo should take the
old balloonist’s place.

CHAPTER XXVIII.—THE RIVAL BALLOONISTS.
======================================

“We’re going to have fun to-day, Leo,” said his
assistant two days later.

“How so, Larry?”

“There is a rival here.”

“Who?”

“Porler from New Orleans.”

“You don’t mean to say he is going to give an
exhibition here?” said the young gymnast with
much interest.

“So he says, and he adds that he will show up in
a way that will throw the circus exhibition away in
the shade.”

Leo smiled. He had heard that Porler was a
very conceited man who had been in the business
for a dozen years or more.

Once he had wanted to become Professor Ricardo’s
partner, but the professor refused to go into
the deal.

This made Porler angry with the professor and
also with the circus folks.

When Leo arrived at the circus lot he found that
the two balloons had been located side by side.

Porler was to exhibit at one o’clock, while Leo
usually went up an hour later.

The young gymnast cautioned Larry to be on
guard, so that no harm should come to his outfit,
and he likewise cautioned his men to keep away
from Porler’s inclosure and thus avoid trouble.

The backs of the two tents used by Leo and Porler
were almost together, and while Leo was in his
own, looking over his things, he heard quarreling
in the tent beyond.

“Oh, don’t ask me to do that, Mr. Porler!”
pleaded a boyish voice. “Anything but that!”

“You must do it, Mart Keene!” responded the
gruff voice of the balloonist.

“I can’t—really I can’t!” pleaded the boyish
voice again.

“You can do it and you will. My reputation is
at stake and you must go up with me and do the
fairy act.”

“I will fall and break my neck!”

“No, you won’t—not unless you get too confoundedly
nervous, which you haven’t any right to
do.”

“Let me do my own act,” pleaded Mart Keene,
for such was the boy’s name.

“No, you’ll do as I want you to. We must show
up at our best.”

The boy began to cry.

He was a street waif from New Orleans. Porler
had picked him up in the French quarter one day
and adopted him. He had promised him a good
living and some money, but he got neither. He
had often abused him, and at times made him do
acts in connection with his exhibitions which imperiled
Mart’s limbs and life. He did not care
what became of the boy, as long as he made money.

Porler flew into a rage when Mart started to cry.

“Shut up!” he cried in a low tone that was full
of passion. “Do you want the crowd outside to
hear your sniveling?’

“I will stop when you promise not to make me
do the fairy act,” sobbed Mart.

“You’ll do that act, I say, and that ends it!”
howled Porler.

He looked around the tent, and, espying a whip
lying near a trunk, picked it up.

“Do you see this?” he demanded.

“Oh, don’t whip me, please!”

“Promise to do as I wish you to or I’ll break this
whip over your bare back, you rascal!”

“No, no!”

Mart tried to shrink back from the man, but he
sprang forward and clutched him by the arm.

Yet the upraised whip never descended.

The back canvas of the tent was pushed up and
Leo appeared.

He caught the whip and twisted it from Porler’s
hand.

“You coward, let that poor boy alone!” he cried.

Porler was thunderstruck. He had not dreamed
of being interrupted. His face grew dark as he
whirled around and faced the young gymnast.

“What right have you to come in here?” he
hissed.

“The right any one has to save a defenseless boy
from a brute!” retorted Leo. “I want you to leave
him alone.”

“He is my ward.”

“I don’t care if he is. You evidently treat him
worse than you would a dog.”

“He won’t do as I order him to.”

“You want him to risk his neck in the fairy act,
an act that can’t be accomplished except by long
and careful training. It isn’t right.”

“You are jealous and afraid we are going to outdo
you,” sneered Porler.

Leo’s face flushed.

“I am not,” he said calmly. “I wish to stick up
for the lad, that is all. Leave him alone and I
won’t bother you.”

“Supposing I don’t choose to leave him alone?”

“Then I’ll make you, and not only that, I’ll go
outside and let the crowd know just how matters
stand—that you want to force him to do an act that
he can’t do, and which may cause him to lose his
life.”

Hardly had Leo uttered the words than, with a
muttered imprecation, Porler sprang upon him
and bore him to the ground.

CHAPTER XXIX.—PORLER’S MOVE.
============================

Porler was angry enough to give Leo a good
beating.

He struck at the boy as he sent him down to the
ground, but the young gymnast avoided the blow.

Then Leo let out, and Porler received a blow on
the nose.

This brought blood, and he grew more enraged
than ever.

Like an eel Leo squirmed from his grasp, and
panting the two faced each other.

“I’ll fix you!” howled Porler.

He ran to his trunk to get a weapon, for he was
in his balloon costume, but suddenly stopped short.

“Where is he?”

He referred to Mart Keene, who had disappeared.

Fearful that the boy was running away, Porler
forgot all about Leo for the time being and ran
outside.

The young gymnast ran to his own tent and came
out.

He saw Porler looking around anxiously.

The lad had certainly escaped.

“I hope he doesn’t find him,” thought Leo.

Porler whispered to his assistant, a man named
Murphy, and the latter hurried off to ascertain, if
possible, what had become of Mart.

Then Porler re-entered his tent. The band was
playing and it was time for him to make his
ascension.

He delayed as long as possible, but at last the
crowd got impatient.

“A little hole in the balloon, that is all, gentlemen,”
said Porler. “I am ready now.”

He did not dare to speak of Mart for fear an
investigation would be started.

He came out, smiling falsely at the crowd, and
walked over to where his balloon swayed in the air.

At a given signal the balloon shot up with Porler
in the basket.

When the balloon was scarcely two hundred feet
in the air Porler got out his parachute and leaped
overboard.

As he came floating down he made several turns
about the double handle of the parachute.

The crowd applauded this, for it was something
new to them.

Leo saw the exhibition from a hole in the top of
his tent, and smiled to himself.

“There are twenty balloonists in the United
States who can do as good as that, and better,” he
thought.

Porler had expected to make Mart go up with
him.

The boy was to leave the balloon with him on the
parachute, and then, when within fifty feet of the
ground, fly away by himself on an immense pair of
white wings filled with gas.

The band continued to play after Porler landed.

“Now for the circus balloonist!” was the cry.

A flourish from the band and Leo came running
out.

