Raftmates, by Kirk Munroe 
 
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Title: Raftmates A Story of the Great River 
Author: Kirk Munroe 
 
Release Date: September 16, 2006 [eBook #19303] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 
RAFTMATES*** 
E-text prepared by Al Haines 
 
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RAFTMATES 
A Story of the Great River 
by 
KIRK MUNROE 
Author of "Dorymates" "Campmates" "Canoemates" Etc. 
Illustrated 
 
[Frontispiece: "Winn dashed away with the speed of a deer."] 
 
New York and London Harper & Brothers Publishers 1902 Copyright, 
1893, by Harper & Brothers. All rights reserved 
 
CONTENTS. 
CHAPTER 
I. 
THE RAFT II. WINN ASSUMES A RESPONSIBILITY III. A 
MUD-BESPATTERED ARRIVAL FROM CALIFORNIA IV. BILLY 
BRACKETT STARTS DOWN THE RIVER V. HOW THE VOYAGE 
WAS BEGUN VI. MR. GILDER AND HIS RUDE RECEPTION VII. 
A GANG OF "RIVER-TRADERS" VIII. DISAPPEARANCE OF THE 
RAFT IX. ALONE ON THE ISLAND X. A NIGHT OF STRANGE 
HAPPENINGS XI. BILLY BRACKETT'S SURPRISING 
SITUATION XII. THE TRAPPERS TRAPPED XIII. WINN'S 
LONELY CRUISE XIV. A PEAL OF GIRLISH LAUGHTER XV. 
"CAP'N COD," SABELLA, AND THE "WHATNOT" XVI. BIM
MAKES AN ENEMY XVII. THE TRUTH, BUT NOT THE WHOLE 
TRUTH XVIII. FOLLOWING THE TRAIL XIX. A CURIOUS 
COMPLICATION XX. BIM GROWLS XXI. EVERY ONE 
EXPLAINS XXII. A "MEWEL" NAMED "REWARD" XXIII. 
REWARD RUNS AWAY WITH THE PANORAMA XXIV. WINN 
DISCOVERS HIS LONG-LOST RAFT XXV. THE RAFT AND 
SHOW-BOAT CHANGE CREWS XXVI. A DISASTROUS 
COLLISION XXVII. IS THIS OUR RAFT OR NOT? XXVIII. THE 
RESCUE OF SABELLA XXIX. BIM BRINGS ABOUT A JOYFUL 
MEETING XXX. IN CLOD'S CABIN XXXI. CAMPMATES TURN 
RAFTMATES XXXII. THE "RIVER-TRADERS" ATTEMPT TO 
REGAIN POSSESSION XXXIII. WHERE IS BIM? XXXIV. A 
BLAZE ON THE RIVER XXXV. BIM'S HEROISM XXXVI. THE 
MASTER OF MOSS BANK XXXVII. BIM'S COON XXXVIII. THE 
GREAT RIVER AND ITS MISCHIEF XXXIX. HURLED 
THROUGH THE CREVASSE AND WRECKED XL. A MEETING 
OF MATES 
 
ILLUSTRATIONS. 
"WINN DASHED AWAY WITH THE SPEED OF A DEER" . . . 
Frontispiece 
"WINN SECURED ONE END OF THE CABLE TO THAT PART OF 
THE BOOM RESTING AGAINST THE SNAG" 
"'WHY, THE RAFT HAS GONE!' EXCLAIMED ELTA" 
"'HOLD ON, YOUNG MAN! ONE AT A TIME IS ENOUGH'" 
"A BROAD STREAM OF WHEAT RUSHED OUT ON DECK" 
"'WATCH HIM, BIM!'" 
"'WHO'S THERE?' CRIED THE OLD MAN" 
"BILLY BRACKETT UTTERED A CRY OF AMAZEMENT"
WINN'S INTRODUCTION TO SABELLA 
BILLY BRACKETT IS A FRIEND IN NEED 
"THE MULE WAS PURCHASED THAT AFTERNOON" 
"WITH A PRODIGIOUS LEAP HE LANDED SQUARELY ON 
REWARD'S HEAD" 
"'THE RAFT HAS GONE, AND WE ARE AFTER IT'" 
THE RESCUE OF SABELLA 
"THE NEXT INSTANT HE SPRANG TO HIS FEET WITH A CRY" 
"THE STRONG ARMS LIFTED HIM AS THEY WOULD A CHILD" 
"LIKE YOUNG TIGERS THE BOYS TUGGED AT THE HEAVY 
SWEEPS" 
"'YO' CALLIN' DAT AR PLANTASHUN MOSS BACK?' 
EXCLAIMED SOLON" 
"THE LANTERNS OF THE WORKING GANG GLANCING HERE 
AND THERE LIKE FIRE-FLIES" 
A REUNION OF "MATES" 
 
RAFT MATES. 
CHAPTER I. 
THE RAFT. 
Although the Venture was by no means so large a raft as many that 
Winn Caspar had watched glide down the Mississippi, he considered it 
about the finest craft of that description ever put together. He was also
a little more proud of it than of anything else in the whole world. Of 
course he excepted his brave soldier father, who had gone to the war as 
a private, to come home when it was all over wearing a major's uniform; 
and his dear mother, who for four weary years had been both father and 
mother to him, and his sister Elta, who was not only the prettiest girl in 
the county, but, to Winn's mind, the cleverest. But outside of his 
immediate family, the raft, the Venture, as his father had named it, was 
the object of the boy's most sincere admiration and pride. Had he not 
helped build it? Did he not know every timber and plank and board in it? 
Had he not assisted in loading it with enough bushels of wheat to feed 
an army? Was he not about to leave home for the first time in his life, 
to float away down the great river and out into the wide world on it? 
Certainly he had, and did, and was. So no wonder he was proud of the 
raft, and impatient for the waters of the little river, on a bank of which 
the Caspar's lived, to be high    
    
		
	
	
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