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The Brighton Boys in the Radio Service
- Language
- EN
- Format
- EPUB
- Size
- 388 KB
Description
This is a work of early 20th-century adventure fiction composed as a narrative of young protagonists. The novel follows three boys from Brighton Academy—Joe Harned, Jerry Macklin, and Slim Goodwin—who decide to enlist in the Signal Corps during World War I. The story recounts their experiences and the challenges they face while training and serving in the military, with emphasis on themes such as patriotism, bravery, and youthful enthusiasm for service. The narrative highlights their determination and the dangers posed by enemy spies, capturing the wartime atmosphere from the perspective of juvenile protagonists.
The work reflects the period's interest in patriotic adventure stories aimed at young readers. It combines elements of historical fiction with adventure, set against the backdrop of world war events, and portrays the boys' enthusiasm for serving their country during a significant historical period.
The work reflects the period's interest in patriotic adventure stories aimed at young readers. It combines elements of historical fiction with adventure, set against the backdrop of world war events, and portrays the boys' enthusiasm for serving their country during a significant historical period.
From the opening pages
There was an Instant of Terrible Whirling about the Room. 66 Scores of Huge Armored Tanks Rolled Through 168 The Brighton Boys in the Radio Service "For Uncle Sam" "Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their——" It was that old practice sentence of typists, which is as old as are typewriting machines, and Joe Harned, seated before the told-style, noisy, but still capable machine in Philip Burton's telegraph office, had rattled it off twenty-five times and was on his twenty-sixth when suddenly, very suddenly, his mind began to work. Or rather it might be said that an idea, the big idea , danced unceremoniously into his brain, and, beginning to take definite and concrete form, chased a score of other smaller ideas through all the thought-channels of his handsome, boyish, well-rounded head. He came to a full stop and gazed steadily at the upturned paper in the typewriter in front of him. Twenty-fives times he had written that sentence, and twenty-five times with mechanical precision and true adherence to time-honored custom he had finished it by tapping off the word "party." It was a formula of words which some genius had devised for the fingering practice it gave one on the keyboard, and Joe Harned had written it hundreds of times before, just as thousands of others had done, without giving a thought to its meaning, or the significance that the substitution of a single word would give it. He read it again, and as if it were the result of an uncontrollable impulse, his fingers began the rapid tap-tap-tap. And this time he substituted the new word that the big idea had suddenly thrust into his mind. Joe gave the roller a twirl, the paper rolled out, dropped to the floor, and he grasped for it eagerly. Even Joe was surprised. He hadn't realized that in his enthusiastic haste he had pushed down the key marked "caps." In bold, outstanding letters near the bottom of the sheet was an historic sentence, and Joe Harned—Harned, of Brighton Academy—had devised it. "NOW IS THE TIME FOR ALL GOOD MEN TO COME TO THE AID OF THEIR COUNTRY!" Joe gazed at it again for a moment, and then let his eyes travel across the little office to where red-headed, freckle-faced, big-hearted and impetuous Jerry Macklin was rapping away at another typewriter, and, two feet…
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