He was dressed in a suit of white and gold. The
gold sparkled in the sunshine and made a beautiful
appearance, quite in contrast to Porler’s dirty costume
of plain white and red.

“Let go!”

Up shot the circus balloon with a rush.

There was Leo, not in a basket, but clinging to a
slender trapeze. A shout of approval arose.

Up and up went the balloon until it became to the
human eye about as large as a dinner plate.

The young gymnast was making a great ascension.

As he went up he began to perform on the
trapeze. He turned over and over and hung by his
toes.

The crowd could scarcely believe its eyes. Porler
was completely outdone.

At last both balloon and balloonist passed out of
sight of those on the fair grounds.

Leo landed in a field several miles from the city.

He hired the farmers who came out to see what
was the matter to help him pack up the balloon.

About an hour later Greson came along and the
outfit was packed on a wagon and carted back to
the circus grounds. When Leo came in for supper
he found a note awaiting him.

It was from Mart Keene and ran like this:

    “:small-caps:`Dear Mr. Dunbar`: I must thank you for your
    bravery and great kindness to me. I am alone in
    the world and need a friend. If you will help me,
    kindly call at the address given on the inclosed
    card.”

The young gymnast looked at the card. It bore
the address of a boarding-house on a side avenue
half a dozen blocks from the grounds.

He at once departed for the place.

CHAPTER XXX.—MART KEENE’S STORY.
================================

It did not take Leo long to reach the boarding-house
advertised on the card.

“I wish to see Mart Keene,” he said to the lady
who answered his summons.

“Oh, yes; please walk into the parlor.”

In a few minutes the lad came in.

He wore an old suit, one he had caught up when
escaping from Porler. He blushed as he took Leo’s
hand.

“You will have to excuse my appearance,” he
said. “But you are aware it cannot be helped.”

“Yes, Mart, I understand it all. I am glad you
escaped from Porler.”

“I must thank you for what you did for me,”
went on Mart. “You are as brave as you are
daring.”

“Don’t mention that, Mart. It was a pleasure
to be of service to you. Let me know how I can
serve you further.”

There was a silence, and the lad cast down his
eyes.

“I must be frank with you,” he said at last. “I
am without a friend in the world and likewise without
a dollar.”

The young gymnast smiled faintly.

“My boy, allow me to contradict you,” he said.
“Neither statement is true. I am your friend.”

The boy’s face lit up.

“I thought you would be my friend, you seemed
so generous. And I wanted a small loan, so that I
might get away from Mr. Porler. I never want to
see that man again.”

“As I said before, what I have is at your
service.”

“Will you loan me ten dollars?”

“Yes, and more. Here are twenty dollars. Accept
them as a loan, to be paid back at any time
that suits you.”

And Leo handed out the amount.

Mart blushed as he accepted the bills.

“I shall never forget you, never!” he murmured,
and put the money away. “I will repay you as
soon as I am able.”

“Be in no hurry. What are you going to do, if I
may ask?”

“I am going to try to hunt up an uncle of mine,”
said Mart. “If I can only find him, I think he will
give me a home. If I am not mistaken, he is holding
some property which belongs to me.”

“Where does your uncle live?” questioned Leo
with interest.

“That I do not know. I will have to advertise
for information, I presume.”

“Up-hill work, that. What is your uncle’s
name?”

“Daniel Hawkins.”

“Daniel Hawkins,” repeated Leo, leaping to his
feet in astonishment.

“Yes. Why, you act as if you knew him,” returned
Mart.

“Know him? Well, I rather guess I do,” returned
the young gymnast bitterly.

“Oh, I am so glad!”

“And I’m sorry.”

“Sorry? Why?”

“You need expect nothing from your uncle,
Mart.”

“Oh, don’t say that!” and the boy grew pale.

“I might as well be plain with you, even if it
does hurt. There is no use in building up false
hopes.”

“You must know my uncle well.”

“I worked for him for a long while—he acted as
if he owned me. He is a miserable skinflint, nothing
less. If you go to him he will work you to
death and treat you worse than a slave. He never
lets up on anybody, not even his own relations.”

And then and there Leo sat down again and told
his story—how he had slaved for the farmer and
run away and become a professional circus performer.

Mart listened with interest, his face growing
paler as he proceeded.

“You are right; I have nothing to expect from
him, even though he was my mother’s own half-brother.”

“Won’t you tell me your story?” asked Leo.

“Willingly, if you care to listen to it.”

And then Mart told how he had been an orphan
for ten years. His father had been an actor and
his mother a comic-opera singer.

“The Hawkinses never had much to do with us
after mother went on the stage,” he said. “That is
how I lost track of my uncle.”

Then he told of his mother’s death in New
Orleans and how he had been cast out on the streets
by an old woman with whom they boarded. He had
danced down in the French quarter, and there
Porler had picked him up.

“He promised me so many things that I went
with him willingly,” he said. “But it was a great
mistake.”

The two talked matters over for a long while—until
nearly midnight—and then Leo made a proposition.

“I am sure you will not find living with Daniel
Hawkins agreeable,” he said. “So I am going to
make you an offer. If you wish to travel with the
circus I will try to arrange it for you. I think I
can get you a place at eight or ten dollars a week
to go up in the balloon with me.”

“Thank you; I’d like that,” replied Mart Keene.

CHAPTER XXXI.—A FALL FROM THE CLOUDS.
=====================================

The next day Leo lost no time in interviewing
Adam Lambert concerning Mart.

“He is clever and will in time make a good acrobat
and balloonist,” he said.

The matter was talked over, and that afternoon
Mart joined the “Greatest Show on Earth” on trial.
He was to assist Leo in the balloon, Larry Greson
having now to spend much of his time with Professor
Ricardo, who was worse in health.

A week later found the circus in Denver. In the
meantime nothing had been heard of Porler, but one
night Leo came face to face with him.

The balloonist scowled and was about to speak,
but suddenly changed his mind and walked away.

“You must be on guard against that man,” said
Leo to Mart.

“I will be,” was the reply.

The ascension from the circus grounds in Denver
attracted great attention.

When the time came for the balloon to go up Leo
and Mart entered the basket.

Up and up went the great monster, gayly decorated
on every side.

