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to bandage a lot of unknown foreigners and leave me alone to worry my heart out."

      "Why don't you go along?" asked Jones. "I'm going."

      "You!"

      "Of course. I've a suspicion our girls have the right instinct, sir – the tender, womanly instinct that makes us love them. At any rate, I'm going to stand by them. It strikes me as the noblest and grandest idea a girl ever conceived, and if anything could draw me closer to these three young ladies, who had me pretty well snared before, it is this very proposition."

      "I don't see why," muttered Uncle John, wavering.

      "I'll tell you why, sir. For themselves, they have all the good things of life at their command. They could bask in luxury to the end of their days, if they so desired. Yet their wonderful womanly sympathy goes out to the helpless and suffering – the victims of the cruellest war the world has ever known – and they promptly propose to sacrifice their ease and brave whatever dangers may befall, that they may relieve to some extent the pain and agony of those wounded and dying fellow creatures."

      "Foreigners," said Uncle John weakly.

      "Human beings," said the boy.

      Patsy marched over to Ajo and gave him a sturdy whack upon the back that nearly knocked him over.

      "The spirit of John Paul Jones still goes marching on!" she cried. "My boy, you're the right stuff, and I'm glad I doctored you."

      He smiled, looking from one to another of the three girls questioningly.

      "Then I'm to go along?" he asked.

      "We shall be grateful," answered Maud, after a moment's hesitation. "This is all very sudden to me, for I had planned to go alone."

      "That wouldn't do at all," asserted Uncle John briskly. "I'm astonished and – and grieved – that my nieces should want to go with you, but perhaps the trip will prove interesting. Tell me what steamer you want to catch, Maud, and I'll reserve rooms for our entire party."

      "No," said Jones, "don't do it, sir."

      "Why not?"

      "There's the Arabella. Let's use her."

      "To cross the ocean?"

      "She has done that before. It will assist our enterprise, I'm sure, to have our own boat. These are troublous times on the high seas."

      Patsy clapped her hands gleefully.

      "That's it; a hospital ship!" she exclaimed.

      They regarded her with various expressions: startled, doubtful, admiring, approving. Presently, with added thought on the matter, the approval became unanimous.

      "It's an amazing suggestion," said Maud, her eyes sparkling.

      "Think how greatly it will extend our usefulness," said Beth.

      Uncle John was again trotting up and down the room, this time in a state of barely repressed excitement.

      "The very thing!" he cried. "Clever, practical, and – eh – eh – tremendously interesting. Now, then, listen carefully – all of you! It's up to you, Jones, to accompany Maud on the night express to Washington. Get the Red Cross Society to back our scheme and supply us with proper credentials. The Arabella must be rated as a hospital ship and our party endorsed as a distinct private branch of the Red Cross – what they call a 'unit.' I'll give you a letter to our senator and he will look after our passports and all necessary papers. I – I helped elect him, you know. And while you're gone it shall be my business to fit the ship with all the supplies we shall need to promote our mission of mercy."

      "I'll share the expense," proposed the boy.

      "No, you won't. You've done enough in furnishing the ship and crew. I'll attend to the rest."

      "And Beth and I will be Uncle John's assistants," said Patsy. "We shall want heaps of lint and bandages, drugs and liniments and – "

      "And, above all, a doctor," advised Ajo. "One of the mates on my yacht, Kelsey by name, is a half-way physician, having studied medicine in his youth and practiced it on the crew for the last dozen years; but what we really need on a hospital ship is a bang-up surgeon."

      "This promises to become an expensive undertaking," remarked Maud, with a sigh. "Perhaps it will be better to let me go alone, as I originally expected to do. But, if we take along the hospital ship, do not be extravagant, Mr. Merrick, in equipping it. I feel that I have been the innocent cause of drawing you all into this venture and I do not want it to prove a hardship to my friends."

      "All right, Maud," returned Uncle John, with a cheerful grin, "I'll try to economize, now that you've warned me."

      Ajo smiled and Patsy Doyle laughed outright. They knew it would not inconvenience the little rich man, in the slightest degree, to fit out a dozen hospital ships.

      CHAPTER III

      THE DECISION OF DOCTOR GYS

      Uncle John was up bright and early next morning, and directly after breakfast he called upon his old friend and physician, Dr. Barlow. After explaining the undertaking on which he had embarked, Mr. Merrick added:

      "You see, we need a surgeon with us; a clever, keen chap who understands his business thoroughly, a sawbones with all the modern scientific discoveries saturating him to his finger-tips. Tell me where to get him."

      Dr. Barlow, recovering somewhat from his astonishment, smiled deprecatingly.

      "The sort of man you describe," said he, "would cost you a fortune, for you would oblige him to abandon a large and lucrative practice in order to accompany you. I doubt, indeed, if any price would tempt him to abandon his patients."

      "Isn't there some young fellow with these requirements?"

      "Mr. Merrick, you need a physician and surgeon combined. Wounds lead to fever and other serious ailments, which need skillful handling. You might secure a young man, fresh from his clinics, who would prove a good surgeon, but to master the science of medicine, experience and long practice are absolutely necessary."

      "We've got a half-way medicine man on the ship now – a fellow who has doctored the crew for years and kept 'em pretty healthy. So I guess a surgeon will about fill our bill."

      "H-m, I know these ship's doctors, Mr. Merrick, and I wouldn't care to have you and your nieces trust your lives to one, in case you become ill. Believe me, a good physician is as necessary to you as a good surgeon. Do you know that disease will kill as many of those soldiers as bullets?"

      "No."

      "It is true; else the history of wars has taught us nothing. We haven't heard much of plagues and epidemics yet, in the carefully censored reports from London, but it won't be long before disease will devastate whole armies."

      Uncle John frowned. The thing was growing complicated.

      "Do you consider this a wild goose chase, Doctor?" he asked.

      "Not with your fortune, your girls and your fine ship to back it. I think Miss Stanton's idea of venturing abroad unattended, to nurse the wounded, was Quixotic in the extreme. Some American women are doing it, I know, but I don't approve of it. On the other hand, your present plan is worthy of admiration and applause, for it is eminently practical if properly handled."

      Dr. Barlow drummed upon the table with his fingers, musingly. Then he looked up.

      "I wonder," said he, "if Gys would go. If you could win him over, he would fill the bill."

      "Who is Gys?" inquired Uncle John.

      "An eccentric; a character. But clever and competent. He has just returned from Yucatan, where he accompanied an expedition of exploration sent out by the Geographical Society – and, by the way, nearly lost his life in the venture. Before that, he made a trip to the frozen North with a rescue party. Between times, he works in the hospitals, or acts as consulting surgeon with men of greater fame than he has won; but Gys is a rolling stone, erratic and whimsical, and with all his talent can never settle down to a steady practice."

      "Seems like the very man I want," said Uncle John, much interested. "Where can I find him?"

      "I've

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