Boy Inventors' Radio Telephone, 
The 
 
Project Gutenberg's The Boy Inventors' Radio Telephone, by Richard 
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Title: The Boy Inventors' Radio Telephone 
Author: Richard Bonner 
Release Date: October 18, 2004 [EBook #13783] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY 
INVENTORS' RADIO TELEPHONE *** 
 
Produced by Curtis Weyant, Ronald Holder and the PG Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team. 
 
[Illustration: (Frontispiece) Jack experienced an odd thrill as he 
prepared to send the first spoken word ever exchanged between an 
airship and land--Page 71.]
THE BOY INVENTORS' RADIO- TELEPHONE 
BY 
RICHARD BONNER 
AUTHOR OF "THE BOY INVENTORS' WIRELESS TRIUMPH," 
"THE BOY INVENTORS AND THE VANISHING GUN," "THE 
BOY INVENTORS' DIVING TORPEDO BOAT," "THE BOY 
INVENTORS' FLYING SHIP," "THE BOY INVENTORS' 
ELECTRIC HYDROAEROPLANE," ETC., ETC. 
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY _CHARLES L. WRENN_ 
NEW YORK HURST & COMPANY PUBLISHERS 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER 
I. 
THE POWER OF THE AIR 
II. AN ENCOUNTER WITH A CHARACTER 
III. THE PROFESSOR'S DILEMMA 
IV. "WHERE IS HE?" 
V. CHESTER CHADWICK--INVENTOR 
VI. THE RADIO TELEPHONE 
VII. THE GREAT TEST 
VIII. TALKING THROUGH SPACE 
IX. THE BOYS FACE TROUBLE
X. AN INVOLUNTARY AËRONAUT 
XI. BY THE ROADSIDE 
XII. MAKING ENEMIES 
XIII. THE LEADEN TUBE 
XIV. IN THE HOSPITAL 
XV. A TALE OF THE COLORADO 
XVI. ZEB CUMMINGS 
XVII. IN THE LABORATORY 
XVIII. INTO THE STORM 
XIX. THE "LIGHTNING CAGE" 
XX. THROUGH THE AIR 
XXI. VAULTING TO THE RESCUE 
XXII. "Z. 2. X." 
XXIII. ON THE BORDER LINE 
XXIV. "THE THREE BUTTES" 
XXV. INTO THE BEYOND 
XXVI. THE START FOR THE UNKNOWN 
XXVII. THE PROFESSOR'S SECOND DILEMMA 
XXVIII. THE UPPER REGIONS 
XXIX. A MUD BATH
XXX. NIGHT ON THE COLORADO 
XXXI. THE ISLAND OF MYSTERY 
XXXII. THROUGH THE WOODS 
XXXIII. THE SECRET AT LAST 
XXXIV. THE INTERLOPERS 
XXXV. TRIUMPH 
XXXVI. THE HOMECOMING 
 
The Boy Inventor's Radio-Telephone. 
CHAPTER I. 
THE POWER OF THE AIR. 
"That's it, Jack. Let her out!" 
"Suffering speed laws of Squantum, but she can travel!" exclaimed 
Dick Donovan, redheaded and voluble. 
"I tell you, electricity is the thing. Beats gasoline a million ways," 
chimed in Tom Jesson. Tom sat beside his cousin, Jack Chadwick, on 
the driver's seat of a curious-looking automobile which was whizzing 
down the smooth, broad, green-bordered road that led to Nestorville, 
the small town outside Boston where the Boy Inventors made their 
home. 
The car that Jack Chadwick was driving differed in a dozen respects 
from an ordinary automobile. There was no engine hood in front. 
Instead of a bonnet the car, which was low slung, long and painted 
black, had a sharp prow of triangular shape. Its body, in fact, might be 
roughly compared to the form of a double-ended whaleboat.
As it sped along outside the city limits, and immune from hampering 
speed laws, the car emitted no sound. 
It moved silently, without the usual sharp staccato rattle of the exhaust. 
Behind it there was no evil-smelling trail of gasoline and oil smoke. 
The car glided as silently as a summer breeze on its wire-wheels, like 
those of a bicycle enlarged. 
"I'll get a great story out of this," declared Dick Donovan, who, as 
readers of other volumes of this series know, was a reporter on a 
Boston paper. "That is, if you'll let me write it," he added, leaning 
forward over the front seat from the tonneau as he spoke. 
"How about it, Jack?" asked Tom with an amused smile. "Shall we let 
Dick here get famous at our expense again?" 
"I don't see why not," said Jack. "Everything about the Electric 
Monarch is patented. The new reciprocating device, and the 
self-feeding storage batteries are fully covered. If Dick wants to write a 
romance about it he can, provided he leaves our pictures out." 
"Oh, I'll do that," Dick readily promised. "Are you making top speed 
now, Jack?" 
"Nowhere near; I wouldn't dare to. I believe that the Monarch is 
capable of ninety miles an hour. I wish we had a place like Ormond 
Beach to try her out on." 
"You can count me out on that," chuckled Dick. "This is fast enough 
for me." 
The boys were trying out their latest invention, an electric car capable 
of making the speed of a gasoline-driven vehicle, and one which could 
be operated at a minimum of cost, almost a nominal expense, as 
compared with the high price of a vehicle run by an explosive engine. 
It was the trial trip of the Electric Monarch, as they had decided to call 
it, and so far the performances of the machine had exceeded, instead of
fallen below, their expectations.    
    
		
	
	
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