Below hung several swinging bars and a rope
ladder.

Mart began to perform on the ladder, while the
young gymnast leaped from one trapeze to another.

It was a marvelous sight, and the crowd went
wild with enthusiasm.

But suddenly, when the balloon was well up over
the buildings near by, a cry of horror arose.

A man was seen to lean out of a window not far
away.

He held a rifle in his hand, and the weapon was
pointed at the balloon.

Crack!

The weapon spoke and the ball pierced the
silken sides of the floating monster.

Leo heard the sound of the rifle and he at once
felt that something was wrong.

Suddenly Mart Keene gave a cry of terror.

“Oh, Mr. Dunbar, look out. There is a man in
one of the buildings who is aiming a gun at the
balloon!”

Crack!

The rifle spoke again, and the people, looking
upward, saw Leo make a leap.

The trapeze had been struck.

Leo had leaped to where hung his parachute.

He caught it with his left hand.

Down he came, the parachute in his grasp.

The catch gave way and out shot the ribs of the
parachute, and the young gymnast’s headlong flight
to earth was stayed.

A cheer went up.

“He is safe!”

The crowd gathered around to where Leo had
reached the earth, in the center of a field of grass.

“He was struck!”

“Is he badly hurt?”

The youth lay unconscious on the grass, his face
as pale as a sheet.

A few thought him dead, and the report that he
had been killed quickly circulated.

The police ran into the building in search of the
rascal who had done the firing, but could not find
their man.

Taking advantage of the excitement, Porler, for
it was he, had left the grounds as fast as possible.

He knew that if caught the crowd might be incensed
enough to lynch him on the spot.

Luckily two physicians were present, and both
hurried to Leo’s side.

It was found that he was suffering quite a little
from his fall.

An ambulance was summoned, and the young
gymnast was conveyed to a hospital.

Here he was given every attention, and by the
following morning he felt nearly as well as ever,
although his breast was still sore and had to be kept
tightly bandaged.

In the meanwhile the balloon had sailed away
from the fair grounds with Mart clinging to the
ropes.

The boy was terribly frightened over what had
occurred.

He became faint and felt for a minute that he
must fall from his lofty perch.

But he recovered and held fast, and thus the
balloon drifted far away.

He imagined the man who had fired the shots
was Porler, but was not certain.

On and on went the balloon over the city, and
then across a wide stretch of farming land.

Finally it began to settle in a neighborhood full
of brush and trees.

Mart looked out anxiously, and it was with much
satisfaction that he saw the balloon was about to
fall in a cleared spot, where no damage would come
to it, and from which he could easily escape.

Down and down came the monster, until it
touched the ground as lightly as would a drifting
feather.

The lad leaped away to escape the great mass of
falling silk and ropes. Soon the balloon lay a flat
mass where it had struck.

Mart wondered if it would be safe to leave the
thing until some one came for it.

Usually Greson attended to such matters, but
now he might have his hands full with Leo Dunbar.

As Mart thought of Leo his eyes filled with
tears.

He thought a good deal of his champion.

He was the first person in the world who had
really befriended him.

“Oh, I hope he isn’t seriously hurt!” he murmured
to himself.

While he stood by the fallen balloon wondering
what was best to do he heard the sound of wagon
wheels.

They came from a country road a few hundred
feet to his right.

“It must be Greson or one of the others coming
for the balloon,” he said to himself.

The wagon came to a stop, and he ran forward to
meet the newcomer that he might inquire about
Leo.

Then of a sudden his heart seemed to stop beating.

The man approaching from the wagon was
Porler!

CHAPTER XXXII.—MART A PRISONER.
===============================

Mart was nearly dumfounded.

It was so unexpected, this meeting, that he was
almost too paralyzed to move.

He gave a faint cry of alarm. Porler heard it
and looked in his direction.

“Ah, so there you are!” he sang out. “I thought
I would find you somewhere in the vicinity!”

He ran toward the lad.

Instinctively Mart turned to flee.

“Stop!” he cried. And he made after the boy
at a greater speed.

Mart did not answer him, but ran the faster.

But the boy was no match for the old balloonist,
who in his day had been a swift runner.

He kept gaining on Mart, and seeing this, the
lad ran toward a clump of bushes.

Mart dived into the midst of these, and thus
managed to get out of his sight.

“You can’t escape me,” cried Porler in a rage.
“You might as well stop right where you are.”

Mart made no reply, but kept on.

Presently he came to a tall tree.

This gave him an idea. Mart could climb like a
monkey, and up the tree he went with great speed.

When Porler reached the spot he was out of
sight, and the old balloonist went on.

“Oh, how I hope he will go far enough away,”
said Mart to himself.

Soon he could hear no more of Porler.

Thinking him gone, he cautiously descended the
tree.

Barely had his feet touched the ground than he
felt a rough hand on his shoulder.

“I thought you were here,” cried the old balloonist
in his harsh tone. “You can’t get away from
me now, Mart Keene.”

“Let me go!” he panted. “Don’t you dare
touch me!”

“Touch you? Well, I guess that’s cool. As if
you didn’t belong to me!”

“I don’t belong to you. You haven’t the first
claim on me.”

“We’ll see about that. Didn’t I take you out of
the street and feed and clothe you, and——”

“Made me work like a horse to pay for it,”
finished the boy. “You have got more out of me
than I ever cost you, ten times over, so there!”

“You’ll come along with me—willingly or unwillingly,”
growled Porler. “Give me your
hand.”

He tried to catch hold of Mart. He snatched his
arm away.

Filled with rage, he struck the lad a cruel blow
full in the face.

It staggered Mart, and he nearly went to the
ground.

Then he picked Mart up and put him over his
shoulder.

At once the boy began to scream for help.

“Shut up!” growled Porler.

For reply Mart screamed louder.

Then Porler threw him down, poured some
chloroform he had in a bottle on his handkerchief
and applied it to Mart’s nose.

The boy struggled vainly for a few minutes and
then became limp in his arms.

“Ah, that did the business,” Porler murmured to
himself. “Glad I brought the chloroform along.”

He took Mart to his carriage and placed him
inside, covering him with several robes.

When Mart came to his senses he found himself
in a little room. The door was locked and the one
window was nailed up tightly. He was a close
prisoner.

