Bradley's Mountain Boys, by 
Silas K. Boone 
 
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Title: Phil Bradley's Mountain Boys The Birch Bark Lodge 
Author: Silas K. Boone 
Release Date: August 8, 2007 [EBook #22279] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHIL 
BRADLEY'S MOUNTAIN BOYS *** 
 
Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
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[Illustration: HAVING SECURED A GOOD SUPPLY OF BAIT, 
THEY STARTED FOR THE CANOE]
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The Mountain Boys Series 
PHIL BRADLEY'S MOUNTAIN BOYS 
Or The Birch Bark Lodge 
By SILAS K. BOONE 
The New York Book Company New York 
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Copyright, 1915, by The New York Book Company 
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CONTENTS 
I Bound for Lake Surprise 11 
II Lub and the Mother Bobcat 21 
III A Mystery, to Start with 33 
IV The Figure in the Moonlight 46 
V The Sudden Awakening 59 
VI Getting Rid of an Intruder 72 
VII On the Border of the Lake 84 
VIII The Mountain Boys in Camp 97 
IX The 'Coon Photographer 112 
X Finding a Sunbeam 121
XI An Encounter in the Pine Woods 134 
XII When Two Played the Game 143 
XIII How "Daddy" Came Back 156 
XIV The Puzzle of It All 169 
XV After the Storm 181 
XVI Peace After Strife--Conclusion 194 
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PHIL BRADLEY'S MOUNTAIN BOYS 
CHAPTER I 
BOUND FOR LAKE SURPRISE 
"Phil, please tell me we're nearly there!" 
"I'd like to, Lub, for your sake; but the fact of the matter is we've got 
about another hour of climbing before us, as near as I can reckon." 
"Oh! dear, that means sixty long minutes of this everlasting scrambling 
over logs, and crashing through tangled underbrush. Why, I reckon I'll 
have the map of Ireland in red streaks on my face before I'm done with 
it." 
At that the other three boys laughed. They were not at all unfeeling, and 
could appreciate the misery of their fat companion; but then Lub had 
such a comical way of expressing himself, and made so many ludicrous 
faces, that they could never take him seriously. 
They were making their way through one of the loneliest parts of the 
great Adirondack regions. There might not be a living soul within miles
of them, unless possibly some guide were wandering in search of new 
fields. 
The regular fishermen and tourists never came this way for many 
reasons; and the only thing that had brought these four well-grown 
boys in the region of Surprise Lake was the fact that one of them, Phil 
Bradley, owned a large mountain estate of wild land that abutted on the 
western shore of the lake. 
All of the lads carried regular packs on their backs, secured with bands 
that passed across their foreheads, thus giving them additional 
advantages. In their hands they seemed to be gripping fishing rods in 
their cases, as well as some other things in the way of tackle boxes and 
bait pails. 
Apparently Phil and his chums were bent on having the time of their 
lives upon this outing. Laden in this fashion, it was no easy task they 
had taken upon themselves to "tote" such burdens from the little 
jumping-off station up the side of the mountain, and then across the 
wooded plateau. There was no other way of getting to Lake Surprise, as 
yet, no wagon road at all; which accounted for its being visited only by 
an occasional fisherman or hunter. 
Each year such places become fewer and fewer in the Adirondacks; and 
in time to come doubtless a modern hotel would be erected where just 
then only primitive solitude reigned. 
Of course Lub (who at home in school rejoiced in the more aristocratic 
name of Osmond Fenwick) being heavily built, suffered more than any 
of his comrades in this long and arduous tramp. He puffed, and groaned, 
but stuck everlastingly at it, for Lub was not the one to give in easily, 
no matter how he complained. 
Besides these two there was Raymond Tyson, a tall, thin chap, who 
was so quick to see through nearly everything on the instant that his 
friends had long ago dubbed him "X-Ray," and as such he was 
generally known.
The last of the quartette was Ethan Allan. He claimed to be a lineal 
descendant of the famous Revolutionary hero who captured 
Ticonderoga from the British by an early morning surprise. Ethan was 
very fond of boasting of his illustrious ancestor, and on that account 
found himself frequently "joshed" by his chums. 
It happened    
    
		
	
	
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