The boy had been placed on a cot in the corner,
and now sat up and gazed around in bewilderment.

“Where am I?” he thought.

Then the full realization of what had happened
burst upon the boy, and he gave way to tears.

“That bad man! What does he intend to do
with me?”

Hour after hour went by and no one came to
Mart.

There was a pitcher of water in the room and a
loaf of bread, both on a stand close at hand.

He drank some of the water, but could not eat.

He knew it was night. Slowly the hours dragged
by until morning.

Not long after this the door was unlocked and
Porler came into the room.

“Awake, are you?” he said. “Hope you slept
well.”

“You monster!” Mart cried. “What are you
going to do with me?”

“I’ll tell you. I am going to make you promise
on your bended knees that you will travel with me
as you used to do, and obey all my commands.”

“I’ll never promise anything like that,” exclaimed
Mart, recoiling with horror.

“You will, or else—” The old balloonist paused.

“Or else what?”

“I will keep you here, and starve you into submission.”

CHAPTER XXXIII.—LEO TO THE RESCUE.
==================================

Leo’s first care, after leaving the hospital, was to
ask about Mart.

He was astonished to learn at the hotel at which
the party was stopping that nothing had been
seen of the lad since the balloon had left the exhibition
grounds.

Greson had gone for the balloon late the day
before.

“Found the balloon all right, but didn’t see a
single trace of the boy,” said the assistant.

“That is queer,” mused Leo. “Can it be that he
tumbled down in some out-of-the-way place and was
killed?”

He at once learned the course the balloon had
taken, and then got a buggy and horse and went
over every inch of the ground.

A little later he found himself at the spot where
the balloon had come down.

He walked around in much perplexity.

If Mart had escaped injury, where was he?

“All this must be Porler’s work,” said the young
gymnast to himself. “I would just like to come
across that man.”

Satisfied that nothing was to be gained by remaining
near the woods, Leo started back to the
road.

In doing this he came across the bottle which had
contained the chloroform Porler had used.

He picked up the bottle and smelled of what
remained in it.

“My gracious!”

Like a flash the truth burst upon him.

“It’s that rascal’s work! He fired on me, and
then came out here after Mart. He has abducted
the boy!”

As we know, Leo was partly right and partly
wrong.

The young gymnast realized that if he was to act
he must do so without delay.

It made him very angry to think of the young
lad being in the old balloonist’s power.

That he would ill-use Mart he felt certain.

From where he had found the bottle Leo traced
Porler’s footsteps to the carriage.

The marks of the carriage wheels were still fresh
and they ran straight into the city.

On the pavements they were, of course, lost.

Leo was in a quandary.

He told Greson of what he had discovered, and
then both of them began a systematic search for
Mart.

Greson started from where the carriage had
entered the city.

The young gymnast went to the exhibition
grounds and attempted to trace up the man who
had fired the shots at the balloon.

From one and another the young gymnast was
able to trace up Porler to a third-rate boarding-house
on one of the side streets.

He was about to enter the place when he saw a
fellow named Danny Murphy, who was Porler’s
assistant, leaving in a great hurry.

“Perhaps he is going to join Porler at some place
where Mart is being kept,” said Leo to himself.
“I’ll follow him.”

And follow Murphy he did.

All unconscious of being watched, Porler’s tool
walked half a dozen blocks until he came to the
residence in which Mart was kept a close prisoner.
He walked around to the rear through an alleyway.

Close behind him, Leo heard him give a peculiar
knock on the door.

A moment passed and Murphy was admitted.
The back door was locked and bolted after him.

When the door had been opened Leo had caught
a momentary glimpse of Porler’s face.

“That settles it,” he thought. “Mart is kept a
prisoner right here.”

Leo had armed himself, and now he walked to
one of the kitchen windows.

He opened the blinds. The window itself was
locked, but bringing out his pocketknife he shoved
back the catch.

Another moment and the lower sash was raised
and the young gymnast leaped into the house.

He did not care if his enemies were present. He
was prepared to fight, if need be.

But, as he surmised, the lower floor of the residence
was deserted.

With cautious steps Leo left the kitchen and
walked toward the stairs leading to the next floor.

As he did so he heard the murmur of voices from
above.

He went up and listened with strained ears.

“Mr. Porler, starve me or not, I will never do as
you wish.”

It was Mart who was speaking.

“And I say you will do so,” growled Porler.

“That’s right,” put in Murphy. “Make the boy
toe the mark.”

“I will not only starve you,” went on Porler,
“but I will give you a taste of your old friend, the
strap.”

“You will not dare to touch me!” exclaimed the
lad.

“Wait and see.”

“My friend, Mr. Dunbar, will have the law on
you for it.”

“Dunbar will never help you again.”

“I think he will.”

The voice came from the doorway, and the three
in the room found themselves confronted by Leo.

CHAPTER XXXIV.—THE END OF PORLER.
=================================

Porler and Murphy were taken completely by
surprise when confronted by Leo.

On seeing the young gymnast, Mart gave a cry
of joy.

“Oh, thank Heaven you have come!”

“Get into the corner, boy!” howled Porler.

“Don’t you speak to him again,” said Leo
sharply. “He is no longer your prisoner.”

“Ain’t he? We’ll soon see about that.”

As Porler spoke he advanced upon Leo.

But when the young gymnast brought his
weapon up within range of the rascal’s head the
latter quickly recoiled.

“You see, Porler, I am armed.”

Murphy, who was completely dumfounded to see
Leo, now came forward.

“We are two to one, young feller,” he said warningly.
“Yer better go slow.”

“I know my own business,” was Leo’s quiet
reply. “Mart!”

“Well?”

“Will you go down and summon help?”

“But you are alone——”

“Never mind. Get a policeman, or somebody
else. I am going to have these rascals arrested.”

“Not much!” howled Porler.

“Let’s down him?” yelled Murphy.

“Back! both of you!”

The two men, however, ran forward, dodging
behind Mart as they came on, and closed in on him.

It was an unequal fight.

But Leo fought well, and the boy was not idle.

Mart caught up a chair, and raising it over his
head brought it down on Porler’s back.

“Oh! oh! you have broken my back!” yelled
the old balloonist.

Scarcely had he spoken when Leo tripped him up.

But now Murphy leaped on the young gymnast,
and the pair rolled over on the floor.

He was in a high rage, and he meant to do Leo a
serious injury if such a thing was possible.

In the meanwhile Porler arose and pushed Mart
from him.

“Help! help!” cried Mart.

He ran out of the room and into the next, the
window of which was not fastened, and opening
the window continued to cry out.

Then of a sudden he saw a sight that gladdened
his heart.

Larry Greson was in sight.

He had followed up the trail from the other end.

“Hurry! hurry!” screamed Mart.

“Mart!” burst out Greson.

“Come up and help Mr. Dunbar!”

“Who is in there?”

“Porler and Murphy!”

Greson ran up on the piazza of the house, and at
the same time Mart flew below to let him in.

“Confound the luck!” howled Porler, who had
heard Mart speaking to Greson.

“The neighborhood will be in alarm,” added
Murphy.

Both men leaped to their feet.

Greson was mounting the stairs three steps at a
time, and close behind him came Mart.

The two rascals thought a crowd was advancing
to capture them.

Dodging Leo, who gave each a heavy blow as he
passed, the two villains rushed out into the
hallway.

Porler was too quick for Greson, but Murphy
was tripped up.

Before he could arise Leo and his assistant had
the fellow a prisoner.

They bound him so that he could not escape.

Then they went after Hank Porler, but he could
not be found.

He had dropped out of a rear window on to a shed
and disappeared.

In the meantime a policeman arrived.

When he heard the particulars of the affair he
willingly took Murphy into custody, and later on
the man was sent to jail.

Steps were taken to attach Porler’s balloons and
other property, but it was found he had sold all his
things.

“He knew he was taking big chances when he
went into that underhanded work,” laughed Greson.

“Oh, I trust I shall never see that man again,”
said Mart, with a shudder.

Strange to say, the boy’s wish was gratified.
Fearful of prosecution, Porler fled to South America,
and that was the last heard of him.

Leo and Mart rejoined the circus at a place called
Wheatlands, and their friends were heartily glad to
see them back, safe and sound.

There was news for both. Professor Ricardo
was much better, and on the week following was to
return to work. This would put Leo back among
the acrobats again, and for this the young gymnast
was not sorry.

He did not forget to put in a good word for Mart
to Professor Ricardo, and consequently the boy remained
in his old place, and Larry Greson was
given a situation among the menagerie men, something
which suited him better than did ballooning.

CHAPTER XXXV.—A COWARDLY ATTACK.
================================

In the meantime it must not be supposed that
Hank Griswold had forgotten his compact with
Nathan Dobb.

The man had been anxious to put his plot against
Leo into operation at once, but Providence willed
otherwise. Griswold was taken down with rheumatism
and for several months could scarcely walk.

But now he was better, and one day started west
to earn the money the squire of Hopsville had
promised him.

As has been related, Delbier, the expert swimmer,
and Leo had become warm friends. One morning
the performer called Leo aside.

“Say, Leo, have you any enemies besides that
Porler?” he asked.

“I don’t know but what I have,” laughed the
young gymnast.

“Don’t laugh; I am serious.”

“Why, what’s up?”

“For the past two days I have noticed an ugly-looking
man hanging around, watching you,” went
on Delbier earnestly.

“Watching me?”

“Yes, and if I’m not mistaken, he follows you
wherever you go.”

“What kind of a looking man?”

As well as he could, Delbier described the individual.
But Leo was not thinking of Hank Griswold—indeed,
he hardly knew the man—and he
shook his head.

“You must imagine it, Delbier.”

“I guess not. Better be on your guard.”

“All right,” and Leo laughed.

When in the country Leo had grown tired of the
quietness, but now when every day brought fresh
bustle and confusion he was glad enough to escape
the crowd and go for a quiet walk.

His course took him along a country road which
presently followed the bank of a mountain stream.

It was a clear stream and full of fish, and Leo
much regretted not having brought along a line and
hook.

He wandered on and on until the town was left a
good two miles behind.

Then he sat down on a rock overlooking the
stream to rest.

As he did so he fancied he saw somebody following
him.

The individual drew behind some bushes.

Leo at once thought of what Delbier had said.

He resolved to be on his guard, and so kept his
eyes open.

But nearly half an hour went by, and as no one
appeared Leo began to think he was mistaken.

A little later the boy started across an open field
not far from the brook.

Then from out of the bushes crawled a man. It
was Hank Griswold.

Cautiously he came behind Leo.

Presently our hero soon stumbled across the
opening to an old well.

“Hullo, this is dangerous!” he murmured. “It
ought to be closed.”

A footstep sounded near at hand. He turned,
and on the instant received a shove that hurled him
backward into the opening!

For the minute Leo felt that his end must be at
hand.

Down he went into the dark and deep well, with
the dirt and brush on top of him.

Had he fallen to the rocky bottom he would most
certainly have been killed.

But, fortunately, when less than ten feet had
been passed, his clothing caught on some projecting
rocks.

Instantly he grasped the rocks with his hands.

The dirt, falling on him, nearly choked him.

He steadied himself with difficulty and managed
to kick himself clear from what was above.

The dirt and brush sliding past him, he felt safer,
although his position was still an extremely perilous
one.

He looked up and saw the evil face of Hank
Griswold peering down into the well.

It was too dark for the villain to see the boy,
and the young gymnast remained perfectly quiet.

Griswold heard the dirt strike the bottom of the
well with a loud sound.

He laughed softly to himself.

“Done for that trip!” he muttered to himself.
“Good enough!”

Hank Griswold waited for a few minutes, and
then, apparently satisfied, hurried off.

As soon as he disappeared Leo looked about for
some means by which to get out of his present
position.

To an ordinary individual this would have been an impossible undertaking,
for the sides of the well were very slippery.

Leo’s gymnastic training now stood him in good
stead.

Cautiously he made his way from rock to rock,
taking chances more than once that would have
made many a boy shudder, grow dizzy and fall.

At last the top of the well was reached once
more.

Griswold had disappeared, but he resolved to follow
the man’s trail, if the thing could be done.

“Ought to have one of our Indians along,” he
thought. There were sixteen of the redmen traveling
with the “Greatest Show on Earth.”

But the path through the brush was plain enough.
It led to the road which Leo had originally pursued
when coming out for a walk.

When our hero reached the road he saw an old
farmer driving along. Evidently the old man was
just coming from town.

“Hold on, sir, I want to talk to you!” cried Leo.

“What’s the matter?” asked the farmer, surveying
our hero’s torn and muddy clothing in curiosity.

“Did you meet a man on his way to town—a
man with a queer walk?”

“I did.”

“Take me to that man and I’ll give you a five
dollar bill.”

The old farmer was greatly astonished.

“Who be you?” he questioned cautiously.

Leo told him.

The farmer at once agreed to run down Hank
Griswold, if it could be done.

Leo jumped into the wagon and off they went.

The chase, however, was a useless one. Griswold
had taken to a side road and could not be found.

“But I’ll catch him some day,” said Leo to Carl,
“and then I’ll make him tell why he attacked me.”

“Perhaps he was hired to do it,” ventured the
young magician.

“That is what I think,” returned Leo, with a
grave shake of his head.

Carl was doing very well. He had several new
tricks, some of which he thought would please the
children. One was called “Milk or Water,” and
was brought out the day after Leo had the adventure
just described.

“I will now show you how easy it is to change
water into milk,” said the young magician as he
mounted the platform in the circus ring. “Will
some one kindly hand me a glass of water? I have
the milk here,” and he took up a small pitcher and
passed it around for inspection.

The glass of water was brought and he placed it
on the table and covered it with a handkerchief.
Then he tapped the glass and also the pitcher.

Removing the handkerchief, he held up the glass.
Sure enough, there was the white milk, as plain as
day. Taking up the pitcher, Carl turned it upside
down to show it was empty.

“Now we’ll change them back,” he said. Another
tap, and lo! the glass was full of water and
the milk was in the pitcher again.

A burst of applause followed.

This trick was simplicity itself. The pitcher
really had milk in it, and the glass was full of
water all the time.

When Carl covered the glass with a handkerchief
he slipped into the water a bit of white cardboard,
which standing upright made the water look like
milk.

While the audience were inspecting the glass as
he held it up he pressed over the top of the pitcher,
inside, a circular card which exactly fitted the opening.
This enabled him to turn the pitcher over for
a second without spilling any milk.

To turn the milk in the glass to water again, he
had but to remove the card. The card in the
pitcher was also removed as the receptacle was handed
around for inspection after the trick was done.

CHAPTER XXXVI.—ON THE ELEVATED TRACKS.
======================================

Ten days later the circus reached the great lakes
and settled in Chicago for a week.

On the following day Leo was strolling down
State Street when, happening to glance up, he saw
Hank Griswold coming from a building with a large
letter in his hand.

As quick as a flash he made after the man.

Leo was almost up to Griswold when the latter
saw him coming and started up the street on a run.

Coming to a side street, he turned up that thoroughfare
and continued on his way for a dozen
blocks or more.

Leo tried to keep him in sight, but was unsuccessful,
and after a search lasting half an hour he
mounted to the elevated road, to take a train to
Jackson Park.

As he went up he did not imagine that Hank
Griswold was watching him.

There was a crowd at the station, and this kept
increasing, as the train was late.

Leo stood close to the edge of the platform. Just
in front and below him were the glistening tracks.

With a rumble the train came in sight.

When it was but a few yards away the young
gymnast felt a sudden shove from behind.

He lost his balance and fell from the platform
directly in front of the oncoming locomotive.

To the onlookers it seemed that the boy must
surely be killed.

He rolled fairly and squarely upon the railroad
tracks, and the oncoming locomotive was barely a
dozen feet from him.

The engineer, who was preparing to stop, jerked
the lever to come to an instantaneous halt, but it
was of no avail.

On and on rolled the heavy engine, with its long
train of cars.

“The boy will be killed!”

“Oh! oh! Isn’t that awful!”

Many turned away, unable to endure the awful
sight.

But the crowd made one mistake.

They did not know that Leo, as an acrobat, was
used to making lightning-like movements whenever
necessary.

His profession now stood him in good stead.

As he came down he had no chance to use his
feet.

But his hands and arms were ready, and like a
flash he turned a handspring and swept out of the
way just as the ponderous locomotive rolled past.

The monster brushed his left leg, but he was unharmed,
and in a second more had reached the
platform on the opposite side of the street.

Although attacked so unexpectedly, Leo did not
lose his presence of mind.

“That was that rascal’s work!” he muttered to
himself.

Reasoning that the man would try to escape from
the scene, the young gymnast rushed down the
stairs into the street.

He was right; for scarcely was the pavement
touched than he beheld Griswold on the opposite
side walking along at a rapid gait.

“Stop!”

Griswold looked around in horror. His intended
victim was not dead! In abject fear he took to his
heels as though Leo’s ghost was on his track.

Up one side street and down another dashed man
and boy, until, coming to an avenue, the man
boarded a street car and was lost to view.

“The villain!” muttered Leo, as he slowed up to
catch his breath. “I must be on my guard in the
future.”

He hunted around and brushed up his clothes.
Then, as there seemed nothing else to do, he walked
to where he had left his friends.

Here he told his story to Carl, who listened in
amazement.

“He is certainly after your life,” said Carl. “In
the future you ought to go armed.”

“I wonder if he can be hired by any one in Hopsville?”
mused Leo.

“That remains to be seen.”

“I’m going to capture him the next time we
meet,” concluded Leo, with a determined look in his
outspoken face.

Mart also heard about the attack and came to
Leo full of fear.

“Oh, Leo, do be careful in the future,” he
pleaded. “What if that bad man should take your
life!”

Two days passed, and as the young gymnast
neither saw nor heard of Griswold, he began again
to feel a bit easier in mind.

But one afternoon, while walking in the vicinity
of the lake, Leo’s attention was attracted to a
small steam tug which was tying up at a wharf.

“Look! look!” he shouted to Carl, who was with
him. “It is Griswold, and Broxton, who was discharged
from the circus for drunkenness, is with
him.”

“Shall I call a policeman?”

“Yes. I’ll watch them.”

Carl hurried off. Ere he had taken a dozen steps
Griswold caught sight of Leo and whispered something
the young gymnast could not catch.

Both rascals were on the point of leaving the
steam tug, but now they changed their minds and
ordered the captain to cut loose and move on.

“Stop!” called out Leo, and ran to the edge of
the wharf.

“Go to thunder!” muttered Broxton.

“We’re not to be caught to-day,” added Hank
Griswold.

In another second the steam tug was clear of the
stringpiece of the wharf.

Leo hesitated not a moment, but, taking a flying
leap, landed on her forward deck. With angry yells
Griswold and Broxton rushed on him.

“We’ve got him now!” said the former. “Down
the lake with you, captain, and be quick!”

“Stop the tug, those men are criminals,” said
Leo.

The tug captain paid no attention. He was in
the pay of the other men.

Griswold had a stick in his hand, and now he
aimed a savage blow at Leo’s head.

The young gymnast warded it off as well as he
was able, but he was no match for both men, and
soon they had him down.

“A rope!” roared Griswold, and when it was
brought he and Broxton and one of the tug hands
proceeded to bind Leo’s hands and feet.

This accomplished, the young gymnast was thrown
into a dark locker. The door was shut and locked
upon him, and the tug proceeded on her way at full
steam.

CHAPTER XXXVII.—THE CAPTURE OF GRISWOLD.
========================================

“What will you do with him?”

It was Broxton who asked the question.

He and Griswold, with whom he had struck up an
acquaintanceship by accident, sat in the little cabin
of the steam tug which was flying down Lake
Michigan at her utmost speed.

The rascally fellow referred of course to Leo, who
still lay bound in the dark locker.

“I’ve got a good mind to tie a weight to his neck
and heave him overboard,” growled Griswold.

“It won’t do to let him go free, that’s certain.
He would have us both locked up at the first
chance.”

“Certainly.”

“Who was with him on the wharf?”

“I don’t know.”

The two rascals talked the matter over for some
time, but could come to no conclusion regarding the
young gymnast.

They wished to get him out of the way, but
hardly dared to undertake such a high-handed
proceeding before the captain and crew of the tug.

“I have it,” said Griswold, half an hour later.
“See that town over there?”

“Yes.”

“Let us tie up there. I’ll go ashore and hire a
close coach and drive it myself. We can take him
inside and——”

He did not finish, but his half-drunken companion
understood.

Their victim should never get away from them
alive.

The tug captain was given orders, and soon a
landing was approached.

After tying up Hank Griswold hurried ashore.
He procured a coach with difficulty, and it was some
time before he appeared on the box, whip in hand.

Then the two men went to the locker, intending
to drag Leo forth, gag him, and roll him up as
though he were a bundle of clothes.

“Gone!” burst from Griswold’s lips.

He spoke the truth. The locker was empty.

“How did he manage it?” queried Broxton, in
deep perplexity.

Griswold looked dumfounded for a moment.
Then he grated his teeth in rage.

“Fools that we are!” he shouted. “To forget
that he is a gymnast. Why, he must have freed
himself within a minute after we locked him in.”

“By thunder! that’s so. But how did he get out
of the locker?”

“I don’t know.”

“The door was locked, wasn’t it?”

“Yes.”

An examination followed, but the two men could
not solve the mystery connected with Leo’s escape.

We will let our reader into the secret.

As Griswold said, the boy slipped from his bonds
with ease.

This done, he lit a match he had in his pocket and
began an examination of his cramped prison.

The sides of the locker were solid, but in the
flooring a board was loose, and he pulled it up.

Underneath was a small opening and into this
he crawled. The board was put in place again, and
finding a nail, Leo succeeded in fastening it.

Crawling around in the dark and wet the young
gymnast soon came to an opening leading up near
the engine-room of the tug.

He came up, and finding a sheltering nook proceeded
to secrete himself.

He could easily have dropped overboard and
swum ashore, but by so doing he would have lost
track of the rascals he had determined to bring to
justice.

After leaving the locker Griswold and Broxton
made an examination of the tug from end to end.

Several times they came close to where Leo was
lying, and he fairly held his breath until they
passed on.

At last the two rascals gave up the hunt in
disgust.

“He has slipped us,” said Broxton. “Better return
that coach and move on.”

This was done and soon the steam tug was ten
miles away.

A landing was made that night at another place,
and the two evil-minded men put up at the leading
hotel.

Leo had followed them ashore and now he felt
he had them just where he wanted them.

He hurried to the nearest telegraph office and
sent a message to Carl to come on at once.

This done, he called on the chief of police, and a
long talk followed.

Without delay the party, accompanied by two
policemen, hurried to the hotel at which the rascals
were stopping. They ascended the stairs and Leo
knocked on the proper door.

“What’s wanted?” came from Hank Griswold.

“There’s a fire next door,” said Leo in an assumed
voice. “Please dress and leave the hotel as soon
as possible.”

“A fire!” came from Broxton, as he leaped out
of bed.

In three minutes the two men had their clothes
on and then they threw open the door.

“Who—what—Leo Dunbar!”

The men were dumfounded at the sight of the
young gymnast, Carl and the police.

“The game is up,” cried Leo. “Officers, arrest
them.”

“You rat!” cried Griswold.

He struck Leo in the face and then tried to dash
past the youth.

He was successful, and reached the stairs before
the policemen could stop him.

Like a flash Leo recovered and made after the
man.

As he reached the top of the stairs Griswold
struck the bottom steps.

Whizz! Leo took a flying leap and landed on
the rascal’s shoulders.

Down went the fellow in a heap. He gave a
groan and then a yell of pain.

“You have broken my leg!” he screamed. “Oh,
my ribs are all caved in!”

He spoke the truth in one particular—his left leg
was broken and he was unable to make further
resistance.

In the meantime Carl and the policeman had
captured Broxton and handcuffed him.

A little later, before the guests in the hotel could
ascertain the cause of the disturbance, the two prisoners
were taken to jail.

Then Barton Reeve appeared on the scene.

“I am satisfied Griswold was hired to attack
me,” said Leo.

“Can’t you get him to confess?”

“He pretends it is all a mistake.”

“Let us both talk to him.”

“Oh, wait; I wonder if the police searched him,”
went on the young gymnast suddenly.

“We can soon find out,” rejoined Barton Reeve.

They questioned the captain in charge. Yes,
Griswold had been searched, and his stuff, quite a
heap, lay in a lump on a near-by desk.

There was some money, a knife, several keys and
a notebook. Leo began to search through the notebook.
He uttered a wild cry.

“Look here!” he ejaculated.

He had found an entry concerning the money
Griswold was to get from Nathan Dobb for his
dastardly work.

“Come with me,” he went on, and led the way to
Hank Griswold’s cell.

At first they could not make the rascal talk at all.

But after awhile Griswold began to think he
was in a terrible dilemma.

“Look here, supposing I confess,” he said, “will
you be easy on me?”

“Perhaps I will,” replied Leo. “One thing is
certain, I won’t be easy if you don’t confess.”

“I was coaxed into this job,” growled the villain.

“And who coaxed you to do it?” asked Leo
quickly.

“Nathan Dobb, the squire at Hopsville.”

“Why does he want to get Leo out of the way?”
questioned Barton Reeve.

“So as he can keep the thousands coming to the
boy,” was Hank Griswold’s reply, which filled Leo
with astonishment and pleasure.

CHAPTER XXXVIII.—GOOD-BY TO THE CIRCUS BOY.
===========================================

Having said so much, Hank Griswold made a
complete confession, only holding back the fact
that he and Nathan Dobb had come together
through his trying to rob the squire’s house.

The confession was taken down in writing, and
then Griswold signed it in the presence of several
outside witnesses.

By this time it was late in the evening, but Leo
was too excited to sleep.

“Can’t we take the first train east?” he asked of
Barton Reeve. “I am anxious to let Squire Dobb
know what I think of him.”

“I will see Lambert and see if we can get off,”
replied the menagerie manager.

They sought out the general manager, and, after
putting the whole case to him, got permission to
leave the “Greatest Show on Earth” for three days.

There was a midnight train eastward, and this
they boarded.

Barton Reeve had secured sleeping accommodations,
but Leo was too excited to rest.

The following noon found them in Hopsville.

From the railroad station they walked to Nathan
Dobb’s house.

“Hullo! there is Daniel Hawkins’ wagon standing
in front,” cried Leo. “He must be calling on
the squire.”

The servant girl ushered them in. As they sat
in the hall waiting for Nathan Dobb they heard a
loud dispute in the office of the justice.

Hawkins and Nathan Dobb were having a quarrel
about some money the latter was to pay the
former for releasing Leo.

In the midst of the discussion Leo walked in,
followed by Barton Reeve.

Both Squire Dobb and old Hawkins were much
astonished at the unexpected appearance.

“By gum, Leo!” cried Daniel Hawkins. “You
good-fer-nothin’, where did you come from?”

Nathan Dobb turned slightly pale.

“Why—er—I didn’t look to see you so soon,
Leo,” he stammered.

“I know it; in fact, you didn’t look to see me
over again,” retorted the young gymnast bitterly.

“What—er—that is, I don’t understand you,
Leo.”

“You soon will understand me, Squire Dobb. I
have come back to show you up as a villain.”

“By gum!” It was all Daniel Hawkins could
say. It took away his breath to hear a boy talk
like that to the principal man in Hopsville.

“You young rascal!” began Nathan Dobb, growing
red in the face.

“Hold on there!” put in Barton Reeve.

“Who are you?”

“You know well enough. I am here to help Leo
obtain his rights.”

“What rights?”

“To all the money you are trying to rob him
of.”

“Me?”

“Exactly.”

“I haven’t a cent belonging to him.”

“We know better.”

“Hank Griswold has been caught and has made a
confession,” put in Leo. “So your game is up,
Nathan Dobb. I always thought there was something
wrong about your doings concerning my parents’
estate, and now I know it.”

Nathan Dobb had risen to his feet. The shot
from Leo told, and he sank back in his chair.

“Griswold under arrest!” he gasped.

“Yes, and you will be soon, too,” added Barton
Reeve.

“By gum!” came faintly from Daniel Hawkins.

“I—I—it is all a mistake,” stammered Nathan
Dobb. “I—er—never intended to defraud Leo out
of a cent.”

“I will never believe that,” replied our hero
warmly.

“Get an officer,” said Barton Reeve quietly.

“No! no! don’t arrest me! For the sake of my
family, have mercy!” groaned Nathan Dobb,
breaking down utterly.

“Will you promise to restore every cent due
Leo?”

“Yes! yes! He shall have it all!”

“I only want what is due me,” said Leo.

“You shall have every cent—I swear it.”

After this Nathan Dobb was easy to handle. He
told the whole story of the estate and how the
money was invested.

All the necessary papers were turned over to
Barton Reeve to be put into the hands of the
court.

“A good day’s work,” said Reeve when he and
Leo left the squire’s house. “You are now free
and rich.”

“I hardly know myself,” replied Leo, and he told
the plain truth.

It was not long after this that Leo came into possession
of property which, later on, when times became
better, proved to be worth nearly fifteen
thousand dollars.

Barton Reeve was appointed his guardian until
he should become of age. The great friendship between
the man and the boy, so strangely begun,
was never broken.

A few weeks after the exposure, and after Daniel
Hawkins had carried the news far and wide, Nathan
Dobb sold out his household effects and went West.
Whatever became of him is not known.

Several years have passed.

On his stony farm Daniel Hawkins worries out a
miserable existence. His wife is more of a tartar
than ever, and together they make one of the most
wretched couples living in the Hopsville district.

Mart Keene is still with the “Greatest Show on
Earth” and is earning a good salary. He has called
once or twice upon the Hawkinses, but he has nothing
in common with the mean farmer and his wife.

Carl Ross is likewise still on the road and is getting
a large salary. He has married pretty Natalie
Sparks and both are well and happy.

Leo has given up the circus profession and is now
at college. He is a diligent scholar and expects to
become a doctor. He has a score of friends who
wish him well and who predict for him a brilliant
future. But no matter how successful he may be
in years to come it is not likely that he will forget
the stirring times when he was simply Leo the
Circus Boy.

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